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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" GRAND FORKS ift\nthe center of Orand Forks valley, the\npremier fruit growing district of\nSouthern British Columbia. Mining\nand lumbering are also important\nindustries in districts contiguous to\nthe city.\nTWENTY-SECOND YEAR\u2014No 49\n1\nKettle Valley Orchardist\nTHF --SrllV *S t''e t-tlOtllf. 118*8-\n**sXaU Dl\/Ll paper of the citizens\nof the district. It is read by more\npeople in the city and valley than any\nother paper because it is fearless, reliable, clean, bright and entertaining.\nIt is always independent but never\nneutral.\nMEMBER OPENED\nTHE ANNUAL FAIR\nReviews Past Achievements of District and\nIs Opiimistic of the\nFuture\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1923\n\"Tell me what you Know ls aet*\nI can mess as well as yon.\nSI.OO PER YEAR\nIn bis address al the opening of\nthe fifteenth annual fair iaet Thursday, E C Henniger, member for\nQrand Forks, said:\nHMr. President, Ladies atd Gentlemen:\u2014We are gathered to lake\npart in our annual event, and it affords me a great deal ot pleasure to\ntake part in this the fifteenth annual\nopening of the Urand Forks Agricultural and Industrial Fair.\nBefore going any further I want\nto express my appreciation of the\ncourtesy extended to me by tbe\npresident aod directors io inviting\nme to take part on tbis occasion,aud\nI would lake this opportunity ol \\\ncongratulating not only {he president and directors of your association, but also those who are exhibit\ning here, on the wonderful display\nof exhibits io the many different\nlines f the agricultural industry\nwhich are being shown tbis year.\nIt must indeed be gratifying to\nvisitors to tbis fair, and especially\nto those who are residents of our\nvalley, to walk around viewing\nthe wonderful production of the\nsoil and feel tbat tbeir lot is cast in a\npart of our Dominion whioh iscapa-\nble of such excellent production.\nGrand Forks Banks First in\nProvincial Competition\nIt may not be generally known\nthat tbis valley of ours in provincial-\nwide, competition has in tbe past\ntaken first place, tbree years out of\nfive, for the best fruit and vegetable displays among the districts of\nthis province, and won the district\ncompetition cup presented for tbat\npurpose by James Anerson, the\nfirst president of the Nelson Agri-\ntural and Industrial association;and\nthese victories were won at a\ntime when we bad no irrigation system and when we were competing\nagainst districts that had considerable acreage under irrigation at that\ntime.\nBetter Opportunities Now\nIf we were so successful in raising\nand producing fruits and vegetables\nduring the years 1905 to 1911 without the assistance of an irrigation\nsystem, as results bave oleer'y demonstrated, how much more successful should we be now, when,\nwitb the aid of tbe government, we bave a splendid irrigation\nsystem whioh gives service to some\n3300 acres of tbe best land in tbe\nvalley, and, I venture to say, in fer-\nJility will compare well with tbe best\nlands in any part of tbe Dominion.\nSource of Prosperity\nWe must never overlook tbe fact\nthat the prosperity of any country\ndepends principally to what extent\nits farming aod agricu tural industry has been developed. History\nshows tbat no nation has been able\nto maintain its position wben it\nneglected to give the necessary support to tbe farming industry which\nit deserved. This wonderful province of British Columbia has often\nbeen referred to as a ' 'sea of mount-\ntains\"; but it is fast coming into its\nown aB a great agricultural province.\nIn 1921 tbe tout agricultural products of the province were worth\n159,742,994; and while we have\ngreat mining industries, as our province is supposed to be essentially A\nraining province; and wbile we have\nfishing industries tbat are second to\nnone in the Dominion, yet our agrin\ncultural production exceeded in\nv lue the combined pi od net ion of\nboth tbese industries hy $17,722,-\n683, which goes to show tbe important place agriculture has assumed\nin this province.\nAssisting the Settler\nlegislation enacted by tbe provincial government io 1921 authorized the agricultural department to\nalliw a rebate on stumping powder\nto settlers clearing land, which has\nacted as a great stimulus along thiB\nline. Uuder this policy settlers have\npurchased 36,327 cases of powder,\nand according to returns msde to\nthe department, over 15,000 acres of\nland have been brought under production, while 6548 actual settlers\nbave made application and received\nrebates on stumpiug powder.\nPotato Show\nThe first annual-potato show to be\nheld io the province was, as you\nknow, beld in Qrand Forks last November, and sbould do much to\nstimulate tbe potato industry in this\nprovince. This year it will be held\nin Victoria, from November 12 to\n17, aod we are looking forward to\nseeing the growers from Qrand Forks\nbring back from tbe Victoria potato\nshow some of tbe higb awards wbicb\nundoubtedly wilt be hung up there\nfor competition among the exbibin\nton.\nIrrigation\nI can not let this opportunity\npass withont Baying a word or two\nabout our local irrigation system,\nAs you all know, we bave an abundant supply of water tor irrigation\npurposes, but we are now confronted\nwith tbe most important task of all\n\u2014that is, getting the full benefit\nfrom the water. Tbe school of experience has taught us tbat ws can\nnot get the maximum results from\nirrigation unless the land is proper\nly levelled and prepared to use tbe\nwater on it. If the land is not so\nproperly levelled before turning on\nthe water, the crop on tbe high\nspots will die out for want of moist-\nure wbile you drown out the crop in\nthe low places in an effort to reaoh\ntbe higher land, with tbe result\nthat you use considerable more\nwater than is necessary without getting the results that you expect.\nOur experience this season has\ntaught many of us tbat the land\nmust be worked intosucb shape that\nthe water can be nsedto advantage;\nbut tbere are still many wbo do not\nrealize the absolute necessity of this.\nIt is true that t j put the land in\nshape for irrigation is a very expensive operation, but the results from\nproper irrigation at a minimum eost\nwill fully justify tbe initial work of\npreparing tbe land and, in my\nopinion, succrss in irrigated farm\ning can not be attained unless this\nmethod is followed. I am satx\nisfied that.the old order of farming\nlarge tracts of land will pass away\nand intensified farming will take its\nplace.\nComparisons\nDuring the year I have been over\nagreatpartof the Dominion, and\nin no par did I see any better op.\nportunity for su cess than what we\nhave here in Grand Forks. With a\nwonderful climate, a beautiful valley with fertile soil and with a\nsplendid irrigation system spread\nover it, the issue is up to us to make\na success. We must acquire a more\noptimistic spirit and strive to make\nGrand Forks a great and wealthy\nagricultural center\u2014produce the\ngoods that will find a ready market.\nLook forward to being successful\nand you will succeed.\nOn behalf of the directors, I now\ndeclare the fifteenth annuel Agricultural and Industrial Fair official'\nly open, and I hope there will be a\nAs a German Paper Views the\nExchange Problem\nIn former days we once were men,\nBut now, as can be seen,\nEaoh German bra^n has changed into\nAn adding-up machine.\n\u2014From Lustige Blaetter, Berlin.\ngood attendance of tbe public and\ntbat it will be a success in every\nway.\nSelect Your Color\nA litt,e girl timidly tsked the\ndrug clerk for a package of pink\ndye.\n\"What do you want it for?\" responded tbe clerk. \" Wollen or cotton goods?\"\n\"Neither,\" said th child. \"It's\nfor ma's stomach. The doctor said\nshe'd have to diet, and she wants it\n\u2022 pretty color.\"\nInventory\nBanker\u2014How much liquid assets\nhave you?\nCustomer (cautiously)\u2014About a\ncase and a half.\nln tbe mountains of the South\nthere are men who, though illiterate, bave answered the call to the\nministry. Naturally, they are handicapped, for tbey mnst depend on\nothers to read the Bible to tbem.\nBut uofortunately\u2014so we learn\nfrom MrB. Cora Wilson Stewart in\nMoonlight Schools\u2014some of tbe\npupils that the day schools turo out\nare ae poor readers as those who\nnever went to school.\n\"Paul was an oyster man,\" one of\nthem once read to an illiterate minister\u2014meaning of course \"an austere\nman.\" Tbe next Sunday the preacher declared to bis congregation tbat\nPeter was a fieherman and that Paul\nwbb an oyster man. Thus his flock\ngot a conception of Paul that probably was unique.\nAnother minister heard the sentence, \"Jacob made booths for his\ncattle,\" road \"Jacob made boots for\nhis cattle.\" The following Sunday\nbe eaid from the pulpit: \"Jacob, tbat\nhumaae man, would not even permit his cattle to go barefooted, but\nmade boots for them to protect\ntbeir tender feet as they walked\nover the stones.\"\nPERFECT ATTENDANCE\nThe following pupils of the Grand\nForks public school were neither late\nnor absent during the month September:\nprincipal's olass .\nArthur Bickerton, George Biddiecome, Gordon Clark, Albert Colarch,\nMarjorie Cook, Aubrey Dinsmore,\nJessie Downey, Edith Euerby, Edgar\nGalipeau,Fred Galipeau, Alice George\nRosa Hansen, Genevieve Harkness,\nAlbert Haw, Walter Haw, Beth\nHuggins, Marion Kerby, Frank La\nrama, Margaret Luscombe, Blanche\nMason, Frank Otterbine, Peter Padgett, Frank Price, Henry Beid, Alice\nScott, Joseph Simmons, Phyllis\nSmyth.\nDIVISION II.\nMary Acres, Jessie Allen, Bruce\nBrown, Parma Cooper,Edmund Crosby, Edmund Euerby, Lilia Frechette,\nGeorge Hadden, William Henniger,\nIrene Jeffreys, Dorothy Kidd, Glen\nMurray, Alex McDougail, Daniel\nMcDougail, Helen Nystrom, Herbert\nOtnmanney, Martha Otterbine, Ruth\nPyrah, Jessie Rjss, John Santano,\nRuby Savage, Ruth Savage. Walton\nVant, Harvey Weber.\nDIYISION III.\nErio Clark, Alice Deporter, Lillian\nDunn. Georgina Grey, Mabel Hobbins, Dorothy Jones, Walter Manson,\nGordon Massie, Laird McCallum,\nEugene McDougail, Helen McKinnon\nLouise McPherson, Jim IVfillor.Peggy\nMudie, Lillian Pell, Elmer Scott,\nWinnie Smith, Eileen Weber, Edna\nWiseman.\nDIVISION iv.\nCharlotte Acres, Jean Clark, Norman Cook, Raymond Dinsmore, Colin\nGraham, Leo Gowans, Katherine\nHenniger, May Hobbins, Marie Kidd\nMary Kingston, Albert Kinnie, Delbert Kirkpatrick, Betty McCallum,\nLily McDonald, Fred Mason, Eliza*\nbeth Mooyboer,Qlady8 Pearson, Louis\nSantano, Fred Smith, Roy Walker.\ndivision v.\nIan Clark, Roy Cooper, Robert\nFoote, Ernest Hutton, Helen Beran,\nEarle Bickerton, Rosamond Buchan,\nElsie Egg, Clarence Hardy, Vilmer\nHolm, Sereta Hutton, Harold Jackson, Zelma Larama, Lee Maurelli,\nVyvyan Plant, Gladys Smith.\nDIVISION VI.\nChester Bonthron, Ruth Boyce,\nErnest Crosby, Ernest Danielson,\nBernice Donaldson, Lora Frechette,\nCharles Harkness, Aleck Hobbins,\nMargaret Kingston, Ethel Massie,\nViolet MacDougall, Margaret McCallum, Bruce McDonald, Michael Mc\nDi>nough,MadelineMcDougall,Charles\nMcLeod, Marjorie Otterbine, Elsie\nSoott, Billy Tutt, Edna Wenzel,\nAgnes Winter.\nDIVISION VII.\nJames Allan, Harold Bailey, An-\ngelo Colarch, Evelyn Cooper, Lura\nCanfield, Charlie Egg, Clarence Henderson, Mazie Henderson, Winnifred\nLightfoot, Daisy Malm, Hazel Mason,\nLaura Maurelli, Marguerite McDougail, Florence McDongall, Minnie\nMcNiven, Helen Pell, Elise Prud\nhomme, George Savage, Mildred\nSmith, Jessie Sweezy, Fred Wenzel.\nDIVISION VIII.\nAlbert Deporter, Albert Euerby,\nBruce Grey, Bessie Henderson, May\nJones, Genevieve Mitchell, Mary McKinnon, George O'Keefe. Josephine\nRuzicka, Alex Shkuratoff, Tony Santano, Laura Sweezy, Polly Vatkins,\nGordon Wilkins, Alex Woods.\nDIVISION IX.\nMildred Bosworth, Ethel Boots,\nShepherd Boyce, Alberta Biddiecome,\nAlice Bird, Wilbert Cooper,Katherine\nDavis, Teresa Frankovitch, Harry\nHansen, Bruce Harkness,Isabel Hoff\nman, Chester Hutton, Dorothy Innes,\nElsie Kuftinoff, Barbara Love, Norman McDonald, Edmund McDonough\nGrace McLeod, Winnifred O'Keefe,\nElizabeth Peterson, Nick Pisacreta,\nVictor Rella, -Mary Reiben, Peter\nReiben, Felice Schaff, Edna Scott\nPhyllis Simmons.\nDIVISION x.\nLloyd Bailey. Margaret Baker,\n[June Danielson, Wilma Davis, Lola\nHut,ton,Veronica Kuva Janet Mason,\nJean McDonald, Myrtle Mitchell,\nLena Pisvcreta, Bonnie Rella, George\nRonald, George Ruzicka, Mona Rylett, Nellie Shkuratoff.\nDIVISION XI.\nEthel Boyce, Winnifred Cooper,\nDoris Egg, Robert Kidd, Mary Kuva\nFrancis McDougail, Auley Miller,\nMabel Miller. Joe Pohoda, Norman\nRoss\nL\nCredit of Province Abroad\nIs Good -- Minister of\nEducation Gives Interesting Figures\nSpecial OorresponiLetice of The Sun.\nVictoria, October3.\u2014British Columbia's credit in Great Britain is\nhigher thnn al any time in tbe past,\nstates Hon. John Hart, minister of\nfinance, wha has juet returned from\na two months' visit to tbe old country. Wbile there the minister\nstudied tbe linancial situation and\nfound interest in British Columbia\nsecurities rapidly increasing. At\npresent, said Mr. Harl, Great Britain, in common wild other European\nnations, had a great many involved\nfinancial problems to solve and until tbese had been dealt with Canada conld not expect a tremendous\ninflow of British capital. However,\nhe predicts that within a short time\nBritish money will seek investment\nin Ibis country, aud particularly in\nBritish Columbia, where the great\nwealth of natural resources promises\nsucb big returns from development\nenterprises.\nE\nOttawa, Oct. 2.\u2014Official\nannouncement was made today of the passage of an order\nin council fixing the date for\nThanksgiving day as Monday, November 12, the date\nalso set for the observance of\nArmistice day.\nHow the Dis ster\nOccurred\nA gentleman in Cincinnati employs two negroes to work on bis\nratber extensive gardens, wbicb be\npersona ly oversees. One morning\n8\u00abm did not appear.\n\"Where is Sam, Oeorge?\" he\nasked.\n\"In de hospital, Bah.\"\n\"In the hospital? Why, how iu\nthe world did that happen!\"\n\"Well, Sam he been a-telling -ne\nev'y mo'nin' fob ten yeaus he gwine\nick his wife 'cause o' her naggin'.\"\n, Well?\"\n\"Well, yestiddy sbe done oveh-\nheah him.\"\nGoing Up\nPat Murphy was on the spot\nwhen the explosion occurred and\nnot a trace of him was found. Io\nbreaking tbe news to his wifo tbe\nforeman said quietly:\n\"Mrs. Murphy, ma'am, I'm sorry,\nbut poor Pat is gone.\"\nGone,\" sbe said. \"For good?\"\n\"Well, ma'am,\" said the foreman.\n\"In that direction.\"\nIf you wish to accomplish great\nthings, bUBy yourself with what the\nmediocre refer to as \"mere details.\"\nWben laying the cornerstone of\nthe science building of the British\nColumbia university group un Fri\nday, Hon J D. MacLean, minister\nof education, gave out some interesting information repsrding th'n\nprovincial institution. Some criticism had hten directed against th\"\ngovernment for proceeding with thc\nconstruction of thp new university,\ncbieflv from centers far removed\nfrom Vancouver. But even tbis criticism has been turned into praise\nwben it was considered that the\nuniversity offered the same advar--\ntageB to the student from outsid-\npoints as it did to those from Van\n-Oliver.\nTbere are now 1200 matriculateii\nstudents in attendance, as well as\nseveral hundred taking short courspn\nTheBe come from ninety nine points\noutside of Vancouver, as well as\nfrom that city. The occupations of\nparents or guardians sending etti\ndenrs to the university are:\nProfessional men, 247; merchant--.\n178; manual laborers, 155; farmers,\n102; bookkeepers and clerks, 101;\nretired, 101; brokers, 54; miscellaneous, 189.\nThe University of British Colum\nbia is onlv eight years old, but In\nthat time the enrollment has in\ncreaBed from 360 in 1915 to 1200 in\n1923. At present thirty eight\ngraduates of tbe university [are tak\ning post-graduate courses in British,\nCanadian anil American universe\nties.\nThe erection of the new buildiug-i\nwas made possible by tbe policy\nlaid down by Hon. Dr. MacLean in\n1920, a policy which received the\nunanimous support of the legisla*\nlure.\nThrough Hon. William Sloan,\nminister of mines, negotiations have\nbeen reopened with the Canadian\nPacific Railway company for a settlement of the tong-standing settle!:-'\nrights problem on Vancouver island,\nDual control of minerals in the\n2,000,000 acre E. & N. belt has\nmade it difficult for mining to develop, and recently President E. W.\nBeatty went into the matter fully,\nwitb tbe result that a ,-olutioo iB in\nsight.\nContinued on I'agt 4* THB BUN: GBAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nUfa (Sratii 3fark3 \u00a7mt\nAN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER\nG. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\nSsVSUBSORIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANOE\nOne Year (in Canada and Great Britain) 11.00\nOne Year (in the United States) 1.50\nAddresr -\"\u25a0 ~\u2014'cations to\njThk Gkand Foiik.i Sun\nPhonb 101R Giukij Forks, B. CJ\nOFFICE: COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1923\nNotes, Notions and Notables\nThe address of the member for Grand\nForks at the opening of the fair last Thursdays, which we print on another page of this\nissue, contains some interesting statistical\nmatter and is sufficiently optimistic in tone\nto warrant the people who are now residents\nof this district not to be in a hurry to change\ntheir location. Like every other sensible person, Mr. Henniger has faith in the Boundary\ncountry, because we have a fine climate, pro.\nducing orchards, fertile land to be brought\nunder cultivation, and rich mineral and timber resources. All that is required to start a\nhealthy growth of the entire district is to do\na little more development work on the various resources. The \"boomster\" can be dispensed with, because the \"prosperity\" he creates is fictitious, and the reaction usually\nleaves the community in a worse condition\nthan prevailed before he made his appearance on the scene.\nAerial travel in Europe is more popular\nthan in this country. It is said that seventy\nplanes are in operation between France and\nthe northern coast towns of Afriea. In one\nday the same pilot in an aerial taxi carried\npassengers from London 10 Manchester and\nback and then from London to Amsterdam\narid back. In all he Hew about one thousand\nmiles.\nisn't,'she seriously responded,'but we were\nafraid of the shock yon might get.' Why, what\nshock?' 'Well, there was a big fire just across\nthe street, and were afraidJf you awoke, and\nsaw the flames, you might think that the\noperation hadn't been successful.'\"\n\"Metal Mike\" is a mechanical instrument\nthat, on being hooked up to a gyro-compass\nand the steering wheel of a vessel, automatically holds the vessel to a straight course.\nThe instrument is sensitive enough to detect\na variation of one-sixth of a degree, whereas\nthe most skillful human control can do no\nbetter than one degree. Despite the keenest\nwatchfulness a helmsman will let his vessel\n\"fall off\" many times, but \"Metal Mike\" never\ndoes. In a rocen* test with the instrument in\ncontrol the rudder of a large steamer did not\nmove for twenty-seven minutes. Such steadi -\nness greatly lessens lateral sea pressure tha t\ncomes from a wavering course and results in\nconsiderable saving of time and fuel.\nRecently, a newspaper dispatch from Chicago declared that a highly edncated man,\nwhose uame it gave, a civil engineer by pro-\nfess:on, and a holder of several aeademic degrees, had declined the offer of a professorship\nin a college unspecified in order to become a\nplasterer at $104 a week in ChicaSo. We do\nuot know whether the dispatch is authentic or\nnot; but it is completely plausible. At present\npay a young man who wants money will do\nbetter at plasteriug than at professional work\nof any sort. Whether he will be better off\ntwenty years from now is another matter. .\nSince several countries in Europe quote\ntheir paper money circulation in trillions, it\nmay be interesti; g to try to grasp what a tril-\nlioo is. Some experts in the treasury at Washington can count four thousand silver dollars\nan hour. Such an expert working eight hours\na day would need a hundred years to count a\nbillion dollars. A thousand experts would\nneed one hundred years to count a trillion.\nThere seems to be hope still of the United\nStates becoming a member of the Leagne of\nNations. Senator Underwood in a speech to\nthe Alabama legislature expressed his willingness to be the presidential candidate of his\npany. He delared that, although he had opposed the eighteenth amendment and the\nVolstead act, he stood for rigid enforcement\nof what is the law of the land; and he expressed the hope that thc Democratic convention would pledge the party, if successful\nin the elections, \"to take our place in international affairs.\"\nThe California Fruit Growers' exchange\nsalvages its by products. Last year its plant\nat Corona worked up 6.50 carloads of cull\nlemons into citric acid and lemon oil. Another\nplant handles 80carloads of cull oranges a\nmonth, converting them into orange oil, concentrated orange juice for beverages, orange\nvinegar, marmalade and orange peel. The\nrefuse furnishes pectin, which is the substance\nthat causes fruit juices to jelly.\nThere are several distinct good stories in\nthe recently published \"Reminiscences\" of\nGeorge H. Ham. Hero is one of them. He\nunderwent a serious operation, and on losing\nconsciousness his thought was, \"This is eternity.\" \"When I recovered from the effects of\nthe opiate, I found myself in a darkened room\nand wondared where I was and what it was\nall about. The kindly-featured nurse quickly\ndiscovered that my consciousness had returned, and came to my bedside, and then I\nremembered everything, 'But why this dark\nroom? It was early morning when they operated on me, but now it can't be night.' 'No, it\nCaptain E. T. Pollock,governor of American\nSamoa, reports the finding of a turtle that\nhad been left on the Tonga islands by Captain\nJames in 1773. According to Captain Pollock's report, the turtle exhibited signs of extreme age; it was blind and when walking\ncreaked like an oxcart.\nAt the Institute of Politics at Williams-\ntown, Mass, Mr. Bakhmeteff, formej Russian\nambassador to the United States, predicted\nthe ultimate fall of the soviet government.\nHe based his prediction on the fact that the\ncommunists are waging a losing fight against\nthe growing demand of the peasants for individualism and ownership of their lands. He\nlooked forward toa new Russia in which individualism and equality of opportunity, operating as tbey do in the United States, would\nbring prosperity and happiness. Social revenge has run its course, he thinks; and the\npeasant is becoming an independent farmer.\n\"Lloyd George sails for Canada\u2014Great\npreparations being made for his reception in\nNew York.\"\u2014Headlines in daily paper. Ah,\nwell, let it go at that\u2014perhaps the geography\nof the continent has changed since we weut\nto school.\nE.G. Henniger Co.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nS. T. HULL\n.Established 1910 B^\nReal Estate and Insurance\n.Resident Agent annul Forks Townsite\na Company, Limited\nGBAND FOBKS\nTransfer Company\nDAVIS S HANSEN. Prop.\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal,\nOffice at R. E. Petrie'i\nPbone 64\nIn China more new roads have been built\nin the past five years than in any previous five\ndecades. Over the new roads Americun motor\nbusses are running. Fares are cheap, and the\nChinese people after their first alarm are on-\nthosiastic customers When the cost of building dirt roads and of transportation is as low\nas it is in China a new industrial order for a\nquarter ofthe human race may come quickly.\nC.V. Meggitt\n\u2022'\"ZIBsusl Estate and Insurance\nOKCHABDS, FARM LANDS AND CITY\nPROPERTY\nExcellent facilities fot selling your (arms\nWe hare agents \u00bbt all Coast and Prairie\nPolnta\nWB CABBY AUTOMOBILE INSURANCB.\nDBALBB IN POLES, POSTS AND TIBS.\nAND FABM PBODUCB\nReliable Information rosrardlntrthls dlstrot\noheerfully furnished, wit sollolt your inquiries.\nOf the one hundred and soventy thousand\nactive clergymen in the United States, only\nsixteen hundred and seventy-one paid an income tax last year on incomes of more than\n$3000.\nc^ncient History\nItenu Taken Prom The Orand Porks Sun for the Corretpondtnti\n'Week Twenty Yeart Afo\nlias sent\nW H. Covert, the well known fruit grower,\nan exhibit of fruit to the Nelson fair.\nJ. A. McCallum, city treasurer, and family returned\nfrom Toronto on Wednesday.\nThe bridge at the Yale hotel bas been raised three feet\nand ls again open for traffic.\nContractor Wilson has moved the Addison building\nfrom Riverside avenue to First street.\nDennis Peon had the misfortune to lose most of this\nseason's crop by fire this week.\nArchie Connors was accidentally killed at the Emma\nmine this week.\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\n\"Tobacconist\nDealer in:\nHavana Cigars* Pipe*\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\n(irand Forks, B. C.\nCity Real Estate Tor\nSale\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPrices i\u2014From $25.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms i\u2014-Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be seen at the\nCity Office. ^^^^^\nJOHN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nFarms Orchards City Property\n^Agents at Nelson, Calgary, Wlhnlpeff ami\nother Prairie points. Vanoouver Agents:\nPKNDBH INVESTMENTS\nBATTBNBUBY LANDS LTD.\nEstablished In 1910. we are ln a position to\nfurnish reliable information concerning this\ndistrict.\nWrite lor free literature\nAMMUNITION\nWe have a complete Une of shot shells and\nrifle ammunition. 16, 20, 12 and 10 ga. shot\nshells. All sizes rifle ammunition. Let us\nAll your requirements for the hunting season.\nFor the dark evening try an EVER-READY\nFLASHLIGHT. A full stock of batteries.\nFRUIT LADDERS at reduced prices.\n8 ft. $1.80 10 ft. $6.00 12 ft. $7.20\nMILLER & GARDNER\nHardware and Furniture\nWood and Ice I\nfor Sale\nStor.\n\"The living voice affects men moro\nthan what they read \"\u2014Pliny, the Younger.\nYour voice conducts your business.\nDirections that you give personally are\nquickly and accurately executed, because\nyour associates cannot fail to understand.\nEach inflection has a meaning of its own.\nRemember the telephone when you\nwould confer with those interested with\nyou in business. Do not trust the cold\nwritten word\u2014send your voice, yourself\nby long distance telephone. '\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMIN6\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly Don\nR. G. MoCUTCHEON\nWIMM6 AVMOI\nIt's the worst wheel that\nmakes the most noise in the\nworld. \t\nIf you greatly admire a\nquality you have at least a\na trace of it yourself.\nCanadian Blind Babies' Home\n(Nursery, Hospital aad kindergarten\nDominion Charter, Without Stook Subscription.\nDIRECTORS\u2014Hon. Martin Burrell, Hun. President; Hou. J. G. Turriff'\nPresident; A.. H, PitMimaioiu, Vice-l'.'siident; K-lw.ir.1 Grand, Secretary!\nC. Blackett Robinson, Cor, Secretary; J. P. McKinley, Treasurer; Lt.-Col.\nWhiton, M.D, R. H. Campbell, Thomas Mulvey, K.C, A. E Provost, W.\nLyle Reid, A. J. Frein***, Charles H Pinhey, G. IS., W. J. Cairns, and Tom\nMoore.\nTRUSTEES\u2014C. H. Pinhey, CE, Thomas Mulvey. K.C, A. J. Preidma n\nLegal Adviser Banker* Auditor\nJohn I. MacCracken, K.C. Royal Bank of Canada. A. A. Crawley, C. A.\nThe Objects of this Institution, for which Incorporation was recently ob*\ntained, are: \"To provide a Home and Refuge for Baby aod Infant Blind; to\nprovide free Scientific Care, Training and Maintenance; to Save the Lives of\neven a few of the many of such unfortunates, who, for the lack of suoh service, perish every year; and to return these little ones to their parents, at\nsohool age with normal, healthy bodies and sound minds'.\"\nThis iu a large and graatly needed Child Welfare Service. Careful enquiry\nat the Qovernment offices in the verious provinces reveals the fact that there\nare at the presant time nearly 250 Infant Blind in the Dominion, Nothing\nhas yet been done for those helpless little ones. In the United States, 16\nyears ago, the first home was opened in New York City; they have now homes\nin 13 States, all doing excellent work. In England, some time ago, Sir Arthur Pearson organized \"Sunshine House,\" Chorley Wood, for Blind Babies,\nand he claims that it is the only one ia the British Empire. Let us have the\nSECOND in Canada. To reach this worthy end money is urgently required.\nFifty Thousand Dollars is the present objective of the Boajd. While the\nHome is to be located in Ottawa it will take in the Baby Blind from every\nprovince, so that this APPEAL for funds will be Dominion wide, and an\nearly and generous response is confidently expected. Cheques should be made\npayable to the Canadian Blind Babies Home Association. All remittances\nwill be promptly acknowledged.\nTell The People\nWhat You Hare\nto Sell THESTTN: GRAND POBKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nRelief for Famine Sufferer?\n..jsspress of Russia at Vancouver loading supplies for the earthquake stricken thousands of jisp.. .\nWith every available inch ol her cargo space crammed with foodstuffs and a capacity stock of ships starts, sufficient\nto replenish the supplies of the Empress of Canada and the Empress of Australia, on relief duty off the Japanese\ncoast, the Canadian Pacific S.S. Empress of Russia was the first relief ship to arrive. She carried consignments of flour,\ncanned milk and canned salmon amounting to 350 tons, from the Canadian governmenl.. The British Columbia branch of\nlhe Canadian Red Cross sent twenty tons of canned milk and fifty tons of other canned food-stuffs, while thc Vancouver\nfapancse Association contributed an initial shipment of fifty tons of flour for their famine stricken countrymc\" More\nthan two hundred & twenty-five of the \"Russia's\" three thousand tons of cargo was of flour\nNova Scotia Interior as Moose Pasture\nH\u00b0i\nSam\nClode\nIndian Guide\niova ,*>LOtia .., a country of lakes\nand streams, offering many ide-il\n\u2022nnoe trips, and the interior is ::\nj*xeat moose pasture. Idea!, tor,\nis the moose hunting, because both\nthc canoe and automobile are used\nby hunters and guides, thus savinir\nmany miles of weary hiking\nthrough the wilderness. On tho\nLiverpool chain of lakes reached\nfrom South Milford via Annapolis\nRoyal or Digby, and on Lake Ked-\ngemakooge, Lake Rossignol, Lake\nMunro, Loon Lake and the Liverpool River expert Indian and whllu\nguides use the canoes for long distances and even call the moose to\nthe shore with their birch bark\nhorns. When some distant point is\nto be reached from \"Del\" Thomas'\nSouth Milford camp, canoes, guides,\nhunters and duffle are loaded upon\na big motor truck for the journey.\nSouth Milford is 15 miles from\nAnnapolis Royal and is a favorite\noutfitting point. So Is the Kedge-\nmakooge Rod and Gun Club, on\nfamous Lake Kedgemakooge, in the\nheart of the wilderness 36 miles\nfrom Annapolis Royal. Both of\nthese camps have ample accommodations and plenty of canoes and\nreliable guides.\nThe Nova Scotian moose season\nlasts from Oct. 1 to Nov. 16. Deer\nare as plentiful as moose, and the\nopen season for this game lasts from\nOct. 16 to Nov. 81.\n., \u25a0.-.. .-.\u2122_. Louie\n<:... ^HAPUOlV,\nExpert Mootse CAu.ee\nAlthough iargu numbers ol moose\nire shot each year, many with Btasf*\nificent \"spreads,\" the annual fc>-\nmnsn is said to equal the kill.\nSuch guide'' as Louis Harlow, half-\nbreed Micmac and Sam Globe, fuB-\nbloodad Indian, are expert moose\ncaller.-, and stalkers and rarely dls-\nippoirt the hunter. The cleverness\nwith which they simulate the caOs\n)f the cow moose with a simple roll\nif birch bark fashioned Into a horn,\nis sure to fool the wisest old bull\nin the wilderness. When the calling\nseason is past, the moose no longer\ncomes to the hunter and the hunter\nmust go to him. Neither canoe,\nnor automobile figures much in this\nphase of moose hunting except that\n:>ne, or both, may help the hunter\nnear the place where the quarry is\nsupposed to be and carry mm home\nwhen the hunt is over.\nMETALLURGY\nUNLESS you see the name \"Bayer\" on tablets, you\nare not getting Aspirin at all\nAccept only an \"unbroken package\" of \"Bayer Tablets of\nAspirin,\" which contains directions and dose worked out by\nphysicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for\nColds Headache Rheumatism\nToothache Neuralgia Neuritis\nEarache Lumbago Pain, Pain\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tablets\u2014Also bottles of 24 and 100\u2014Druggists.\nAspirin is the trade mark (registered In Canada) of Bayer Msnufactmeor Mono-\nSfctlcacldester of Salicyllcacld. Whllo it Is we 1 known that Aspirin******* \u00ab-\u00bb\"\nmanufacture, to assist the public asalnst***Wb?mW^***<**m?&*r c<\"W\u00bbay\nwlU ba stamps* with their general trada mark, tha Bayer cross.\nHeretofore the annual -jeneral\nmeetings of the British Columbia dis.\nvision of the Canadian Institue of\nMining and Metallurgy have been\nheld in Vancouver, as being, on the\nwhole, the most convenient center for\ngatherings of this kind. A departure\nis being made this year, however, in\nIhe decision to hold a general meet\ning in Trail, with the dual purpose of\nenabling eoast members to acquaint\nthemselves with the important mining and metallurgical developments\ntaking place in the Kootenays, and of\nindicating to Kootenay members and\nmining men the interest of the institute in their concerns and problems.\nThis meeting will be held on Wednes\nday, Thnrsday and Friday, .October\n17, 18 and 19, and a cordial invitation is extended tn all mining men,\nwhether they are members or not, to\nattend.\nThe program arrangements are in\ncharge of a committee under the capable ahairmanship of M. E. Pureell,\nof Rossland, who uow announce that\na number of papers covering a wide\nrange of subjects of timely interest\nwill be presented for discussion, in.\neluding, \"A Symposium on the Min\ning and Treatment of Sullivan Ores,\"\nby S. G. Blaylock, VV. M. Archibald,\nB. Q. Montgomery, R. W. Diamond.\nE. M. Styles, J. Buchanan, Geo. J.\nMurray, B. A. Stimmel and J. G,\nFingland; \"Mining and Smelting\nOperations at Anyox,\" by L R.CIapp;\n\"Recent Mining and Metallurgical\nDevelopments at Britannia,\" by W.\nM Brewer; \"The History and Progress of Mining in the Kootenays,\"\nby S. 8 Fowler; \"The General Geology and Ore Deposits of the Grand\nForks, Greenwood, Osoyoos and\nSimilkameen Mining Divisions,\" by\nP. B. Freeland; \"Undiscovered Mines\nof British Columbia,\" by Dr. L. W.\nUglow; \"Small Scale Mining Operations and Their Problems,\" by A. E.\nLangley; \"'The'.Sulphur Industry,\"\nby F. W. Guernsey, and \"Publicity\nand the Mining Industry,\" by C. M.\nCampbell.\nIn addition, visits will be made to\nthe Trail works and possibly also to\nthe Rossland mines. Nor has the\ncommittee forgotten to provide for\nentertainment of a lighter sort, and\nit may be affirmed that the provisions\nin this respect will prove by no means\nthe least attractive features of the\nprogram.\nTen Commandments\nFor the Motorist\nThe ten commandments of good\ndriviug are as follows:\n1. Drive on tbe right side of the\nrnad; it is just as good as the left.\n2. Slow down when approaching\nt crossroad; it is nearly as dangerous as a railroad crossing.\n3. Look out for children, ~~* (ou\ncan never tell what they will do,and\nyou are always in the wrong if you\nhit one.\n4. Try to help instead of hinder\nthe traffic officer; he is there for\nyour goof', and he's got a lough job.\n5. Be sure that your \"dimmers\"\nreilly dim; it's no joke driving into\na blinding glare, as you probably\nknow.\n6. Read and obey tbe warning\nsigns; tbey are not put up as ornaments.\n7. If you feel you've got to speed\n\u2014do it where it won't kill anybody\nbut yourself.\n8 When making minor repairs\nstop where your car may be seen\nfrom both directions; otherwise you\nmay stop longer than you anticipate.\n9. Speeding around comers is a\nstraight route to the hospital. Don'i.\nrace past a Btopped street car. Some\nA Wheat crop of 382,514.000 bush.\n\u2022la is forecasted in a report issued\nby the Dominion Bureau of Statis-\ntlw. The report is based upon the\ncondition ef crops at the end of July,\n\u2022nd Indicates that the Prairie Prov.\ntaees will produce 857,295,000 bush-\n\u2022ls ef wheat if weather conditions\ncontinue favorable. Manitoba, it is\n\u2022SfMcte-i. will have a total wheat\nrUM of 44.46S.000 bushels; Saskatchewan 211,051,000; nnd Alberta\n101,778,000 bushels. Alberta is the\n\u2022niy province to show an increased\n\u2022fioli as com pared with 1022.\n\u00bb \u2014\u2014\nA party of five Journalists, rep.\nresenting the leading newspapers\nof Switzerland, who recently arrived\nat Quebec, are the truest* in Canada\n\u2022f E. W. Beatty, President of th\u00ab\nCanadian Pacific Railway. They\nwill tour the Dominion in ths inter*\nests of Swiss colonisation. Stops\nwill be made at different points\nwhere Swiss people ars fanning, and\nopportunity will be given to mem.\nbers of the party to converse with\ntbem and prct first hand knowledge\n\u25a0s to the desirability of Canada ra\ns place for Swiss colonists.\nIn a letter en \"Canada snd Land\nSettlement.\" published by the Morn-\nIns; Post, Sir Geo. McLaren Brown,\nEuropean manager of the Canadian\nPacific Railway, says tl-nt the agri-\ncultural salvaH\"n of Western Can-\nada lies In nixed farming, which\ncalls for smaller nnd more numerous\nagricultural holdings than whest\ngrowing does, and results in closer\nsettlement nnd better communication. The bitrger and more deinrly\nsettled the rural population, th.\nmore soelR' Blrienltlei: there arc ind\ngreater ad.antages generally,* ha\n\u2022an,\nday the jury will call it manslaugha\nter.\n10. Use discretion. Tbe fact tnat\nyou had tbe right of way won't\nbring anybody back to'life, least of\nall yourself.\nThe shortest\nthing in the\nworld\u2014\nisn't a mosquito's eyelash or a gnat's\nwhisker, or any other part of any insect\nwhatsoever-- IT IS THE MB.If OR Y OF\nTHE PURLIC.\nIf you doubt this ask the first men\nmen you meet the follow!u * questions!\nSt When did the R31 cross the Atlantic?\nWho was her pilot? On What date was\nLord Kitchener drowned? What was\nthe name of the ship that blew up and\nalmost wiped out the city of Halifax?\nWhat Ger.nan submarine torpedoed\nthe Lusi)ania?\nIt is a safe bet that you would not\nget one correct answer.\nNow do you see the necessity of persistent advertising? When the details\nof events of world wide importance are\nso soon forgotten how do you expect\nthe public to remember you unless\nYOU TELL'EM-and keep telling them?\nADVERTISE!\n1\nOne step won't take very far,\nJYou've got to keep on walking;\n' JOne word won't tell folks who you are,\nYou've got to keep on talking;\nOne inch won't make you very tall,\nYou've got to keep on growing;\nOne little ad. won't do it all,\nYou've got to keep them going.\nr\nBrown started out without a cent;\nHe's rioh now and still rising;\nSome say 'twas luck; some say 'tw\npluck;\nHE says 'twas advertising. TBI BUN: GBAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\ni'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFOR FINE PRINTING\nNews of the Gity\nMayor U, H. Hull returned od\nTuesday \u00ab ven in g from a tbree weeks'\nvacation trip to the cotst. Mr. Hull\nvisited in'ist of tbe cities and town?\non the island and the oiiinland, a^\nwell as deiule and other Sound\npoints. Mrs. Hull remiiued oo lhe\ncoast for a little longer visit with\nfriends.\nThe packing bouse is still working on tha Molutoshes. The quality\nof this yariety of apples here this\nyear is superb and oan not bt surpassed anywhere oa the continent.\nThe local manager of tbe Assor\nciated Growers stales that the outlook for advantageously marketing\nthe winter apple crop is improving\nand that he believes tbat tbe\nranchers will realize fair returns.\nDonald, tbe two-year-old son of\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Bri .kiuau, of\nDanville, who died at the Grand\nKorks hospital early Saturday morning, was buried from the home of\nP. J. Lyden in tbis city on Monday\nafternoon.\nH. B. l'enny, Dominion inspector\nof electricity and gas was in the\ncity on Wednesday and tested a\nnumber of tue electric meters uow\nin use here,\nThe local manager of the Associated Growers states tbat the price\nof MacB will be advanced 10c per\nbox ou tbe prairie uexl week,\nGrapes\u2014Be ve your order with\nA. D. jMorrisop for jellying and\neating grapes. 7c per lb., bulk .\nJohn GriiBsick, tbe jeweller, is\nvisiting in Uhcle Sam s domaiu for\na few days mis weels.\nA. D. Morrison's grape crop this\nyear will amount to about two tons.\nFour of the Cnnadian Pacific\n\"Empress\" liners, the Jiritain, the\nFrance, the Scotland and the India,\narc to load |*rain at Quebec during\nthe 102;' season, and new berths\nhave been provided for these vessels\nnear the grain conveyors, at a cost\nOf $300,000.\nWhen she was alighting from \u2022\nstreet car in Vancouver, Mrs. Rose\nMcLaren received injuries which prevented her from concentrating and\ntemporarily did away with her earning power ns a spiritualist or psychic\nreader. She was awarded $1,260\nagainst the railway company.\nThe addition of the 17,000-ton\n\"Montlauricr\" to the Canadian Pacific \"Mono Class\" fleefc marks an\nimportant development. Not only is\nshe the largest one-class-cabin ship\nsailing to and from Canadian ports,\nbut she is lhe largest in her class on\nthe Atlantic. Her length is 613 feet\nand breadth 68 feet. Because of her\nsize -she will sail to and from Quebec.\nApproximately H.fiOO tons of silver\nore are waiting shipment from the\nKeno Hill, Yukon, mines. This\nquantity represents the winter haul.\nAnother 2 000 tons may be moved\nthis summer, making the total silver\nshipments ten thousand tons for\n1923. Such m output is worth about\n$2,000,000, high grade ore running\nfrom $200 to $300 per ton.\n\"The greate ' Teat of steam trans-\nportal inn to mv knowledge,\" said C.\nE. Stockdlll, of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway, reci fitly, \"was the movement of the g in crop of 1022.\"\nFrom Sept. 1 to Nov. 81, a period\nof 91 days, the Canadian Pacific\nRailway loaded and shipped an average of 1,20\"* cars per day. This re-\nQuiring the dispatching of a train\nevery 46 minutes during that entire\nreriod, carrying more thnn 1.000,000\nushels daily. This movement exceeded even that of the bumper crop\nTear of 1915\nOne of the many instances of the\n\u2022plendid work carried out at the\nLiverpool docks is afforded by the\nCanadian Pacific liner \".Metagama.\"\nOn a recent arrival at that port she\nstarted the discharge of her cargo\n\u2022nd coaling at fi o'clock in the morning. Allowing for the usual dinner\nfcour, she took un board in her side\nbunkers 1,000 tons of coal, which\nwas completed by 2.<1F> the same\nafternoon. At the same time she\ndischarged 1,700 tons of cargo, the\n(Treat or pari ol which consisted of\npackage freight, completing thi*-\noperation hy 7.16 tht- same evenin'\n|\n**\niiere and! here\n]\nlhe total quantity of sea fisk\n.! 1 on both the Atlantic and\n\"jific coasts during the month of\nly was 322,043 cwts., valued at\n:,7i 1,110 to the fishermen, compar-\nwith a catch of 873,382 c-wts.\nilued at $2,596,730 in July, 1922.\nCattle in north Al'berta's livestock\nherds now number more than 2,000,-\n000, This industry and also the\n.\".vine industry have increased amazingly in the northern part of tbe\nProvince in the last few years.\nCarrying large consignments from\nthi Dominion Government and the\nBritish Columbia branch of ths\nCanadian Red Cross, ths Canadian\nPaciflo S.S. Empress of Russia was)\nthe first ship from the American\ncontinent to arrive with relief for\nt!:' earthquake and famine stricken\npi opie of Japan\nNearly $10,000 in fur royaltite\nwas collected in The Pas, Man., by\nthe chief game warden last winter.\nThis does not include the royalties\ncollected from the Hudson Bay Co-in-\npi'iy and Revillon Freres, which will\ni 'ore than double this amount. Thia\ndocs not include moneys secured\nthrough taxes, licenses and ether\nSources of revenue.*\nCreamery butler made in Alberta\ntook a total of 149 prizes out of 2M\nprizes offered, or 63 per cent., at exhibitions at Edmonton, Calgary, Regina, Brandon, Saskatoon and Vancouver this year. Out of 11 open\nchampionships offered, Alberta butter took 8. In the Calgary exhibition\nsix provinces competed, in thr-se\nothers four provinces competed, and\nin two others three provinces competed. . ,\nBritish Columbia has reached tke\npeak of the biggest tourist season\nin her history, and it is estimated\nthat as a result of the enormous\ntravel and the expenditure of transients while in the province thia\nsummer, will be worth at least $30,-\n000,000. The opening of the Banftf-\nWindermere motor highway through\nCanada's rock garden was largely\nrespon~'b!e for this increase in tourist traffic through tbs Pacific province. ,\nGold producers in the Province ef\nOntario during the first six months\nof 1923 report production of 384,-\n446 ounces gold and 65,444 ounces\nsilver, of a total value of $7,244,081\nshipped by the Porcupine producers,\nand from the Kirklsnd Lake producers 69,691 ounces gold and 6,615\nounces silver, of a total value \u00bbf\n$1,402,873, or from the two camp*\na total value of $8,646,954.\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway will\ncontribute $25,000 for the relief of\nthe sufferers in Japan and have also\ndecided that supplies ef Canadian\nfood-stuffs and clothing donated, or\npurchased with money donated for\nrelief work, will be transported free\nover the Company's rail and steamship lines. President E. W. Beatty\nmade this announcement while making a tour over the Company's lines\nin the West with a party of directors.\nHe added that this action had been\ntaken because of the reports of the\nintense hardships due to the disaster,\nand notwithstanding the fact that\nthe Company had lost heavily by the\ncatastrophe.\nThe following editorial recently\nappeared in the Windsor \"Border\nCities Star\": A recent cargo of silk,\nen route from China to New York,\nwas snipped via Vancouver and the\nCanadian Pacific Railroad and crossed the St. Lawrence to Ogdensburg,\nNew York, instead of being sent\nacross the United States from San\nFrancisco. The incident offers something for Canadians to think about.\nIt proves what a splendid service\nthe Canadian Pacific offers in its\nrail and steamship lines. In a country like Canada, transportation is all\nessential, and the way the Canadian\nPacific has carried on, in spite of\nthe business difficulties which began with the war and are not yst\nsmoothed out, is a credit to the nation which conceived it.\nAgain, the incident calls attention\nto Canada's splendid gateway to the\nEast. Although China is in a chaotic\npolitical' condition just now, the\nhuge Oriental nation offers wonderful trade, chances in the future. Ne\nnation is better placed for getting its\nshare of this business than Canada,\nGROCERIES\nOur Groceries are constantly moving,\nand they are therefore always fresh and\nin prime condition. We make a specialty\nhigh grade Teas and Coffees.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25 H. H. Henderson, Prop.\nPROVINCIAL NEWS\nFROM THE CAPITAL\nConcluded from Page 1.\nAnswering charges W. J. Bowiser,\nleader of the opposition in tbe legist\nlature, tbat government officials\nwere spending $1000 a day running\naround the country in automobiles,\nHon. W. H. Sutherland, minister of\npublic works, bas prepared a statement in refutation. Tbis sbows tbe\ndaily cost to be $275, or ones-quarter\nthe figure mentioned by Mr. Bowser\nTbe cost is small considering the\namount of work done, contends Mr.\nSutherland.\nHon. E. D. Borrow, minister of\nagriculture, is bome from the old\ncountry and reports that conditions\nare most promising for tbe securing\nby British Columbia of a large number of selected settlers from Geeat\nBritain.\nBE\nDEAFNESS CAN\nCURED\nDEAFNESS, NOISRS IN TUK HEAD AND\nNASAL C ATA Mill\nThe new Continental rume ly called\n\"LARMALENE\" (Kcgd.)\nis a simple harmless home-treatment wbich\nabsolutely I'tii-ct deafness, noiHcs lis tho head,\neto. NO KXPKNSIVKiAPl'LIANCK** NBBDKD\nfor. this new 'Hutment, instantly operates\nupon the affected putts with complete and\npermanent success. SCORES OF WONDERFUL CURBS EBPOHEI).\nRELIABLE TESTIMONY.\nBIDETHERBON CLEVELAND\nIT brings the whole country for miles around within easy reach.\nHave you seen the new models? They're as graceful as swallows! As\nbright as new coinl As weatherproof as a duck? Automobile Steel\nBearings. Frame of English Seamless Steel Tubing. Hard Maple\nRims. Hercules Brake. Everything complete. Real Quality. Real\nValue. Easy Terms. We are tbe people'to mount you right.\nJ. R. MOOYBOER gE^\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3ra\nO >en Saturday Evenings 111110 o'Cloek\nSOME PROVIDER\n\"Is your husband much of\na provider, Milandy?\"\n\"He jes' ain't nothin' else,\nma'am. He gwine to git some\nnew furniture providin' he git\nde money; he gwine to git de\nmoney providin' he go to\nwork; he go to work providin' de job suits him. I never\nsee such a providin' man in\nall niah days.\"\nTbe only trouble with \"the\nheight of fashion\" ia having to wear\nit long time after tbe \"height\" has\nchanged.\nIf you wart to have a friend, be\none.\nThe Long-Suffering Eyes\nWhat strange liberties, says the\nBoston Transcript, do our story\nwriters take with their characters'\neyes. Here are a few:\n\"Her eyes roamed carelessly\nround the room.\"\n\"With her eyes she riveted him\nto the spot.\"\n\"He tore his eyes from her face,\naud they fell on tbe letter st her\nfeet.\"\n\"He drank her in with drowning\neyes.\"\n'\u25a0Their eyes met for a long,breathless moment and swam together.\"\n\"Marjorie would often take her\neyes from tbe deck and cast tbem\nfar out to sea.\"\n\"He tore hia eyes away from\nhers, causing intense pain to botb.\"\nWe should think it would.\nAlthough warnings against the\nfore-tfire menace have been sent out\nrepeatediy, Hon. T. D, Pattullo,\nminister of lands, has another appeal\nto make to the citizens of British\nColumbia. The hazardous season has\narrived and care during the next two\nmontha will mean a saving of millions\nof dollars.\nMrs. K. Wilkinson, of Slnd Road. Stroud,\nwrites:\u2014\"Please could trouble you to send\nme another box of the Ointment, lt is not for\ninyHc.f, but for a friend of mine who is as bad\nas I was,end cannot get any rest for the uolses\nin lhe iiea(i. I feel a new womau, and oan (to\nto bed now and tret a good night's rest, woich\n1 had not been able to do ior many months.\nIt is a wonderful remedy and I am most delighted to recommend it.\" : . .\nMrs. E. Crowe, of VVIiitenorse Road. Croydon, writes: -\"1 am pleased to toll you that\nthe small tin of ointment you sent to nse at\nVentnor, has proved a complete success, ray\nhearing is now quite normal, and the horrible head noi-ses have eeased. The notion ol\nthis new remedy must be very remarkable,\nfor I have bcen troubled with these complaints for nearly ten years, uud have had\nsome of the very best medical advice together\nwith other expensive instruments all to no\npurpose. I need hardly say how very grateful I am, for my life has undergone an entire\nchange. \t\nTry one box to-day,which can be forwarded\nto any address on receipt of money order for\n\u00bb1.00. THERE IS NOTHIG11ETTBK AT ANT\nPRICE.\nAddress orders to:\u2014\nTHB \"LARMAXBl-vJB\" CO.,\n10, South View, Wistliut- St., Oartford,\nKent, England.\nPlacer mining in Mongolia is a\nprimitive process compared even with\nthe American pioneer method of wash\ning out gold in a pan. The Mongol \u2014\nso Dr. Ferdinand Ossoudowski tells\nua iu his book Beasts, Men and Gods\n\u2014lies flat on the ground, brushes the\nsand aside with a feather and keeps\nblowing iuto the little excavation so\nformed. From time to time he wets\nhis flnger and, picking upon it a small\nbit of grain gold or a diminutive nug \u2022\nget, drops it into a little bag hanging\nunder his chin. In that way he collects adout a quarter of an ounce, or\nfive dollars' worth of gold a day.\nTIMBER SALE X5558\nSEALED TENDERS will be received by tbe\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, not later than\nuoon on the Uth day of October, l'J-23,\nfor the purohase of Licence X5558, near\nCastle Mountain, Cascade, to cut 2500 H\u00bbwn\nTies.\nOne year will be allowed lor removal of\ntimber.\nFurther particulars of the District Forester, Nelson.\nDon't regret too mu:h your ups\nand downs; after all the only man\nwho has none is in tbe cemetery.\nIt is time to begin to worry about\nnext wintet's fuel.\nRADIO RADIO\nSee our new Shop, just opening up,\nin the\nOLD OPERA HOUSE BUILDING,\nWINNIPEG AVENUE.\nWc Will Carry\na Pull Line of\nLong distance Receiving\nSets\u2014several makes.\nAlso\nElectrical Supplies\nand will do\n'All kinds of Electrical Re\nParts to Build Your Own\nSets.\npair Work.\nHouse Wiring.\nYALE GENERAL ELECTRIC\nWINNIPEG AVENUE\n$495\nMEN'S WORK SHOES\n$4,95\nGall at Donaldson's and\nsee the best buy in men's\nwork shoes on the market today.\nAlso don't forget to look\nat the new line of\nCHILDREN'S\nELK SHOES\nThese are real bargains.\nNOTICE OF CANCELLATION OF\nRESERVE.\nNOTICK IS HKKEBY GIVEN that the reserve\ncovering Lots iSOSs, 2807s and 8908s, Similkameen Division ol Tale District, is cancelled.\nQ.E. NADBN,\nDeputy Minister of Lands\nDepartment of Lands,\nVletoria, B.C..\nSeptember 21. 1921.\nDonalds\n'onaidson s\nPhone 30 v\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nTAgent\nDominion Monumental Worka\nAab-natoa Products Co. Roofing\nESTIMATES FURNISNED\nBOX 332\nIGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nCounter\nCheck Books\nWe have secured the\njiigency for Grand\nForks of a large\nWestern Publishing\nHouse which manufactures a superior\ngrade of Counter\nCheck Books\u2014carbon back and carbon\nleaf styles.\nPrices Are Right\nEncourage Western\nenterprises and keep\nWestern money in\nthe West.\nAny Quantity\nfrom 100 up to 2500\nbooks.\nThe Sun\nJoib Department\nOur\nHobby\nis\n\u2022Good\nPrinting\n-THllE value of well-\nprinted* neat appearing stationery aa\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBail programs\nBusiness cards\nVisiting cards\nSh'pping tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists ,\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\n! Posters\nMenus\nNew Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColombia Arenas and\nlake Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nTHE HUB\u2014Bring your boot\nand shoe repairs to my\nshop for neat and prompt\nwork. Look for the big\nboot.\u2014GEO. ARMSON\nYale Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\nA. Z.PARE, Proprietor\nYale Hotel, Fiust Street\nii -.Synopsis of\nLand Act Amendments\nQMinimum prloe ol 11 rst-olsus land roilnoed\nto$5an aore; Moondrolasi to 12.60an aero..\nPre-emption uow cuuniied tu surveyed\nlands only.\nlieoords will be granted ooverlug only land\nsuitable for agricultural purposes and wtiioh\nIs non-timber laud.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished, bnt\nparties of not more than four may arrange\nior adjacent pre-emptions with joint resi*\ndeuce, but eaoh making* ueoessary improvements on respective oluims. e>\nFre-einptors must oeoupy elainis fur live\nyears aud make improvements to vulue oi till\nper aore, including (Wearing und euitivatlou\nof at least 5 aores. beiore receiving Crowu\nliraat.\nWhere pre-emptor'in occupation not less\nthan 11 years, aud has made proportionate\nImprovements, he may, because oi ill-health,\nor other cause, be grauted intermediate oer-\ntilioate of improvement aud transfer his\nolaim.\nRecords without permanent residence may\nbe issued, provided applicant makes improvements tuoxteut oi jiiiiKiper auuumaud\nrecords same eaoh year. Failure tu muke improvements or reeosd same will operate as\nforfeiture. Title oanuot be obtained iu less\nthau 5 years, uud improvements of $10.00 per\naore, Iueludlng 5 acres cleared aud cultivated.\naud resideuce uf ut least two years are res\nquired.\ni're-omptor holding Crowu grant may reoord another pre-euiptiuu, if he requires laud\nluooujuuotiou with his farm without actual\noooupntion, provided statutory improvements\naud residence malutaiued ou Crowu grauted\nland.\nUuaurveyed areas, out exceeding io aeres,\nmay be leased as homesites; title to be obtained after fuimiiut,' residential aud improvement conditions.\nIfor graaing and industrial purposes areas\nexceeding 610 aores may be issued by one person or oompany.\n.Mill, factory ur industrial sites on timber\nland exoeediug \u00abu aores may be purohased:\noouditious iuolude payment of stumpage.\nNatural liny meadows inaccessible by existing roads may be purohased conditional upon\nconstruction of a roud to them. Rebate of\none-hall of oost of road, uot exceeding hall\nof purohase price is made.\nPHE-EMPTORS' FREE GRANTS AOT.\nIhe soope ol this Act ls enlarged to luclude\nall persous joining or nerving with Ilie\nMajesty's Voroes. The time within whioh the\nheir- or devisees oi a deceased pre-emptor\nmay apply ior title under this Act is extended\nfrom out year from the death of such\nparson, as forme rly, until. one Tear altar tbe\noouolusiOD of the present war. This privilege\nla alao made retroaotive.\nNo faas relating to pre-emptions are due or\npayable by soldiers on pre-emptlona recorded\nafter June 26, 1918. Taxes are remitted for\nfire yeara.\n1'rovlsiou.for return of moneys accrued, due\nand bean paid since August i, 11114, on no-\noount of payments, fees ur taxes on soldiers'\npreemptions.\nInterest on agreements to purohase town or\noity lots held by members of Allied b'oroes,\nor dependents, acquired direct or l-jdlreot,\nremitted,!rom enlistment to Maroh U, 1M0.\nSUB-PURCHASERS OF OROWN\n.LANDS.\nProvision made for issuance of Grown\ngrants to sub-purchasers of Grown Lands,\nwho failed to oomplete purohase. involving\nforleltnre, on fulfillment of conditions of\npurchase, interest and taxes. Whore sub-\npurohstses do not olaim whole of orlgnal parcel, purchase prloe due and taxes may bo distributed proportionately over wbole area.\nApportions mnst be made by May 1, 1020.\nGRAZING.\nGraaing Act, 1019. lor systematic development of livestock iudustry provides for graaing districts and range administration under\nCommissioner. Annuul craning permits\nIssued based on numbers ranged; priority for\nestablished owners, Stook-owuers may form\nAssociations Ior range management. Frees\nor partially lree,permits for settlers, campers\nor travellers, op to ten head.\nNEW HARNESS SHOP\nI have opened a new harness shop and am prepared\nto make harness to order\nand do all kinds of repair\nwork. Shop equipped with .\nmodern machinery. All work\nguaranteed:\nC. A* Crawford\nN\u2014\u2022tTsUyhsinOffl\u2014","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"GeographicLocation","value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1923_10_05","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"IsShownAt","value":"10.14288\/1.0340981","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.031111","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-118.439167","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Titled The Evening Sun from 1902-01-02 to 1912-09-13
Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13
Titled The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-09-20 to 1929-05-10","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Grand Forks, B.C. : G.A. Evans","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"SortDate","value":"1923-10-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1923-10-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title","value":"The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}