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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","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":"Full Text","value":" GRANDFORKS\nthe center of Grand Forks vail'\npremier fruit   growing    distr]\nSouthern British Columbia\nand  lumbering are   also   impi\nindustries  in  districts contigui\nthe oity.\nI^F*****-*^^^**-^^3\nB\nTHE SUN\nKettU Valley Orchardist\nis the favorite news..\npaper of the citizens\nof the district. It is read by njore\npeople in the city and valley than any\nother paper because it is fearless, reliable, clean, bright and entertaining.\nIt is always independent but nevor\nneutral.\nTWENTY-SECOND YEAR\u2014No 45\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY,   SEPTEMBER 7, 1923\n\"Tell me what you Know l\u00bb *****\nI cen guess as well ae yen.\nUOO PER YEAR\nJAPANESE CITIES\nARE LAID WASTE\nBY FIRE, QUAKE\nAND TIDAL WAVE\nSiev of Dead Choke\nStreets   of  Tokyo*\nYokohama   and\nOther Centers\nDEAD TOTAL 240,000\n*\u2022\u25a0\n\t\nTorrential Downpour Fol-\nQlows Quake, Adding to\nMisery of Millions Home\nleas\u2014'\/Rivera    Change\nTheir Courses\nap\nex-\nSan Francisco, Sept, 4.\u2014\nLatest unofficial reports place\ntlie dead in Tokyo and Yokohama at 240,000, and 450,000\npersons injured, as the result\nof the earthquake and fire. in\nJapan, according to a wireless message picked up here\ntonight to Admiral Edward\nW. Eberle, commander of the\nPacific battle fleet, from Admiral Edwin A. 'Anderson,\ncommander of the United\nStates Asiatic fleet.\nEstimates indicatethatmost\nof the territory within a radius of forty or fifty miles of\nTokyo virtually was destroyed. In this vicinity torrential\nrains have fallen since the\nearthquake, and this has\nadded to tne misery of those\nleft homeless by the successive disasters.\nThe rains also have made\nthe roads so hearty impassable that overland communication between Tokyo and the\nremainder of Japan is alinost\nIF.      i. \u00ab      ...***\u2022\u2022 *^\nimpossible.\nSome of  the outstancH\nfacts  about the catastrophe\nare:\nSupposedly extinct volcano\nbroke out fifty miles from\nTokyo.\nTokyo, and Yokohama un\nder martial law.   All military\nsummoned from interior.\nFrench, Italian and American embassies destroyed.\nViscount Takahashi, ex-\npremier, and twenty of his\nstaff reported killed.\nTidal wave responsible for\ncomplete destruction of several\ntowns.\nPrince regent escapes by\ntaking refuge in the imperial\ntreasure vault.\n'\u2022A mass of ruined villages\"\nis the description cabled of\none area.\"\nHundreds of wounded^ying\nthrough lack of medical aid.\nTsujiki section, where, until\nrecent years, foreigners -were\ncompelled jio reside,   utterly\ndestroyed.\nBritish embassy reported\nburned down.\nPonds in public parks filled\nwith corpses of wonjen and\nchildren.\nNearly two thousand prisoners released when prisons\nare threatened by fire.\nTokyo foreigners reported\nkilled by the collapse of hotels.\nTwo millions in affected reported ^starving.\nBridge crowded with  three\nthousand refugees collapses,\n, throwipg all into the stream.\nRiver Sumida, flowing\nthrough Tokyo, clogged with\nbodies.\nRiots occurin affected area.\nUnited States consul and\nwife at Yokohama reported\nkilled.-\n.Hundreds hurl  themselves\ninto   the   river   as   fire\nproaches.\nYokohama   oil   tanks\n-plode, killing scores.\nCargoes of rice pouring into stricken zone.\nTwo hundred and sixteen\ndistinct earthquake shocks felt\nin Tokyo on Saturday.\nFifty-seven tremors reported on Sunday.\nPrincess Kaya seriously\ninjured.\nOnly two houses standing\nin Yokohama.\nMore than half of Tokyo\nwiped out.\nMother   of  Prinpe\nkUldil,. Princess; Yfmashina\ndead of injuries.\ni .Daatlvs of Prince Matauga-\ntaand Count Takahashi re\nported.\nMany vessels of Japanese\nfleet still believed lost\nFife raged in Tokyo -for\ntwo days and nights.\nTorrential rains follow\nquake, adding to* misery of\nhomeless.\nNew island lappiirjs near\nthe Idzu group.\nRivers have changed their\ncourses.  \t\nA Hard \"C\"\nThere are few persons about wbom\nmote stories illustrating the possession of a genial wit are told thao\nOliver Herford, the artist and maker\nof clever verses The Argonaut says\nthat he waB once speaking over bhe\ntelephone with Prof. Brander Mat\"\nthews, who had just Announced his\nintention of sailing tor Europe on\nthe Celtic\u2014whfeb he pronounoed\n'Keltic.\"\n\"Ob, please don't say Keltic,\nBrander,\" pleaded Herford. -'Because if you do, you know, you'll\nbave a bard sea all tbe way over\"\nShanghai, Sept. 4.\u2014Reports ol; the\nTokyo earthquake and Area here are\nconflicting, but itis asserted that-, the\ndisaster is far worse than the catastrophe of 1856, when 100.000 lives\nwere lout. The reports state that\nfour fifths of Yokohama has beet destroyed, inrludlbg 100,000 howeq.\nIlliterate Ministers\nIn tbe mountains of the South\nthere are men who, though illiterate, have answered, tbe call to the\nministry. Naturally, tbey are handicapped, tor tbey mnst depend on\nothers to read the. Bible to them.\nBut unfortunately\u2014ao we learn\nfrom Mrs. Cora Wilson Stewart in\nMoonlight Schools\u2014some of tbe\npupils that tbe day schools turn out\nare as poor readers ae those who\nnever went to school.\n\"Paul was an oyster man,\" one of\nIhem once read to au illiterate minister\u2014meaning of course \"an austere\nman.\" Tbe next Sunday the preacher declared to bis congregation that\nPeter was a fisherman and that Paul\nwas an oyster man. Tbus his flock\ngot a cooception of Paul that probably was unique.\nAnother minister beard the sentence, \"Jacob made booths for his\ncattle,\" road \"Jacob made boots for\nhis cattle.\" The following Sunday\nbe said from the pulpit: \"Jacob, that\nhumane man, would not even permit his cattle to go barefooted, but\nmade boots for tbem to protect\ntheir tender feet ae they walkad\nover the stones\/'\nthe past two years the licensee of\nninety-six clubs have been cancelled\nTbree Oriental clubs are included,\nthe balance being \"white\" clubs.\nOf this tot <l sixty eight licences\nwere cu off because of liquor activities of the clubs. Mr. Manson\nclaims that this evidence should\nshow conclusively that hn depart\nment ha* at nil times been awake to\nthe question of clubs.\nHon. T. D. Pattullo, minister of\nUnds, takes objection to the wording of a report of statements made\nat the empire forestry conference,\nthat logging was a wasteful operation in British Columbia. He said\nthat the leaving of a large amount\nof timber in the woods was due to\ntbe fact that a certain percentage\nof timber was oot suitable to the\nmarkets open to British Columbia\nlumber, but on the whole lumbering\nio this province was being carried\noo most economically.\nThe Long-Suffering Eyes\n,\u201e_,\u201e_,..\u201e. 0 \u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e\u201e \u201e\u201e\u201e What strange  liberties, says tbe\nSome'reports state the\" Yokohama Bo^OD '\"T'\u21228.\"1^'. f\u00b0 0U'  Bi0Ty.\nharbor been ruined, Many refugees are\nliViugin ships in the harbor.      ',.\nThe earthquake lasted from sik to\nten minutes, with a constant vertical\nmovement. The Osaka Mainicha, cor\nrespondent cabled here that the regent is safe, but the imperial palace\nis burning.\nTHE WEATHER\nr\nThe following ie the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\nday during the past week, aie recorded by the government thermometer on E. F. Law's rancb:\nMin.\ntil\n54\n51\n86\n45\n54\n46\nIsxchu\n. 0.05\nAug. 31\u2014Friday 90\nSept.   1\u20148atun*ay  90\n-  *^ Sunday.\"  89\n3\u2014Monday....... 81\n.   4\"-srTnead4Jr..i.... 82\n5\u2014Wednesday.. 76\n6   Thureday...77.-84\ns\nRainfall...........\t\nFRQMTHECAPITAL\nSpecial Oorrtsgpoadence of The Sun.\nVictoria.September 5,\u2014There was\na decided improvement in industry\nthroughout British Columbia last\nyear, according to tbe fourth annual\nreport of the department of industries, just published by tbe government. There was also a marked renewal of interest in the vast wealth\nof raw materials of tbe province.\nIncluded in the report ie an elaborate directory of products manufactured in British Columbia, a work\nwhioh required \u00ab great deal of research and time on the part of the\ndepartment. Tbere are 482 different articles manufactured, witb 2718\nestablishments operating in tbe\nprovince. During the year the department of industries distributed\n15,000 copies of the directory.\nThe report points out that the av*\nerage British Columbia product is\nequal to if not better than tbe artis,\ncle imported or brought here from\neastern Canada, a point often unappreciated by local consumers, who\nwould save money and encourage\nbome industry by selecting British\nColombia products wbere possible.\nThe minister of industries points\nout tbat British Columbia exports\ntoo many products in the raw slate:\ncopper, ztnc, lumber, lead, silver,\nfish and particularly agricultural pro\nducts. At tbe same time canned\nsoups, vegetables aod fruits are im-\npotted in large quantities.\nOROWNEDATLAKE\nWhile Bathing With a\nParty of Friends, Ho\nSinks and Fails to Como\nto Surface Again\nNelson-Spokane Road\nOfficially Opened\nMarking the opening of another\nhighway crossing tbe international\nboundary Itne, ceremonies were beld\nlast Thuisdsy on the new Nelson-\nSpokane roadway. Officiating at\nthe ceremonies were Hon. Dr. W.\nH. Sutherland, minister of public\nworks for British Columbia, and\nFred L. Wolf, Newport. Wash. Botb\nrepresentatives, driving motor cars\nin either direction, broke tapes\nstretched across tbe line.\nSome 400 can with their occu -\npants from British Columbia and\nWashington points were in attend -\nance at the opening, wbicb is bailed\nas a remarkable achievement for\nbotb Nelson and the interior of\nBritish Columbia as a whole.\nAfter the opening ceremonies ibe\nvisitors all went to Nelson, where\nappropriate entertainment awaited\ntbem.\nCharles Vernon Hargis, of Spokane, aged 38 years, wis drown-d\nin Christina Lake on L-ibor while\nbe was with a party of six friends\nfrom Spokane. Tbe accident occurred near tbe pavilion iu very\ndeep water. Hargis is eaid to lia>e\nbeen a good swimmer, and the incident is attributed to heart Hi'-\nure.\nThe body was lecovered shorilv\nafter tbeuccident,and il was broug t\nto the undertaking establishment of\nMiller & Gardner in this oity,\nwhence it was shipped to Spokai. <\nfor burial. As Mr. Hargis was with\na party of friends at the time tl n\nfatality occurred, Coroper Kingst- n\ndecided that ao inquest would not\nbe necessary.\nMr. Hargis was an automobile\nsa.esman of Spokane, and he was lo\nhave been married in two week-'\ntime. His fiancee was one of tlm\nparty at the lake when the drowning accident occurred.\nwriters take with   their characters\neyes.    Here are \u2022 few:\n\"Her eyes roamed carelessly\nround tbe room.\"\n\"With.her eyes she riveted bim\nto tbe spot.\"\n\"He tore hie eyes from her face,\nand they (ell on the letter at her\nfeet.\"\n\"He drank her in with drowning\neyes \"\n.'\u2022Tbeir eyes met for a long breath\nless moment and swam together.\"\n\"Marjorie would often take ber\neyes from the deck and cast tbem\nfar out to sea.\"\n\"He'tor'e Bis' eyes away from\nhers, causing intense pain to both.\"\nWe should think it would.\nSTORAGE OF FRUIT\nANDREGETABLES\nReorganisation of the govsrnmen t\nprinting office has been completed\nby Hon. Dr. MacLean, provincial\nsecretary. Under tbe new system it\nwill be possible to tell to a cent the\ncoat of every piece ol printing u nder\ntaken. The government printing\noffice ia the largest in tbe province\nsnd iB considered one of tbe most\nmodern on tbe continent. Tbe service costs approximately $250,000\nper year. Ampng other work handled is the printing of the British\nColumbia Gazette, the largest publi\ncation in tbe province outside of\ndaily papers.\nIf you wiah to accompli-h great\nthings, busy yourself with what the\nmediocre refer to as \"mere trifles.\"\nThe  hunting\nSeptember 16.\nseason opens  on\nThe largest collection of illicit\nliquor ever in tbe possession of tbe\nattorney-general's department is\ndoomed to destruction, an order in\ncouncil having been passed author\nising tbe step. It is bootleg whisky\nof doubtful origin and none of the\nstuff is considered fit to sell in the\ngovernment stores.\nAe an evidence of bis activity in\ncurbing the illicit operations of clubs\nin British Columbia, Attorney-Gen-\neral Manson announces tbat during\nTbe storge of fruit and vegetables\nfor bome nd market must receive\ngreater attention lhad it has hitherto\nbeen accorded. Tbe amount of waste\nannually is very great. As a first\nstep towards eliminating tbis, every\nfarme or household with sufficient\nland to grow vegetables, and per\nhaps fruit trees, should nnderstand\nmore about stork g the crop. Some\ncrops keep best in an atmosphere\nthat has a bigb moisture content,\nwhereas others require a low percentage of humidity. So it will be\nseen that there can not be a coodi\ntion to suit all vegetables and fruits\nin tbe same cellar or storage building. Apples, pears, potato s, carrots\nand cabbage soon deteriorate in very\ndry storage; wbile on the otber band\nwintersquasb, pumpkins, marrows\nsnd otber such crops like s dry st\nmosphere. Moulds sud rots Boon\ndestroy them.\nIf you know your cellar is a very\ndry one and you wish to keep apples,\netc., in it make provision for adding\nmoie moisture to the air by intro\nduoing wet sacks spread out or by\nsprinkling tbe floor, tbe idea being\nthat a lsrge surface must be wet and\nevaporation quick. Tbe atmospheric\nhumidity oan be tested with a wet\nand dry bulb thermometer. Take\nthe readings and check up on the\nchart which is supplied with it. A\nhumidity ranging between 75 and\n85 is satisfactory.\nIo case of squssb and pumpkins,\netc., any frost proof place which is\ndry is suitable\u2014tbe top shelf of the\npantry, for instance, or shelves in\nthe pssssgs. Quality is often lowered by poor ventilation. Where crops\nare stored in large quantities ventilators Bhould be open as much as\npossible to carry off gases and hest\nThe Child Was Right\nThe teacher war giving the ki*i\u00ab\ndergsrten class a lesson in natural\nhistory. Turning to one small tot,\nshe ioquired, \"What do elephants\nhave tbat no otber animals have!\"\n\"Little elephants,\" was lhe apprising reply.\nSentimental Telegraph\nMessage\nLiterary art is seldom employed in\nthe composition of telegrams. But a\nwriter in the London Express knows\nof a man who does aim at elegance ia\nhis telegraphic style, though with another purpose than the gjatificatiou\nof his own taste.\nWhen the man is in the country,\nsays the Express, he writes beautiful\ntelegrams to his aunts in town on tlio\nleast provocation. Here isatypicil\none:\n\"What pleasing prospect natum\noffers in evening eye delighted with\ndistant groves fields meadows cows\nsheep soul soothed awed contempla-\ntiin of infinite will yon send on nn.\notber twenty pounds tempojarily\nshort Henry.\"\nAnd he usually gets it tool'1\nAlthough warnings against the\nfore.itlire menace have lieen sent out\nrepeatediy, Hon. T. D. Pattullo,\nminister of lands, has another appeal\nto make to the oitizens of Uritiili\nColumbia, The hazardous season has\narrived and care during the next I vo\nmonths will mean a saving of millions\nof dollars.\nThere's a good deal of education\nfor a young fellow in owning a share\nor two of divideud-paying stock. A\ndividend makes as interesting a lecture on economics as any prof et .-or\ncsn give.\ncoming from a large bulk of nny\ncrop. Wben severe weather occurs\nclose up the ventilators. Do i ot\nstore a large volume of any crop\nwbile it is warm from tbe field unless you know tbat you cau reduce\nthe heat by proper ventilation More\nattention must be paid to tbis when\ncommercial storage is being dsne in\nthe fall, and our growers must help\nwheu asked to do so \u2014R. H. Helmer, Superintendent Summerla d\nexperimental Station THE SUN: GBAND FOBEB, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n1\/1\n?\u00aehf (Sranb Iffm-fca *rot\nAN INOIPBNOENT NEWSPAPER\nQ. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\n-'SUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANOE\nOne Tear (in Canada and Great Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States)    1.50\nAddretr \u2022-*\u25a0 ********-'cations to\nsiTm- Grand Forks Sun\nPhonb 10IR Grand Forks, B. CJ\nOFFICE:    COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nthese ports tbe shipments will be reinspected.\nIn the case of large consignments.they may be\npermitted to proceed to destination for inspection. The importation of certain plants\nhas been prohibited on account of insect pests\nor plant diseases.\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1923\nNotes, Notions and Notables\nThe Academy of International Law was recently opened at The Hague.   It is proposed\nto gather students and professors of interna -\ntional lawfrom all over the world for an annual\nlecture course of three months.   It is hoped\nthat the Academy will build up and establish\na universally recognized code of intornationa 1\nlaw and help to encourage among the intel -\nlectual leaders of the world an international\nspirit and an enthusiasm for justice to all nations. James Brown Scott, the American pub\nHeist, has beeu paaticularly active in bringing the Academy to pass, and the Carnegie\nFoundation has advanced the money to make\nit possible.\nE. C. Henniger Co.\nA good human machiae should not wear out\nin seventy years, says Dr. MacCabe, the English army doctor who has written on human\nlife, its enjoyments and prolongation. Over\nagainst the opinion of the Psalmist he quotes\nGenesis vi, 3, \"And the Lord said: 'My spirit\nshall not always strive with man, for that he\nalso is flesh, yet his days shall be an hundred\nand twenty years.' \" Argning from scientific\nanalogies, Dr. MacCabe points out that most\nof the higher animals enjoy a life span that is\napproximately five times their growing period.\nIf man falls short of that, it-is mainly owing\nto some kind of intemperance, he. believes.\nModeration in all things is his rule of health.\nThe catastrophe in Japan is of such tremendous proportions that it obliterates all\nrace prejudice. The loss of life is simply appalling. Nations and individuals will do everything that can possibly be done to lighten the\nsuffering among the survivors.\nThere is still romance on the sea, though\nsails have given place to steam and internal-\ncombustion engides. Did you read the story\nof the Trevessa, a British cargo boat that went\ndown in the Indian ocean in June? Rescue\nships failed to find any trace of the crew, but\nthe forty-four men were at the time sailing\nwestward in two . ship's boats toward th e\nnearest land\u2014fifteen hundred miles away. The\ncaptain's boat reached the island of Rodriguez\nafter twenty two days at sea, and the mate's\nboat was picked up off Mauritius three days\nlater. The sailors in the first boat, says the\nSpectator, encouraged by an old salt sixty\nyears of uge\u2014a reincarnation of Masterman\nReady\u2014kept cheerfully to a daily ratiou of\none biscuit and as much water as would fill\nthe cover of a cigarette tin. They had a week's\nsupply left at the end. The men in the other\nboat were less fortunate or less frugal and\nmuch of the time had to depend on catching\nsuch rainwater as fell. Several Lascar seamen\ndied of drinking soa water, though they must\nhave knwn, as Homer's Greeks knew, that it\nwas fatal. Thirty-six men survived the re\nmarkable voyage. ,\nHere is a new kind of union. The mathematicians of Germany have have organized to\nspread abroad the practical and cultural sig\nnificanco of mathematics throughout Germany,\nwhere, they say, there are to be observed \"uu\nfriendly tendencies\" toward mathematics. We\nhave always understood that a good many of\nthe younger students in that study did not\nfeel kindly toward it, but we had not sup\nposed that their influence was strong enoug h\nto make a union of schoolmasters necessary\nto fight it, says the Youth's Companion.   Per\nhaps the Germans have become disgusted\nwith mathematics by the daily necessity  of\nfiguring up to the third or fourth decimal just\nhow much the mark is worth.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks, Bj. G.\nTHE STORY OF A MAN WHO WOULD\nSUCCEED ANYWHERE\nTwenty thousand cartloads of stones were\npicked up and hauled away by J. P. Jacobson-\nElmquist in clearing land for his farm in\nSweden. So no one objects to his winning this\nyear's first prize of the Swedish Agricultural\nassociation.\nWe'll call him Jake for short. In 1895 he\ntook tbree acres that no one else wanted; it\nwas suck a rock pile. Patiently he set to work\ndigging up the boulders. Finally he bad the\nstones all removed aud the soil bearing crops.\nGradually, with profits saved from his harvests, be bought more rock pile. Now he has\neighty acres, ten devoted to crops which support him and his family, and seventy acres of\nforest which he planted.\nJake used his twenty thousand cartloads of\nstones to build a beautiful wall around his farm\nand a fine highway along one side.\nHe and his wife can take things more easily\nnow, for their nine children\u2014whose livingjwas\nwrested from as hopeless a looking strip of\nland as can be found almost any where\u2014ar e\nassisting in the work.\nHow many men would have the patiente\nand confidence in their own efforts to attempt\nthe task undertaken by Jake back in 1895?\nHis success demonstrates that success is\nlargely up to the individual himself; that no\nhandicap is too big to be overcome; that man\ncan create his own opportunity.\nThe story of Jake's life is enough to make\nsome pf the rest of us ashamed of ourselves\nwhen we grumble or become discouraged at\nour lot, though we have easy sledding compared to Jake,\u2014Kitsilano Times.\ng. T. HULL\nEstablished 1910\nRealEstate .and Insurance\nBsssldeot Agent Orssnd Forks Townsite\nOompaoy, Limited\nThere is little fear in the future of the young\nman who has a deep-seated faith in himself.\nSome men attempt so much that they never\nget anything finished.\nHe that planieth a tree is a servant of God,\n-Henry Van Dyke.\nLearn to   think all the way around and\nthrough each job you tackle.\nAny man who shows himself unselfish  will\nhave friends, tbough he may not havo much\nelse\nFarms     Orchards     City Property\nAcenta at Nelson, Caller--, Wihnlpec and\notber Prairie polnta. Vanoouver A-reist*:\nPBNDBBINVBSTMBNTS\nHATTKNBUHY LANDS LTD.\nEstablished ln 1911. wo are In a position to\ntarnish tellable information concerning this\ndistrict.\nWrite Ior tree literature\nGRAND FORKS\nTransfer Company\nDAVIS 8 HANSEN, Propt\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal,  Wood and   Ice\nfor Sale\nIS IT WORTH WHILE\nKeeping timber for B.C. Industries?\nKeeping alive a prosperous payroll?\nKeeping fur and feather in B.C.?\nKeeping timber for manufacture?\nKeeping a green forest for posterity?\nThen\u2014\nt\nPrevent Forest Fires\nIT PAYS\nOffice at R. F. Petrie*! Store\nPIiomM\nC.V. Meggitt\n|Beal Batata and Inauraus-xo\nOHCHARD0, FABM LANDS   AND CITV\nPBOPBBTY\nSxoellont facilities tot selilnf your farms\nWe hare agents at all Coast and Prairie\nPoints\nWB CABBT AUTOMOBILB INSURANCE.\nDBALBB IN POLBS, POSTS AND TIBS,\nAND FABM PBODDCB\nBailable Information regarding tbls dlstrot\noboerfullr furnished. Wit solloit your la-\nqulrfes.\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nDeals-Tin.\nHavana Cigars* Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\n(band Forka. B. C\nOn September first tbe new regulations under the destructive insect and pest act, issued\nby the department of agriculture, went into\neffect. All importers of nursery stock, which\nincludes all plants for ornamental purposes or\npropagation, such as trees, shrubs, vines,\nbulbs, perennials, etc., except seeds, are required to secure a permit before the shipments are brought into Canada. Importations\nof nursery stock must be inspected before\nleaving the country of origin and a certificate\nof inspection must accompany the invoice\nImportations from countries other than the\nUnited States can enter Canada only throug h\nthe ports of St. John, N.B., Montreal, Que.,\nNiagara Falls, Ont., aud Vancouver, B.C.   At\no4ncient History*\nHeme Taken Prom Tba Orand Porks Sun fer ths Corrcepondtnr\n\u2022Wssk TweotT Y\u00abM Ago\nNeil McCallum haB tendered hia resignation as Liberal\ncandidate in Qrand Forks riding for member of the provincial legislature.\nPostmaster Hull has received a first stock of 110 postal\nnotes, the issue of which has been authorized by the post\nmaster general under the postal notes regulations at present in force.\nA. B. VV. Hodges, superintendent-of tbe Qranby smel\nter, left last week for California, where he will  visit for\nshort time.\nThe city council adopted a resolution in favor of the\nestablishment of a high sehool in Qrand Forks.\nThe Pioneers' Association of Kettle Valley held a ban\nquet at Carson on Tuesday evening.   R. R.  Gilpin, tha\nsecretary, issued about one hundred invitations. The eld\ntimers had a jolly time.\nCity Electrician Waterson ia erecting a warehouse for\nhis electrical supplies on the city lots near the city  hall.\nHenry White, who is known to fame as the locator of\nthe Old Ironsides mine, returned to the city last Friday\nfrom a three inontns' tour through the Okanagan country.\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMIHB\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly   Don\nR. C. MoCUTGHBON\nmanna atmm\nL\nCity   Real Estate For\nSale,\nApplications ior immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPrices i\u2014From $25.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms i\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be seen at the\nCity Office.\nJOHN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nGarden Tools\nAnd Other Spring Needs\nWe stock a complete line of Rakes, Hoes, Shovels\nand all tools necessary for the Spring work.\nFerry's Package Seeds.\nQet a Planet Jr. Seeder and Cultivator for the\nfarm this spring.   They are great labor savers.\nBapco Paints and Varnishes.   Try our Auto Paint\nand Varnish and make the old car look like new.\nMassey-Harris Implements.   Let us quote you  on\nyour needs.\nMILLER & GARDNER\nComplete Home Furnishers\nIt's the worst wheel that\nmakes the most noise in the\nworld.       \t\nIf you greatly admire a\nquality you have at least a\na trace of it yourself.\n\u25a0\u2022532\n\"'Tis the heart's voice alone'ean reach the\nheart.\"\u2014De Mussett.\nThe invention of the telephone resulted, not\nfrom an effort to find a means of communication, but from the deep pity in the heart of\nthe inventor for those without the ability to\nhear the human voice. .\nThe range of the unaided voioe is only a\nfew feet; but the same voice speaking into the\ntelephone may be heard a mile or three thousand \"miles away. The inflections, the accents, the individuality are all transmitted\nfaithfully.\nThe telephone stands ready day or night to\ntransmit your voice to relative, friend, or any\nwith whom you have need of speech. The\ntelephone is the universal instrument.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nI\nTell The People\nWhat   You   Have\nto Sell THE SUN: GRAND POEKS, BRITISH OOLUMBU\n-\n'   \"*\"   A*t-m&Smmt?i ^^lIF\" ^^AtO*-   ^'\"^'^      ^f*&\n\" <**^lw\u00a3&'''     ********&%\n.$s*iA_J\u00a7-,\n\u2122s*,,^s^'S\u00abfc\nttm'tiW^'^\n^g*\u00bb^\ng^g^flpi* ppJW\nIron Horses Ready For Grain Rush\nHERE are aome of the engines and box can, Canadian made for Canadian\ntraffic, which arrived in Winnipeg recently to augment the rolling stock\nof tha Canadian Pacific railway. This equipment is now in readiness for the\ntransporting of western Canada's crop, which bids fair to be one of the largest\never recorded. These additional engines and can were constructed at the\ncompany's shops at Angus, near Montreal, and hava been assembled at the\nWeston shops, Winnipeg, awaiting the call to the harvest fields of the west.\nThe upper picture shows four trains leaving Weston with a string of\napproximately 100 box cars per engine.*Each car haa a capacity of 60 tons.\n(2) and (8) some of the new freight engines which will be used to haul the\ngrain throughout the three prairie provinces. (A) One of the 55 new P-2 class\nengines. These engines have a total weight of 252 tons, exerting \u2022 traction\neffort of 66,000 pounds. Their driving wheels are 5 feet 3 Inches in diameter,\ncylinders 26 H in. diameter by 82 ln. stroke; the total length being 81 feet)\n4 }A inches. The tender has a water capacity of 8,000 gallons and 14 tons of\ncoal, which ls equal to the average citizen s winter supply of fuel.   These\n4 *A inches. The tender has a water capacity of 8,000 gallons and 14 tons of\ncoal, which ls equal to the average citizen s winter supply of fuel. These\nengines are known as the P-2 class, numbered In 6,800 series. They have\nvestibule cabs for the comfort of the engine crew and are electrically\nequipped throughout. The complete weight of one train hauled by one of\nthese engines, Including the engine, ls 4,476 tons, of which 8,020 tons would\nbe the carrying capacity for wheat, or 100,660 bushels in each train. The\ncarrying capacity of the 45 engines of this standard is 4,529,700 bushels per\ntrip. Each engine makes one trip a day. Picture No. 5 shows another group of\nthe new Canadian Pacific locomotives. Their capacity and weight rank\nthem among the biggest of their type in the world.\nTips on Tapioca\nWhat do you know about tapioca?\"\nWell, it is round; it is made of\u2014of\u2014\nLet Charles W. Mead help us out; in\nNatural History he describes how the\nIndians of Brazil manufacture the\nstarchy, jelly like globulrs.\nThe Indian woman, he says, takes\na large piece of bitter cassava root in\nboth hands and rubs it back and forth\non a board studded with huudreds of\nsharp pebbles until the root is res-\ndsced to pnlp When she has grated\na sufficient quantity she presses as\nmuch water out of it as possible. For\nthis purpose she usis as a press a long,\nnarrow tube of basketwork called a\ntipiti, with a.loop'at either end. She\nforces the pulp into the press, which\nshe then hangs up by one of the loops\nThrough the lower iood she inserts a\nlong, stout pole, which she runs under\nsome convenient object, which serves\nas'a fulcrum. Then she sits on the\nfree end of the pole, and her weight\nstretches the press and forces the\nliquid through the interstices of the\nbaskotwork. The liquid is caught in\na pottery vessel and is made into cas \u2022\nsareep, the favorite condiment of the\nSouth American Indian,\nThe wet mass is taken from the\npress and spread on a large fiat dish\nof pottery with a raised rim; under\nthe dish a fire is built. If stirred\nrapidly the preparrtion will not cake\ninto large masses but will quickly\nagglomerate into small, irregular pel-\nets, which are the tapioca of commerce.\nUNLESS you see the name \"Bayer\" on tablets, you\nare not getting Aspirin at all\nH\nere an\ndTn\nere\nProtection of migratory birds has\nbeen added to the duties of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway's constabulary.\nAirplanes attached to the Ontario Forestry Department are now\nequipped with radio sending apparatus so that they can keep in constant touch with the chief and other\nrangers.\nThere was an increase of sixty-\nthree per cent in the number of immigrants to Canada during the last\nthree months as compared with the\ncorresponding period ef last year.\nCanadian Pacific agents in Britain recruited nearly five thousand\nmen for work in the harvest fields\nof Western Canada and, through\nlack of steamship accommodation\nclosed their doers on as many more\nwho, attracted by the special harvest rate, sought to enter Canada.\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 Manufacture of Mono-\nacetlcacldester of Sallcyllcacld. While It Is well known that Aspirin means Bayer\nmanufacture, to assist the nubile against Imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company\nWIN Aa Stamen With thalr general trade mark, taa \"Bayer Cross.\"\nThe branch lines program ef the\nCanadian Pacific Railway carried\nout this year will bring into operation on the prairies a larger mileage\nthan any one year sinse 1914. Of\nthe 431 miles of line nnder construction, 281 miles -will bs ready for\nhandling grain ln the Fall, and of\nthe balance, 116 miles will be ready\nfor steel by the winter freeze-up.\nA building has been acquired by\nthe University of Toronto to be entirely devoted to the manufacture\nof insulin. This will be the only\nfactory in Canada te manufacture\nthe   curative   fluid  In   commercial\n?uantities and, although it is mana-\nactured in the United States, Great\nBritain and Denmark, the Canadian\nproduct will be sold throughout ths\nworld.\nDawson City recently celebrated\nthe twenty-seventh anniversary ef\nthe discovery of the Klendyke. Tn\nan exhibition of Yukon products\ncabbages 16 inches in diameter and\nweighing thirty pounds, potatoes as\nbig as a man's head, pumpkins as\nbig as watermelons, wheat, oats and\nbarley bore witness to the fertility\nof the Yukon sell. Side by side\nwith these ranged gold nuggets,\ngold dust and silver bars.\nDr. James Inohes, Commissioner\nof Police, Detroit, and a guest st the\nCanadian Pacific Bun-plow Camp at\nNipigon, holds the record for ths\nbiggest speckled trout caught in ths\nNipigon River this season, having\ncaptured a flsh weighing 7H pounds.\nThis catch was above the average,\nbut a large number of six pounders\nhave been taken from the Nipigon\nthis season. Several years ago, and\nfrom practically the same place, Dr,\nJ. W. Cook, of Fort Willis--)*, ciright\nthe       WOrld'1-        -CmlmmtA       :*.Mm*-'-<m.l       tmtt '.*\nwhich weighed fourteen and one-half\npounds, and was more than two and\na half feet long.\nA record was established recently\nwhen one of the latest type of Canadian Pacific locomotives drew a train\nof 42 cars of newsprint, weisrhin*\npany, North Bay, to Toronto, with-\nout mishap. Ordinarily, it would\nhave taken two passenger engines\nto haul such  a   load   for   the J20\nthis feat the huge engine, together\nwith an all steel tr.inVsi.tEg of\nthe latest model ttmrist, dining and\nOsnal Exhibition at Toronto,\n'There are hundreds of first class\nlarm workers in Scotland anxious ta\ncorns te Canada, and the finest material Canada oould wish for, but\ntlieir wages are sufficient to barely\nsupport them and they are unable to\naccumulate funds for the passage.\"\nThis is the opinion of Thomas\nScotland, of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway Colonization and Development office in Glasgow, who recently arrived In Canada with a\nparty of Scotch immigrants bound\nfor the western provinces.\nTo J. K. L. Ross, director af the\nCanadian Pacific Railway, goes the\nhonor of catching the world's record\nfish with rod and real. At Bt.\nAnn's Bay, N.S., he landed a tuna\nweighing 712 pounds; length, 9 feet\nS inohes; girth, 6 feet. Commander\nRoss used a Vom Hofe tuna rod and\nreel. No. 89 thread line, with\nmackerel for bait. His catch took\nthree and a quarter hours to land.\nThe world's wheat crop this year\nis estimated at 8,318,000,000 bushels,\nas compared with 8,104,000,000 bushels last year, an increase of 214,-\n000,000 bushels, according to figures carefully compiled by the International Institute of Agriculture\nat Rome. The estimated shipments\nfrom supply countries of the world\nfor this year ie 690,000,000 bushels,\nof which Canada is expected ts\nsupply 290,000,000 bushels, or about\nons-third.\nCanadian trade with Australia is\non the increase, according to returns made public by the Bureau of\nStatistics. Canadian exports to\nAustralia for the twelve months\nending with June were 119,824,289\nas compared with 112,200,468 for\nthe corresponding period ending\nJune. 1922. Canada's imports from\nthe 'Commonwealth have also increased. The imports from Australia for the last twelve months\nwere $1,546,829, as -ompared with\n$1,276,871 for tha yoar previous.\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\n\u25a0w-hatsoever--.IT IS THB MEMORY OF\nTHE PUBLIC.\nIf you doubt this ask the first men\nmen you meet the following questions*\n;i When did the B31 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 German  submarine   torpedoed\ni *\nthe Lusifania?\nIt is a safe bet that you would not\nget one correct answers\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 teUing them?\nADVERTISE!\n1\nOne step won't take very far,\n\"JYou've got to keep on walking!\njjJOne word won't tell folks who you are,\nYou've got to keep on talking |\nOne inoh 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.\nf\nBrown started out without a cent*\nHe's rich now and still rising\u00bb\nSome say 'twas luck} some say 'tw\nplucki\nHE says 'twas advertising.\n...  ' '* IBB SUN: GRANDFORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nt\n>y\ncf  days  ago from Seattle after an I\nabsence of about BeveD yeare.    His\nwife is a patient in ihe Orand Forks |\nhospital. xm \u25a0 -m .\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFOR FINE PRUITIK6\nJ. C. Taylor returned to the oity j\non Saturday.    His wife aod daughter, who bave been  visiting at  tbe |\ncoast  for  a   couple of months, re\nturned bome witb bim.\nNews of the Gity\nAt tbe adjourned meeting of tbe\ncity council on Friday evening tbe\nbylaw providing for thc construction\nof a flume from Mill creek to tbe\ncity reservoir was advanced ae far as\nit legally could be, and at a special\nmeeting oc Tuesday eveoingthe by\nlaw was reintroduced. Tbe inspector\nof muuicipalitiei bis decided that\ntbis bylaw mast be submitted to tbe\nratepayers, ind a vote will theretore\nbe taken oa it >n tbe 19tb lost.\nK. C. McCutcheon complains of\ncertain parties circulating a report\ntbat be is charging %lti for 12 foot\norchard ladders. Tbo price for this\nsize ladders, be says, is $8.50, wbicb\nis a substantial reduction former\nprices.\nTba schools reopened on Tuesday\nmorning as per annouocnm.nt.\nTbere was tbe usually large enrollment at tbe Central school and tbe\nhigh school in tbis city.\nJ. H. Platb.an old-timer of Grand\nForks, returned to tbe city a couple\nDEAFNESS CAN BE\nCUBED\nDEAFNESS, NOISES IN TUB HEAD AND\nNASAL CATAUKII\nThe new Continental remedy called\n\"LARA1ALENE\" (Re$d,)\nIh a simple harmless hoino-treatmeut which\nabsolutely cures deafness, noises iu the head,\neto. NOUXPKNSIVEjAPPLlANCfig NBBDKD\nfor this new Ointment, instantly operates\nupon tbe affected parts with complete and\npermanent success. dCoBKS OP WONDER-\nFULCUttHSBBPOKKD.\nRELIABLE TESTIMONY.\nMrs. K. Wilkinson, of Slad Road; Stroud,\nwrites:\u2014\"Pieaie could trouble you to tend\nme another box of the Ointment. It la not for\nmysuaf, but for a friend of mine who is as bad\nas I was,and cannot get any rest for the noises\nin the noad. 1 feel a new woman, and can go\nto bed now and get a g-ood night's rest, which\nI had not been able to do for many months.\nIt ii a wonderful remedy and I am most delighted to recommend it.\"   :   .   ,\nMrs. K.Crowe, of VVIiUehorso Road, Croydon, writes:\u2014\"I am pleased to tell yoa that\nthe small tlu of  ointment you sent to me at\nVentnor, has proved a complete success, my\nhearltiK is n jW quite normal, and the horrible head noises have ceased. The action of\nthis new remedy must be very remarkable,\nfor X have been troubled with these oom-\nplaints for nearly teu years, and have had\nsome of the very best medical advice together\nwith otlier expensive instruments all to no\npurpose. I need hardly Hay how very grateful lam. for my life has undergone au entire\nchange.' \t\nTry one box to-day.whioh oan be forwarded\nto any address on receipt of money order for\n11.00.   THKKK IS NOTHIG BETTER AT ANT\nPRICE.\nAddress order* to:\u2014\nTHB \"LAKMALKNE\" CO.,\n10, South View, WatUng St., Dartford,\nKent, England.\n$495\nMEN'S WORK SHOES\nCall 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\n7 hese are real bargains.\n, I\nDonaldson's\nSam   Camerou,   of   Hock Creek,\narrived at the Grand Forks hospital\nyesterday for tbe purpose of under\ngoiug a surgical operation.\nC, F. R. Pincott, barrister, msde\na professional visit to Rossland od\nTuesday.\nA. Stoddard, of Edmonton, Alta.,\nwas in tbe city this week trying to\nbuy apples from the independent*\nWe have not learned what eucoess\nhe met with.\nHarvey Hansen left for his home\ntn Kansas City, Mo., on Saturday.\nActions Speak Louder\nThan Works\n-'Well, son, is the boss in?\" asked\nthe visitor.\nThe office boy, witb bis chair\ntilted back, looked at the caller bu t\nmade no reply.\n\"I asked if the boss is in,\" said\ntbe visitor.\nThe office by glanced at him but\nremained silent.\n\"Didn't you hear me?\" tbe   visitor demanded sharply.\n.   \"Of  course   I   heard   you,\" an\u00ab\nswered the office boy.\n' 'Then wby didn' t you answer my\nquestion!   Is the boss in or not?\"\n\"Now I ask you,\" retorted the\nboy as be crossed his legs on the\ndesk, \"does it look like it?\"\nHopeless   Struggle With\nan Irregular Plural\nA young woman wbo lives in\nWashington recently returned from\nabroad. Sbe wae describing her experiences io mountain climbing to\na friend who is in the diplomatic\nservice.\n\"Ah, mees,\" said the foreign diplomat, \"so you climb zat mountain?\nZat was a foot to be proud of I\"\n'Pardon me, count.\" said the\nAmerican girl. \"I thick you mean\n'feat.'\" \t\n\"O-oh!\" exclaimed the count with\nDemonstration\nBy HEINZ'S MAN\nAt our Store All Day Saturday\nCITY GROCERY\nH. H. Henderson, Prop.\nfresh admiration.   -'So you climb\nhim more than once?\"\nModest But Truthful\nA certain lawyer had found tbe\nwitness difficult to manage, saye\nHarper's Magazine, and finally asked\ntbe man whether or not he wai acquainted with any of the men whom\nhe tiaw in tbe jury box.\n\"Yes, sir,\" replied the witness,\n\"more than half of them.\"\n\"Are you willing to swear that\nyou know more than half of them?\"\ndemanded the lawyer.\n\"Wby,\" retorted the witness, \"if\nit comes to that, I'm willing to swear\nthat I know more than all of them\nput together.\"\nThe Crow Was Luoky\nA cattleman who was \"riding\nrange\" near Roeburne, Australia,\nsays W. D. Boyce in his book, Illustrated Australia and New Zealand,\npicked up a rock to throw at a crow.\nAt least he thought it was a stone,\nbut the unusual weight of it made\nhim stop and look* to his amazement\nthe thing was a npgget of almost pnre\ngold.\nWhen he reported his discovery to\nan official the fellow, who was incredulous, merely asked, \"And what\nbecame of the crow?\"\nbit of grain gold or a diminutive nug\nget, drops it into a little bag hanging\nunder his ohin.    In that way be collects adout a quarter of an ounce, or\nfive dollars' worth of gold a day.\nRIDE THEBB ON 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 coin! 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. Ri MOOYBOER 8b^&5\u00a3b?&\nOpen Saturday Eveninfta Till 10 o'Cloek\nIf you wish to accomplish great\nthings, busy yourself witb what tbe\nmediocre refer to as \"mere details.\"\nAn Effioient Librarian\nA sohool teacher in a -aestero town,\nwishing to learn more about the\nstories of Edgar Allan Poe, enquired\nat the delivery desk of the rural\nlibrary for the Gold Bug and added:\n\"I can't seem to find it in the catalogue, but lam sure y.:n bave it. A\nfriend of mine had it out last week.\"\nThe librarian, who was new and\nvery young, glanced at the drawer of\ntbe card catalogue over which the\nteacher had been poring and then\nsmiled:\n\"No wonder, Miss Smith,\" she ex.\nplained with patient gentleness. \"You\nwere looking under 'fiction.' I think\nthat if you will turn to'entomology'\nyou won't have any trouble.\"\nMining With a Feather\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 Ossendowski tells\nus ia his book Beasts, Men and Gods\n\u2014lies flat on the ground, brushes the\nsand aside with a feather and keeps\nblowing into the little excavation so\nformed. From time to time he wets\nhis flnger and, picking upon it a small\nRADIO RADIO\nSee our new Shop, just opening up,\nin the\nOLD OPERA HOUSE BUILDING,\nWINNIPEG AVENUE.\nWe Will Carry\na Full Line of\nLong   distance   Receiving\nSets\u2014several makes.\nAlso\nParts to Build Your Own\nSets.\nElectrical Supplies\nand will do\nAll kinds of Electrical Repair Work.\nHouse Wiring.\nYALE   GENERAL   ELECTRIC\nWlSmPtmLi    VENUE\nPhone 30\nCanadian   Blind   Babies'  Home\nINuraery, Hospital aad Kindergarten\nDominion Charter,  Without Stook Subscription.\nDIRECTORS\u2014Hon. Martiiilurrell, Hon. President; Hou. J. G. Turriff,\nPresident; A. U. tP&ssi u ay:i, Vun-Pi-aiiJj.it; Blw^i-d (J1-4-1J, d-wretary,\nC. Blackett Rjbiaun, Cji*. .Secretary; J. F. McKinley, Treasurer; Lt.-Col.\nWhiton, M.D, It. 9, Onpbeil, Thomas Mulvey, K.C, A. E. Provost, W.\nLyle Raid, A. J. flV*ini*i, OiirlosM. Pinhsy, C.B, W.J. Cairns, and Tom\nMoore.\nTRUSTEES\u2014C. H. Pinhey, CE, Thomas Mulvey. K.C, A. J. Freidman\nLegal Adviior Bunkers Auditor\nJohn I. MacCracken, K.C.    Royil Bank of C*nada.     A. A. Crawley, C. A.\nThe Objects of this Institution, for which Incorporation was recently ob#\ntained, are: \"Io provide a Home and Refuge for Baby and Infant Blind; to\nprovide free Scientific Cire, Training and Maintenance; to Save the Lives of\neven a few of the many of siuli unfortunates, who, for the lack of such service, periah every year; and to return these little ones to their parents, at\nHohool age witli uii-inal, licvtltliy bodies and sound minds.\"\nThin is a largo and greatly needed Child Welfare Service. Careful enquiry\nat the Government offices in the various provinces reveals the fact that there\nare at the presaut 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 iu 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 Boaad. 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.\nDon't regret too mu :h yoar tips\nand downs; after all the only man\nwho bas none is in tbe cemetery.\nTIMBER SALE XS340\nSEALED TBNDERS will be received by the\nMinister of Lands at Viotorla not later than\nnoon on the 27th dsy of September, M2I. for\nthe purchase of Lloenoe X5M0, to cut l,M.i,000\nfeet ol Pine. Fir and Tamarao, and 21,.160 Ball-\nwe7|Tlec.on an area situated on Wild Horse\nGreek, West Fork Kettle Biver, Similkameen\nLand Distrlot.\nThree (8) rears will be allowed for removal\nof timber.\nFurther particulars of tbe Chief Forester,\nVictoria, B. C, or DUtrlot Forester, Kelson,\nB. O.\nI\nLAND ACT\nNotioe of Intention to   Apply\nPurchaae Land\nto\n ._ \u201e__   Land   Distrlot, Recording\nDistrict, and situate at the south end ol\nChristina Lake, adjoining a small part of\nIn Similkameen\nnd i\nNOTICE\nNotice is hereby given that I will\nnot be responsible for any debts contracted by my wife after the 3rd day\nof September, 1923.\nFRED W. RUSSELL.\nTIMBER SAL! X5257\nSEALED TBNDERS will be received br the\nMinister of Lands at Victoria not later than\nnoon on the 21th day of September, IKS,\nfor the purohase ol Licence X5267, to cut\n500,000 feet of Flr, Tamarao and Spruce, 8,000\nTies, and 110,000 lineal feet ol Poles, on an\narea situated on Cameron Creek, North\nFork ol Kettle River, surveyed a* Lot 1M5S\nand portion of Lot tSMS, Similkameen Land\nDistrict.\nThree (\u00bb Tears wlU be allowed for removal\nof timber.\nFurther particulars of the Chief Forester,\nVictoria, H. 0., or District Forester, Nelson,\nB O.\nTIMBER SALE X40O1\nSB A LED TENDERS will be received by the\nMinister of Lands, at Viotorla, not later\ntban noon on the 28th day September, 1MI,\nfar the purchase of Licence X1601, to eut\n1,926,000 feet of Flr, Spruoe, Tamarack and\nCedar: 827.500 lineal feet of Cedar Poles; 101.000\nTies; 1,400 eords of Cordwood; and 1,500 cord s\nof Fence Posts, on an area situated on slh\nInly Creak, Similes west of Graud forks.\nSimilkameen District.\nTwo (2) years will be allowed for removal\nof timher.\nFurther particulars of tne Chief Forester'\nViotorla, B. 0.. or District Forester, Nelson,\nB.C.\nA. E, MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nAgent\nDominion Monumental Worka\nAabeato* Product* Co. Hoofing\n.ESTIMATES FURNISHED\nBOX 332    I6RAND FORKS, B. C.\nI tl.ot 486 (which part of lot Is owned by An>\ndraw Willey).\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Andrew Willey, of\nBonnington Falls B. C, occupation Electrician, Intends to apply for permission to\n'urchaae the following, described lauds:\nJommenolng at a pott planted at tbe southeast\ncomer of mr part of Lot \u25a0WW; thence North to\ncomer of Lot 418; tbence toutheast,followiug\nCan. Paoiflo Railway to anoint due east of\nSnt of commencement; thenee due west to\nnt ol  commencement   and   containing\nent y aeres, more or less.\nDated June 27th, 1921.\nANDBBW WILLBY. Applicant.\nB. a. Ritchie. Agent.\nCounter\nCheck Books\nWe have secured the\nagency 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\nJob Department\nOur\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\nrW*OE value ol well-\nprinted, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding, invitations\nBall programs\nBusiness cards\nVisiting cards\nSh'pping tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNew Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColumbia Avenue and\nleak* 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\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYale Hotkl, First Strict\n-\u25a0Synopsis of\nLand Aot Amendments\nQlattnlnsum price of first-class land reduced\nto \u00bb5 an acrei second-class to f 2. JO au acre..\nPre-emption now confined to surveyed\nlauds only.\nRecords will be grauted covering only land\nsuitable for agricultural purposes uud whicli\nis non-timber land.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished, bat\nparties of not more tbau four may arrange\nlor adjacent pre-emptions with joint residence, but eaoh waiting ueeeasary improvements on respective olutias.\nfre-einptois must occupy claims for five\n'ears aud make improvementa to value of tlo\nPer acre, inoluding clearing aud cultivatiou\nof at least u aores. beiore receiving Crowu\nolraut.\nWhere pre-emptor 'In uco'upatiou not lets\nthau i years, aud hus made proportionate\nImprovements, he may, because of Ill-health,\nor other cause, be grauted lister mediate cer-\nUUoate of improvement aud transfer Us\nclaim.\nRecords without perinaueut resideuce may\nbe Issued, provided upplloaut inaites improvements to extent ol jWoo puf uuuum aud\nrecords same eaoh year. Failure to make lm-\npruveuiouts or reooid same will operate as\nforfeiture. Title cannot be obtaiued in less\nthan 5 years, aud improvement* of tlO.ml per\nacre, Including t acres e.eareil nud cultivated,\nand resideuce of at least two years are res\nquired.\n1're-omptur hoidiug Ur.swu graut may reoord another pre-emption, if he requires laud\nlueoujuuetiou with his farm without actual\nocaupatiou, provided statutory improvements\naud resideuce maintaiued uu Crowu grauted\nlaud.\nUuturveyed areas, not exoeediug HO acres,\nmay be leased as bomesitet; title to be ob-\ntaiued after fulUlliug resideutial and im -\nproveineut conditions.\nFor graaiug and industrial purposes areas\nexceeding Wu acres may fee Issued by oue per-\nsou or oonipauy.\nMill, factory or industrial sites on timber\nlaud exoeediug u acres may be purchased:\nooudltions iuolude payment of stumpage.\nNatural hay meadows iuaooeetible by exist,\nlug roads may be purohueed conditional upon\nconstruction of a fund to them, ttebaleuf\none-half of oost o! road, not exoeediug hall\nof purohase price is made.\nPRE-SMPTORS' FHII BRANTS AOT.\nIbe soope of tbls Aot Is enlarged to Include\n\u202211 persuus jululug or serving witb Uls\nJUIesty's Voroes. Ihe time within wbioh the\nholr\u00ab or devi.ee. ol a deceased pre-emptor\nmay apply lor litle under this Act is extended\nfrom one year from the death of such\nperson, at formerly, uutil oue rear alter the\nconclusion of the present war. Ihis privilege\nls also made retroactive.\nJ*0J&x.'*1*Ixa** **-\u2022 P*o\u00bbPtlone are d ue or\n\u00a3\u00bb\u00a3? ^,*?.*\\*^.oar**f!m**a*Vtio** \u00bb\u00aboord\u00bbd\na J?LiS\" *-> *m \u00ab\u25a0*\u00bb \u2022reronsttled for\nare yeara.\n. ''\u25a0\"\u2022\"isiou.lor return of moneys accrued, due\n\u2022od beeu paid since August 1,1 lilt, on ao-\nJ0\"*** . Wmente, feet or taxes on soldiers'\npreemptions.\n\u201eis.?1**W ?if \u2022\u2022'\u2022\u2022\"\u2022pts to purchase town or\ncity lota held isy members of Allied Forces,\nS V**********, acquired direct or Indirect,\nremitted .from enlistment to March il, UM.\naUa-PUROHASIRS   OP   OROWN\n.LANDS.\nProvision mat* tot lesaance of Crown\nEft..10. *Tt***t>tiajms**t* 'of Crown finds,\nwho (ailed to complete purchase. Involving\nfortelture, on fulfillment of conditions of\nPurchaae, interest aod taxes.  Where tob-\neoL purohaseprice\t\ntributed proportionates.\npurchase, do not claim whole dlt orlgnal par-\n' te due and taxee may be dls-\n. . lionately over, whole are*.\nApportions most be made by May 1,1920.\ntBRAZINQ.\nGraaing Act, 1910. for systematic development of llveetoek industry provides for graaing districts and range administration under\nCommissioner. Annual graaing permits\nIssued based on numbers ranged; priority for\nestablished owners, Stock-owuers may form\nAssociations for range management. Free,\nor partially free,permlto for settlers, compere\nor travellers, up to ten head.\nNEW HARNESS SHOP\nI hsve opened a new harness shop and am prepared\nto make harness to order\nand do atl kinds of repair\nwork. Shop equipped with\nmodern machinery. All work\nguaranteed:\nC. A. Crawford","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":"Geographic Location ","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_09_07","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":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0340988","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<br><br>Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13<br><br>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":"Sort Date","value":"1923-09-07 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":"1923-09-07 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":""}]}