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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":" A\n^f**^\nH\nGRAIN) FORKS Lf t\nthe center of Grand Forks valley, the\npremier fruit growing district of\nSouthern British Columbia. Mining\nand lumbering are also important\nindustries in districts contiguous to\nthe oity. '\nKettle Valley Orchardist\nIflD OULl 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.\nTWENTY-FIRST YEAR\u2014No  19\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY,   MARCH 17, 1922\n\"Tell me what you Know li true:\nI can guess as well ss yoo.\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nLIGHT RATE SAME\nAS NOW; WATER\n' MAY BE HIGHER\nCouncil Succeeds in Reducing Power Co.'s Demands Half a Cent Per\nKilowatt Hour \u2014 Fall\nFair Wants Donation\nCbeakamus, which went out in the\nfloods last October.\" The Northern\nConstruction coinpany haa all tbe\nmaterial on the ground for two more\nHowe trues spans and work on tbe\nQuesnel riyer will proceed rapidly,\nIt is understood that work will\ncommence in a abort time on several timber bridges between the two\nCottonwood rivera.\nThe Spokane Concrete company\nexpects to start manufacturing concrete pipe fnr the irrigation system\non the 25th inst.\nETAX\n\u00bbM FEELING STRONGER.\nEVERY DAY, DQC, BUT\nAM NOT EXACTLY\nTRAINING FOft. A\nPRlflZE.'   FIGHT\nTbe mayor and all the aldermen\nwere present af tbe adjourned meeting of tbe city council, held at 1:30\no'clock this afternoon.\nA deputation from the Agricultural association was present, Fred\nClark and* E. F. Laws acting as\nspokesmen, soliciting financial assistance towards tbe fall fair, the\ncouncil being aaked for I a do\u00bb\nnation of about 1350. The council\npromised consideration of tbe matter in tbe final dealing with the estimates.\nMayor Hull reported the result of\nthe interview with Lome Campbell,\not tbe West Kootenay Power company, siatiog that the city bad been\nsuccessful n securing a rate of 2J-\neents a kilowatt hour in plsce of\nthe 3 cents asked by the company.\nA preliminary discussion of the estimates occupied considerable time,\nit being the feeling of the members\nof the council tbifl wbile no in\ncrease would be charged th? consumer for electric lights, yet in view\nof tbe increased cost to the city of\npower purchased, it would be necessary to make an increase in tbe\nwater rates some 25 cents, or possi\nbly 50 oents, per month per consumer.\nSizing up roughly tbe estimates\nsituation, it would appear that aome\n110,000 extra will bave to be raised\ntbia year over and above last year's\nestimates. Tbe school board alone\nrequire some 130,000.\nTbe final estimates was laid over\nuntil the next regular meeting.\nAn enquiry was receive for\nlioense rates from tbe Idternational\nAmusement company, offering a\nround-about and attractions generally. The clerk was instructed to\ninform the company thai a license\nfee of $50 a day would be required.\nThe various committees presented\ntbeir reports, which were   adopted.\nBLANKS ARE\nIN THE MAIL\nQuestionaires Are Being\nSent to All and Must\nBe Returned by March\n31--Minimum: Bachelors, $1200; Benedicts,\n$1500\nHE'S GETTING BETTER.   GIVE HIM TIME\n\"No longer does tbe devil wiggle a\nwicked forked tail, but now be shakes\na shimmying shoulder,\" Straton de*\ndared.\n\"Tbe devil of today is no longer\nthe bold, brazen devil of years igo.\nThe new model has arrayed himself\nlike an angel of light.\n\"Nor does the new devil care\nwbere be goes; be tempts tbeologi\nans and sometimes entees the pulpit.\n\"Brimstone' of   Dante's time has\nturned to jazz, movies and the tbea\nters of 1922.\n\"Tbe 1922 devil is an advocate of\njazz, and a regular attendant of\nmovies and t theaters.\"\nSupreme efforts of the new devil,\naccording to Straton's analysis, are:\nTo undermine tbe virtue of\nwomen; to destroy masculine bonor;\nto Wreck the marriage vows, to\ncheckmate tbe church; to overthrow\ntbe old-fashioned bome.\n\"These things are tbe 1922 mode)\ndevil, and these are some of hiB\nworks,\" he concludes.\nTHE WEATHER\nThe following is the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\nday during the past week, as recorded by tbe government thermometer on B. F. Law's ranch:\nMas.\nMarob 10\u2014Friday    40\n11\u2014Saturday  41\n12- Sunday  40\n13\u2014Monday  45\n14\u2014Tuesday  43\n15\u2014Wednesday.. 52\n16- Thursday  49\nMin.\n33\n27\n26\n12\n27\n36\n33\nInches\nSnowfall     2.2\nRainfall ...   044\nWork Upon Bridge\nOver Quesnel River\nProceeding Radidly\n* s\nQuesnel, March 16.\u2014Joe Kelly's\nbridge gang of about thirty men arrived on Saturday's train. Tbey will\ncontinue work on the P.O. B. bridge\nover the Quesnel river. A pile bridge\nwas driven last spring and trains\nran over tbis until late fall, when a\nHowe truss span was put in over the\nmain channel. For the last four\nmonths the bridge gang has been\nworking on the Cheeki bridge near\nIncome tax forms and personal\nproperty questionaires are now being sent out through the mail by G.\nW. Cripps, provincial income tax\nassessor at Vancouver. The forms\nmust be filled in and returned by\nMarch 31. The income dealt witb\non them is for the whole year 1921\nPersons wbo have not received\nforms from tbe taxation departmeni\nare required to get tbem before tbe\nend of tbe mantb and fill tbem in\nto avoid being penalized.\nThree Months' Grace\nTaxation officials will send out\natatemeuta of tbese taxes due within a couple of weeks after the ques-\ntiooafres are sent in to tbe government. About tbree months will be\ngiven after tbat for the payment of\ntbe charges.\nSeparate income tax questionaires\nare seoi out for all companies and\ntbere are others for farmers.\nThe Bachelor Tax\nBachelors must pay income tax in\nexcess of $1200, Married men must\npay on all over $1500 and $200 is\nallowed for eacb cbild.\nOtber exemptions allowed both\nmarried aod single men include dependents, such as father, mother or\nother close relative aod also life insurance.\nIn connection witb the income returns a statement has to be furnished sbowiug all tbe personal property a person bas, witb the exception\nof automobiles, household furniture\nand wearing apparel. All'yachts,\nsailing ships, launches, notes.bonds,\nstocks, reference books, professional\nbooks, medical, dental or scientific\ninstruments have to be listed in detail.\nOnly One Tax Paid\nOn the total value of the personal\nproperty the taxation officials will\nfigure out what has to be paid as\ntax. But a person will not be called\noo to pay tbe personal property tax\nuuless it comes to more than the income Ui. In tbat case it is not\nnecsssary to pay the income tax. A\nperson has to pay only one of these\ntaxes, tbat being the one wbicb is\nth egreater.\nTbe income tax jb figured out on\nthe following basis: 1 per cent on\nincome above tbe exemption limit\nand up to $2500; 2 per cent on all\nbetween $2600 and $3600; 3 per\ncent between $3500 and $4500; 4\nper cent between $4500 and $5500,\nand so on in similar progression.\nVancouver Man's Calendar Reform Plan Accepted by Washington\nTo Vancouver goes tbe distinction\nof having advanced tbe plan of calendar reform tbat tbe recent convention at .Washington, D.C., unanimously adopted. Tbe new method\nof measuring,time was invented by\nMoses B. Cotsworth, a statistician of\nthe Terminal city, It was obosen\nafter careful deliberation in preference to ten otber suggestions.\nThe gathering was known as the\nUnited Statea national convention to\nreceive, discuss and consider plans\nfor improving tbe calendar.\nFollowing are tbe proposals pre*\nsen ted:\nPlan No. 1\u2014Tbe \"International\nFixed Calendar Plan,\" advanced by\nMoses B. Cotsworth, Vancouver, B.C.\nPlan No. 2\u2014The \"Equal Mouths\nor Liberty Calendar,\" advanced by\nJoseph TJ. Barne8,Mioneapolis,Minu.\nPlan No. 3\u2014 The \"Perpetual Calendar,\" proposed by L. C. Pope, of\nFort Myer, Florida. *\nPlan No. 4\u2014Tbe \"Swiss\" plan,\nadvocated by Dr. A. F. Beal.Bureau\nof Standards, Washington, D.C.\n\u00a3Plan No. 3\u2014The \"Black\" system;\nplan 6, the \"John Robertson\" plan;\nNo. 7,the \"AlexanderPhillip\" plan;\nNo. 8 the \"Ghilain\" 'plain; No. 9,\nthe \"Decimal\" plan, proposed by\nEdward Skille, Drummond, Wis.\nNo. 10, a plan presented by Dr. D.\nC. Savage,,of Nashvilie, Tenn.; No.\n11, the. \"New Era Calendar,\" invented by Howard Q. Warren, of\nPrinceton University.\nFolia wing tbe discussion Joseph\nV. Barnes offered tbe following resolution:\nWhereas, after due consideration\nof the different plans proposed, this\nconvention is convinced of tbe superior merits of the first (International Fixed Calendar) plan, whicb\nprovides for tbe Betting aside of New\nYear's day as an independent legal\nholiday, and wbich also provides for\nsetting aside of the extta day in each\nfourth year as \"Leap Day\" (making\nitean independent legal holiday),and\ndivides the remainder 364 days oj\neacb year into 13 months of exa itly\nfour complete weeks eacb, by placing a new month between June and\nJuly, and suggesting \"Sol\" as tbe\nnatural nahoe for sucb new month,\nbecause it will include the time the\n\"Solstices\" come in both the northern and the southern hemispheres;\nTherefore be it resolved, tbat tbis\nUnited States national convention on\ncalendar reform does hereby endorse\ntbe \"International Fixed Calendar\"\nplan as being, in its opinion, the\nmost simple, the moat conveniently\narranged, and tbe most desirable of\nall the plans proposed to the convention, and we do hereby recom\nmend its adoption by tbe law-making bodies of the nations of the\nworld.\nThe  resolution   carried    unanimously.\nIt is significant that although tbe\nCalendar convention was' assembled\nby the Liberty Calendar Association\nof America, Mr. Barnes.the founder\nof tbat association, proposed tbe de\ncidiog unanimous resolution recommending all nations to adopt Mr.\nCotswortb's \"International Fixed\nCalendar\" plan, wbioh had previously been unanimously recount! nded\nby both tbe Royal Society of Canada\nand tbe government of Canada.\nNorris Government\nDefeated in Manitoba\nWinnipeg, March 14.\u2014By a vote\nof 27 to 23, tbe Norris government\nwas defeated on a stisight vote of\ncensure resolution in the legiolature\nthis evening, and as soon ap the\nlieutenant-governor, Sir James\nAikens, returns from Torooto on\nThursday, Premier T, C. Norris will\nplace his and the resignation of lbe\ngovernment in his bands.\nA general election at an early date\nis inevitable and tbe only point in\ndoubt is whether the lieutenant\ngovernor will induce the government\nto carry on until election arrangements are made or whether be will\ncall upon one of tbe group leaders\nto forn> a government tbat will do\nso. ' In view of the apparent impos -\nsibility of any group leader forming\na government tbat woul d ommaod\na working majority in tbe bouse, it\nis oonaidered probable that Sir\nJames Aikens will make an effort to\nget the Norris administration to\nstay in oflice till election arrangements are completed. Meanwhile\ntbe house stands adjourned till to-\nmjrrow afternoon.\nThe Modern Devil\nShakes Wicked Shoe\nThe following indictment of present-day society is made by a New\nYork preacher. Perhaps some of\ntbe vices of modern times are not\nany worse than ihose practiced by\nthe people a generation or two ago.\nModern methods must be used in\nfighting tbe 1922 model shimmy\nshaking devil. You can not combat\ntbe up-to-date satan who shakes a\nwicked shoe on the dance floor witb\ntbe weapons our gjaodfathers used\nagainst the old-fashioned brimstone-\nbreathing Mephisto.\nThis is tbe answer of Dr. Jobn\nRoach Stration, famous reformer, to\nDr. Robert Stuart Macartbur, wbo\nquit Calvary Baptist church, whicb\nhe founded, because he could not\nstand Stration's sensational style.\nDr. Straton will preecb next Sun\nday on tbe subject of Dr. Macartbui's\nreeighatioo from tbe churoh.\nWhat Happens to  I\nOld Railroad\nTies\nThe railway -passenger who sees\npiles of worn-out cross ties .piled\nup and set on fire by repair nags\nalong  the right of way sotMtta-MS\nwonde<\\\" why this is done and asks\nwhy people are net allowed te use\nthem for fuel. The Pennsylvania\nRailroad has issued an information\npamphlet dealing with this subject\nwhicb states:\u2014\n\"In the first place, it is far from\ntrue that all the old ties are burned.\nA considerable number are constantly being sold to persons living\non er near the right ef way, who\nbuy them at nominal priees, usually\nten or fifteen cents apiece, aad use\nthem for firewood.    .-.\u2022_.\n\"That it about as far as the mB-\nread company has been able to go,\nthus far, in finding an outlet for\nworn-out ties. Such a method ef\ndisposal is practicable only in those\ncases i '..ere the ties can b\u00ab delivered\nat a public crossing, or other point\nwhere they can be obtained safely\nby the users, and where the eost of\nso delivering them is not greater\nthan the nominal prices obtainable.\n\"The Company cannot sanction\nthe public going promiscuously over\ntracks and through yards to gather\nup old ties. To do so would bt practically letting down the bars against\ntrespassing on the tracks, an evil\nwhich has been the causa of about\nhalf of all the fatal accidents on\nrailroads in the United States.\n\"Efforts have been made to interest dealers in firewood in buying tha\nold ties, but not thus far with much\nsuccess. The causes appear to be\nthat the old ties are often dirty;\nthat they contain more or less stone,\ngrit and slag wedged in tho cracks,\nwhich might injure the saws used in\ncutting them; that in many cases\nthey are partly decayed; that they\nare dried out, and that their fibre\nis more or less crushed, so that they\nburn out too quickly. These an\namong the reasons assigned by dealers who have not been willing to pay\nthe railroad company enough to\ncover the eost of collecting the tiea\nnnd delivering them to a point at\nwhich they could bo removed.\n\"Efforts have also been made to\ndlspore of old ties in a number ol\nother ways, including sale for wood-\npulp purposes, for the extraction oi\nchemicals, for burning and sale of\nthe ashes for fertiliser, and foi\nmanufacture into charcoal, but without success in Interesting parties engaged in these occupations.\n. 'The Company will be glad to continue and wherever feasible to extend, the present practice of selling\neld ties to individual consumers foi\nn, minal prices' at points whore they\nci.n be delivered without danger to\nIhe purchasers and without costing,\nfor collection and transportation,\nmore than they are worth as fuel.\nThe management will welcome any\nother suggestions by which more of\nthe old ties can be usefully disposod\nof or made available for commercial\nor industrial purposes.\"\nThe   Canadian    Pacific   Railway\ngoes further than the Pennsylvania\nRailroad and gives away ties to any\nwho will take them, such giving being surrounded with the necessary,\nsafeguards as  to trespassing.    Tht\nexperience of the Canadian  Pacifu\nis  that  ties are taken  only whet\nthere is no standing timber in thi\nvicinity, and that in many cases tl\nfarmers taking the ties do not ui\nthem for firewood but for generall\npurposes around the farm, indicating that tha valne of old ties\nfirewood   in   this   country   is\ntremely small.\nIN KOOTENAY\nReturns From Sixty Out\nof Sixty-nine Polls Give\nDr. J. H. King a Lead\nof 1100 Votes\nFernie, B. C, March 14.\u2014Returns from sixty polls out of a total\nof sixty-nine in the East Kootenay\nconstituency tonight indicates tbat\nHon. Dr. J. H. King, minister of\npublio works in the Ottawa government, has been elected to parliament\nio tbat riding by a majority of at\nleast 1 iilOover his Labor Progressive\nopponent, H. M. Brondson, of Cranbrook. Tbe figures for the sixty\npolls, whicb in-Iude all the arger\ncenters of population, stand]tonight:\nKing, 3016; Brondson, 1855. The\nremaining nine polls are in remoter\nsections of tbe riding and will not\nreturn their polls tonight.\nTbe^electiou was made necessary\nby tbe fact that R. E. Beattie, Progressive member ior lbe riding, resigned. Dr. King, former provincial\nminister of public works for British\nColumbia, resigned at Victoria and\nentered tbe contest tn East Koote \u2022\nnay following bis appointment to a\nportfolio in tbe Mackenzie King\ncabinet.\nTbe election of Dr. King completes Premier King's cabinet, and\ngives British Columbia one representative in tbat administration.\nFOSTER'S FORECAST\nWashington,March 13\u2014 The week\ncentering on March 17 will average above normal tempertures on\nmeridian 90 from tbe Gulf of Mexico\nto tbe far north. The hiSh temperature of that disturbance will be in\nnorthwestern Canada about March\n15, on and all along meridian CO\nMarch 17, and in eastern sections\nMarch 19. A cool wave will be\nin northwestern Canada near March\n19, on meridian 90 March 21, in\neastern sections 23.\nUnusually severe storms will prevail from March 11 to 19, and whatever relief tbere is in store for America and* Canada may be expected\nduring tbat ten days. March will be\nfull of storms and improvements in\ncrop weather will come witb tbe\nstorms.\n1 expect that about one-third of\ntbe continent will get below normal\ncrops and two-tbirds will get bumper crops. Altogether tbe best average\nof crops are expected for North,\nAmerica tbat will bave been produced for many years.\nJust as we were about to start tbe\npress to print this week's issue of\nThe Sun, the first buttercup of tbe\nseason was brought into our office\nby Miss Helen Mason. It should be\na sign that spring is juet around the\ncorner.\nElection Coctests\nOccupying Time of\nGabinet Ministers\nVictorio,March 15 \u2014Election con\ntests contiuue to o.cupy a large part\nof tbe time ol Premier Oliver and his\nministers. Ouly Hou. W. H Sutherland and Hon. E. D. Barrow are\nat tbeir desks, and the former left\ntoday for Nelson. Hon. William\nSloan will leave for Nelson tomor-\nrnw, too, which will leave Hon. E.\nD, Bairow tbe only member of tbe\ngovernment on the job.\nThe government is confident of\nwinning tbe Nelson fight, bnt it is\nhardly expected thatHhe CraDbrook\nby-election will be brought on for\neome montbe, nor tbe one in Vancouver to replace M, A, Macdonald. THE   SUN,   QRAND   FORKS,   B. C.\nAN IH.EfmtmmlT  N_L\u00ab3->t?E*l\n9. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANOE\nOne Tear (in Canada and Qreat Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States)   1.50\nAddresr -\" ~~ 'cations to\nThk Grand Forks Sun,\nPhonk 101R Grand Forks, ti C.\nOFFICE:    COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1922\nMuscle Shoals. It would be absurdly wasteful to allow the $85,000,000 already spent\n.there to be charged off to profit and loss\u2014\nor rather to loss alone. It may be that no one\nwill make a better offer than Mr. Ford; but\nSecretary Weeks thinks that the Detroit man\nis trying to drive a rather hard bargain with\nhis fellow citizens. It is a part of Mr. Ford's\nproposal that the government, sell to him for\n$5,000,000 nitrate and steam plants that Sec\nretary Weeks says have a scrap value of more\nthan $8,000,000.\nEngland is glutted with cotton cloth that it\ncan not sell; Austria is unclothed becausee it\ncan not |juy. While Russia is starving, American granaries bulge with surplus corn, The\nworld is full of goods that it can not exchange, and there are so many ships on the\nsea that hardly any of them can get a profitable cargo.\nThe term Grand Canon applies to that part\nof the Colorado river which lies in northern\nArizona. Itis a gorge 217 miles lo g, 4000 to\n6000 feet deep and from 1 to 15 miles wide at\nthe top. Far away to the north, however, on\nGreen river, a tributary of the Colorado, there\nbegins a greatly depressed river bed that continues through Utah and Arizona for 1000\nmiles, ''morr mysterious in their depths than\nthe Himalayas in their height.\"\nA Russian statistician has discovered  that\n.he Russian birth rate, which was almost 40\na thousand before   tlie war, was  only 13 a\nthonsand in 1919, -and that the death rate,\nwhich was 25.4 in 1913,was75 sixyears later.\nWe give the figures for what they may be\nworth, for we imagine that the vital statistics\nof Russia would be hard to collect and mt to\nbe trusted; bnt there can be no doubt of the\ntremendous waste of   population.   In only\ntwelve   of  the  \"governments\" of European\nRussia the loss of population is estimated at\nthree million. *\n\"Business in oQr town is tolerably good,\"\ndeclares an exchange, \"nnd if the pessimiSts\nwho are waving their hands would only take\nsome Hags in them, it might be considerably\nbetter.\"\nOn a high point' of Mount Adams in the\nstate of Washington are one hundred and\nthirty six apparently human footprints, made\nin mud that has long since turned to stone.\nThe tradition of the Yakima Indians is that\nthe spot is the place where \"the great canoe\"\nlanded after theeFlood, and that the footprints were made by the people who stepped\nfrom the \"canoe\" to the ground, softened by\nthe long inundation.\nMany labor unions have a financial strength\nthat the public does not realize. For example,\n150 members of the Elevator Constructors'\nunion in San Francisco went on strike against\na cut in wages. The International Brotherhood of the craft voted at once to pay every\nstriker his wages under the old scale\u2014$9 a\nday. Some of the money came from'the treas\nury of the organization, but most of it came\nfrom a levy of 10 per cent on the wages of\nmembers of the union who fwere working in\nother cities.'\nTho great purchasing power of foreign\nmoqey in Austria makes tourists thrive but\nthe Austrians suffer An American dollar will\nbuy two fowls, or a goose, or sixty heads of\ncabbage, or six pounds of butter. It will pay\nfor a month's rent of a large well-furnished\nroom or of a small apartment in the best part\nof Vienna. The salaries of lawyers, schoolmasters, clerks and other brain workers, if\nmeasured in our money, range from $12 to $18\na month. A doctor gets from 15 to 25 cents a\nvisit, and domestic servants from 40 to 75\ncents a month.\nClose Examination of the\nDiamonds\nshown here only accentuates their\ncharm. They, are stones that will\nappeal to those who prefer a' small,\ngood diamond to a large, faulty one.\nSelect a Diamond Now\nA small payment will reserve it for\nyou. An occasional sum on account\nfrom now on will put you in pos ,\nsession of the best of gifts without\nyour having felt the cost.-\nJ. C. TAYLOR\n- Jeweller and Optician\nBridie Street Grand Forks\nNothing Else is Aspirin -\u25a0\u2014 say \"Bayer\"\nWhether we are growing better or merely\ngoing faster is a conundrum for philosphers.\nConsider the latest scheme for a cafeteria:\nthe diner takes his seat at a table on a slowly\nmoving section of floor, picks up the dishes he\ndesires as he passes the counter, pays the\ncashier as he sweeps by her cage and then\ncontinues to eat with what show of leisure he\ncan muster as he continues to revolve iu his\norbit. Sot a square meal but around one\nseems tp be the aim.\nA flock of swans that belong to the bishop's\npalace at Wells, Somerset, England, use the\nancient moat as their swimming pool. From\none ofthe palaqo windows hangs a ropo that\nreaches to the water and that is attached to a\nbell in the building, and whenever the swans\nare hungry thoy tug at the rope until ihey succeed in ringing the bell and some ono throws\ndown food to them. A bishop's daughter\ntaught them the trick.\nNon official radio messages\u2014music, sermons, vaudeville, lectures, personal advertising\u2014must now be sent at a wave length of\n300 meteres in the United States. The department of commereo reserves the wave\nlength of 485 matres for weather reports, crop\nand market reports and other official and\nsemi-official announcements.\nFrom Detroit, by way of Roger Babson, the\nstatistician, comes the news that Henry Ford\nis at work on a composition  of cotton and\nforniajdehoyde and glue, whicli may be called\n\"cottonoid\" for   convenience, and  that if his\nexperiments succeed he can  block  out auto\nmobile bodies as a cook cuts  out doughnuts.\nPresumably the engine will  still have to be\nmade of sterner stuff; Incidentally^ for the instruction of tliose who believe that the day of\n\"opportunity\" has gone by, Mr.  Ford  recalls\nthat  seventeen  years ago he could  not get\ntrusted for a chicken for his Thanksgiving\ndinner.    Last year he paid  the government\n$7(5,000,000 in taxes.\nIt is interesting to know that the historic\nflag of Ireland is not green but blue. Green\nas the national color dates only from the\nrevolution of 1798. It was then accepted by\nthe people, but there -was never any official\naction to change the color of the Irish flag,\nwhich in early days was blue. Nor has the\nharp always been an emblem of the country.\nOriginally the Irish flag boro a golden siui-\nburst. Later it displayed three golden crowns,\nand it was not until she seventeenth century\nthat the harp displaced them. On the royal\nstandard of the United Kingdom, where the\nIrish flag i.s quartered with those of England,\nScotland and Wales, che harp appears on a\nblue field. But the new free state government\ncan change the national color to green if it\npleases, and it is very likely to do it.\nCommon Ground\nSEE\nE. C. HENNIGER\nCOMPANY\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nBefore Buying\nYour\nSEED GRAIN\nand\nGARDEN SEEDS\nWarning! Unless you see name\n\"Beyer\" on Ublets, you are not getting Aspirin at all. Why take ohanceil\nAccept only an unbroken \"Bayer\"\npackage whicli contain, directions\nwtfrked out by physicians during 21\nyears and proved safe by millions for\nColds, Headaohe, Btracho, Tootach1.,\nNeuralgia, Rheumatism, Neuritis.,\nLumbago, and Pain.  Made in Oanada.\nAll dru_;_\u00bbi!.ti Sail Bayer Tablets of\nAspirin in handy tin boxes of 12 tab-\nlots, and in bottles of 24a nd 100.\nAspirin is the trade mark (registered\nin (J-mada) of Bayer Manufacture of\nMonoaceticaoidester of Salicylicacid.\nWhile it is well knowh that Aspirin\nmeans Bayer nriiiufaoture, to assiat\nthe publio against imitations, the\nTablets of Bayer Company will be\nstamped with their general trade\nmark, the \"Bayer Cross.\"     .  .\nS.T.HULL\nEstablished 1910\nReal Estate and Insurance\nResident Agent Oriiml Porks Townsite\nOompany, Limited\nForms    [Oriliiir.ls     City Property\n.1 Agents nt* Nelson,  Calgary, WllltltpOtf Hnd\nother Pralrlupoints.  Vancouver Agents)\nPBNDBK INVISSTMKNTS\nItATTKNIIUH Y LANDS LTD.\nBstabllshcil ln I'.IIO. wc arc In a potlHon   to\nfurnish .tillable liifnriitntlnn nonoBrilillir-tlHs\ndistrict.\nWrit, fill   ...\u00bb . 'it M.ltll r-fl.\nGBAND FORKS\nTransfer Company\nDAVIS 8 HANSEN, Props\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal*  Wood and   Ice\nfor Sale      \" .\nOffice at  R.  P.  Petric'g Store\nPfionc 64\nC.V. Meggitt\nBenl Estate nnd Insurance '\n.Secretary Weeks has turned over to the\nAmerican congress without recommendation\nthe offer of Henry Ford for the Muscle Shoals\nplants for the manufacture of fertilizers and\nthe production of power\u2014if congress will appropriate the money to complete the project.\nIt is generally agreed that something should\nbe done with the power  that  is available  at\nWritten for The Sun by\nD. E. cJMELROSE\nThe laws of Nature give us life, on this revolving sphere, the law of man produces strife\nto mar our progress here.\nFirst we must creep, then rise and walk,\nwhere mischief leads the way, while mother\nteaches us to talk and words of love to say.\nWe cut our teeth and carve the chairs and\ntwist the kitten's tail, then take a header down\nthe stairs, or backwards o'er the rail.        t\nAt six we go to school to learn sweet gems\nof knowledge rare, where helpful hints we\nmay discern\u2014and practice how to swear.\nAt eighteen years we know it all\u2014just say\nit with conceit. We wonder why the earth\ndoesn't fall and grovel at our feet.\nIt takes us years of ceaseless toil to learn\nthe golden rule, and sow our wild oats in the\nsoil prepared -in Sunday school.\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE GITY OF\nGRAND FORKS\nProposes to dispose ofthe following lands which have\nbeen acquired under Tax Sale proceedings. OFFERS\nto purchase one or more of the said lands will be re-\nceivep by the undersigned on or beforeMarch 24, 1922:\nMap 23, Block 13, Lots 3, 14, pt. of 4.\nMap 23, Block 14, Lois 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 20.\nMap 23, Block 15, Lots 9, 7.\nMap 23, Block 17, Lots 2. 3\nMap 23, Block 18, Lots 1, 2, 9.\nMap 23, Block 19, Lots 16, 23.\nMap 23, Block 21, Lots 19, 20.\nMap 23, Block 24, Lots 23. 14, 22, 16, 21, 19. \u00ab\nMap 23, Block 25, Lots 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 7, 8.\nMap 23, Block .30,1,018 1, 2, 3, 4,5, 6,7,8,9,10,11, 12, 13, 14, 15.\nMap 23, Block 31, Lots 4. 5, 6, 7 and hnlf of 10.\nMap 121, Block 28, Lots 3, 4' 7  8, 9, 10.\nMap 121, Block 2PA, Lots 6, 7, 8 9, 10, 11. 12, 13, 14, 16,\n16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21.\nMap 121, Block 29, Lot 4.\nJOHN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nEden and Bluebird\nElectric\nWashing Machines\nM90.00on Terms\nMILLER & GARDNER\nComplete Home Furnishers\nT\nVery Old Highland\nWHISKY\nSupplied to the P. & O. Steamship\nLine for over forty years; to His\nMajesty's Transports; to many exclusive Clubs and Officis' Messes all over\nthe world. 15years matured. Ask\nfor Catto's.\nfoh'mai.i at\nUOVKKNMRNT Milium Nio:im\nORCHARDS.  FARM   LANDS   ANI\u00bb CITY |\n.     PROPERTY\nEx.*t'lent facilities for sf.lll.11_- your farms I\nWe hive (-..-out* at   all    Const and  Prairie]\nPoints\nWK CARRY AUTOMOHII.K INSURANCE. |\nDEALER IN POLES, POSTS AND TIES,\nANI> FARM PRODUCE\nReliable Information ro-ranlln'.. tills distrct I\ncheerfully ftirnitslTeil. We Hnllc'l your in-1\nqMlrfcs.\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFOR FINE PRINTING\nImprovements\nAre Constant\nSolutions of telephone problems are\nnearly always made in advance of necessity. Improvements are experimented\nwith constantly, so that the standard of\nservice may be at all times the very best.\nIt is not that a standard may be maintained, but that the standard may continue to be as close to perfection as it is\nhumanly possible to have it. F.iobiems\nof speed, accuracy and transmission are\nalways before the telephone engineers,\nand the great and precise mechanisms\nthrough which the volume and complexity-of telephone traffic is handled are\nmechanically perfect in the light of present invention,\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY %\n1\/\nTHE   SUN,   GRAND   FORKS,   B. C.\nINTERESTING    SCENES    FROM   MANY    PARTS . OF   THE   WORLD\n(t) Banff winter carnival.   Winner of the\nflwee mile ski race.\nI*,) \"Victow,\" Neleon'e old  ship enteriag\ndrydock at Portsmouth for examination.\n(8) 8&. \"Empress of Russia\" being escorted\nby seaplaneTinto Vancouver Harbor, under\ndirection of the Canadian Alrboard Xntellir\nSnce Departmimt. \u2022\n) Making the largest Ball of Twine in ttw\nworld is the ambition of C. H. Stall, of Cincinnati, by saving every scrap. Mr. SMI\nworks in a wholesale drug warehouse.\n(6) The Grand Duke Cyril Vladimlravitek\nand Ws family. He is said to have been\nchosen a candidate for the Russian throne.\n(8) Vancouver Amazons, winners of hockey\nmatch against Calgary Regents, at Banff\nwinter sports. ,   ,\n(7) S.S. \"Montealm\" Lounge Room, looking\nforward. The \"Montcalm* is one of the\nthree new 16,000 ton liners for the Atlantic\nservice of the Canadian Paciflo,\n* INDEPENDENCE ON TWO ACRES\nhouse there are prunes, peaches,\nplums, apples, pears, cherries ana\ne%Bii a \"Concord\" vine full of fruit.\nMr. Jones sold $200 worth of apples\nlast year\u2014$32 of which came from\ntwo  trees alone.\nTbe chief pride of this model\nfarm in miniature is, however, ths\npoultry. There are 200 head altogether and the 150 layers are kept\nm one house\u2014divided off into compartments with a run In front of\neach. As soon as one run looks stale\nit is dug up, sown down to rape snd\nanother run used. Scarlet-runner\nbeans are growing all up the south\nend of the run ns shade. The poultry aro. Barred Rocks and Leghorns.\nThc house itself is of an exceptional\ndesign the owner's own idea entirely.   The floor space is 50 ft. by\numiirniiiiifui iiifinnnnniiiiifiii*Mrn\u00bbjimnjinjiiii 11 iijj miiiiu uiiuiiiIlHIJIIIIMIJIILf JUfli iiMiimmn'-Linmllirnig\nThi-os cows, s couple of hundred\nK Tons cows, s couple oi nunarea\nbat, sn orohsrd, small fruit and\n\u00bb market garden, sll en two acres\not had In ths suburbs of Van-\nMtmrt How msny sweltering folk\nIn CM dusty oity limits would believe\nit possible f And yet Mr. Jones does\nit, snd makes Mmself an Independent man.\nMethod again! Method, foresight\naad hard work sre three essentials\nto success, which have made Mr.\nJones huJopendent. He has stacked up three tons of hay this summer\noff the three-fourths of an acre that\nhe devotes to hay, just timothy and\nclover mixed, nothing else.\nAll ths milk ls sold locally at 8\nquarto for $1, and the neighbors\nare only too glad to come and get It\nthemselves.\nAbout %-acre is devoted to mangolds and feed carrots for the cows,\nthat Mr. Jones haB only a little\nalfalfa to buy for winter, together\nwith the bran and shorts. He has\na machine for chopping the hay before feeding, which is an economy in\nItself.\nThe eow stable is spotlessly clean\nand drained into a tank outside\nwhence ibe liquid manure is taken\nto the vegetable garden. Cow and\nchicken manure mixed are generously applied wherever and whenever possible and t*w effect of this\nadded to naturally rich soil Is sweet\ncorn ten feet Man and cabbages.\nAH the vegetables are sold retail\n(thus doing away with the middleman) and being a gardener bv instinct, Mr. Jones follows a certain\nrotation of stop in planting.\nFor instance, brussels sprouts are\nset out where the early green peas\nor beans have just been turned under the soil so a* to get foil aataat-\nage of the nitrogen contained in the\nstalks and leaves of the legumes. In\nthe same way borecole (curly kale)\nis   planted   fmmediatuly   after   the\nitatoes.\nHe keeps his own seed from cress,\nonions, parsley and leeks and finds\nthat it suits Itself to the soil better\neach year.\nThere ars plenty of currant and\nrrooseberry bushes and some fine,\nhealthy looking rows of magoon\nstrawberries, but the best of his\nsmall fruit are the raspberries, of\nwhich he has 700 to 800 canes, and\nthose have proved so profitable that\nMr. Jones Is going to plant Vi acre\nmore next year.\nta tks ssshsrd on ws side of the\n14 _t.. raised 4 ft. off the ground\nand the space underneath used for\ndust baths and which, of course, are\nthus dry all the year round. From\nthese the hens enter the house\nthrough \u00abn opening In the floor.\nMr. Jones was a dairy farmer in\nthe north nf Ireland before he mis\nout to Canada fifteen years ago.\nUp to just lately h' worked in an\niron foundry lp town, but found that\nhis little farm was paying him so\nwell that he now gives all his time\nto it. His wife takes no less interest in it all than he does, so that\nhoth are \"worki\" partners\"\u2014the\nid   il   COl'nbinat.nn.\nThe Illustration - a  view of\nMi. Jones' farm. THE   SUN.   URAND   FORKS,   1. C.\nNews of the City\nMrs. C. C. French, wbo has been\nvieiting her sister, Mrs. J. T. Stafford, left for ber home in Creston\nlast week. Sbe will return to tbis\ncity in a few days.\nA number of cabinet ministers of\n(he provincial government have\npassed through tbe city during the\npast few daya to take part in the\nNelson by eleetion.\nE. C. Henniger, M.L.A., went up\nto Greenwood this evening to take\npart in a public meeting whicb is to\nbe addressed by Hon. J. D. Mac-\nLean and otber speakers.\nWilliam Tomlinson, a mineralogist and collector and a friend of\ntbe prospector, wbo was well known\nin tbis city, died at bis home in\nNew Denver last Saturday.\n' The regular meeting of tbe city\ncouncil adjourned on Monday evening until 1:30 this afternoon owing\nto the illness of the city clerk and\nthe absence from the city of one of\ntbe aldermen.\nImmigration Inspector P. T. McCallum left Thursday evening for a\nshort visit to Nelson.\nUev. Hillis Wright returned from\nVancouver on Sund.y.\nTbere are a number of cases of in\nIluenzi iu the city, but tbey seem to\nbe of a mild nature.\nhave been addressed by Premier\nJohn diver, Finance Minister John\nHart and our local member, was\ncancelled owing to the inability of\nthe cabinet ministers to reach the\ncity.\nj Percy   Abbott   left  today for  a\nshort visit to Nelson.\nBorn\u2014In Grand Forks, on Friday, March 10, to Mr. and Mrs. R.\nParks, a daughter.\nThe public meeting   announced\nEquipment w-.ich Will be UBed in\nconstructing a railway to give access\nto the site of the dam which the\nGranby Consolidated Mining, Smelting it, Power company proposes to\nerect near Anyox was shipped north\nfrom Vancouver this week. It consists of ties, poles, rails and a quan\u00ab\ntity of electrical apparatus. The\nrails shipped north were used during the construction of the Hudson\nBay railway for the purpose of\nbringing out ties and trestle timbers.\nCharles F. Law, mining engineer\nand broker, formerly representative\nof the late Lord Rhondda'in Peace\nriver, has returned to the coast from\nNew York, where he has been for\nseveral weeks on mining business\nafiecting British Columbia. Mr. Law\nstates that mining men and capitalists in the eastern United States are\nevincing a growing interest in. the\ndevelopments in British Columbia\nand especially in the reports of re\ncent discoveries of new gold areas in\nfhe province.\nEdward Collins, owner of a New\nYork record for several forgeries and\npassing of worthlees cheques, sat\nback and listened the other day\nwhile Magistrate Sweetser held bim\nin $2500 bail on a charge of passing\na worthless cheque for $100. Tben\nbe leaned slightly forward and enquired suavely: \"Would your h nor\naccept a cheque*!\" \"Not even a certified one,\" the magistrate answered\nGROCERIES\nWe deal in fruits, vegetables and groceries exclusively and have fresh goods arriving daily, and\nsell them as fast they as they arrive. That's the\nbeauty of having fresh goods\u2014they're easy to sell.\nCourteous treatment and prompt delivery.\nTHE CITY GROCERY\nPhone 25 H. H. Henderson, Prop.\nB1DB THEBE 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. \u25a0\nJ\u00bb R* MOOYBOER gII^dWrks.b!1^!\nOpen Saturday Evenings Ull 10 o'Cloek\nyou deserve some kind\nfor your nerve.\"\nof a  medal\nScience Discovers\nErysipelas Gure\nToronto, March 16.\u2014Two important medical discoveries; were announced Monday by the Academy [of\nMedicine, says a Paris dispatch to\ntbe Mail and Empire. One of tbem\nis a cure for erysipelas, Doctors Cou-\nbeau and Kieffer reporting];that a\ncertain tetrachlorate solution plaoed\non the sore causes an immediate bait\nto extension and infection. Early\napplications reduce the] fever, tbe\ndoctors declare, aod continued] use\ncures the disease'\nPositive relief is promised to tu-\nbercular cases suffering from asthmatic crises. Dr. Bouveyron states\nthat the respiratory passages can be\ncleared by the injection of. tubercular toxin in small dosas spread over\nseveral weeks, the treatment rendering the patient immune from the\nnasal breathing difficulties.\nVirginia farmer gives some rules\nhow not to succeed witb cows. He\nsays;\nDon't weigh your milk, for then\nyou might bave to figure aod think.\nFeed your cows timothy hay; it is\ngqok for a race borse.\nCow-testing associations are needless; tbey show yon bow to save and\nknow.\nKeep the barn hot; cows are Jike\nwoodchucks.\nDon't bave many windows in the\nbarn; the hired man might look\nout.\nKeep the water ieo cold; shivering\ngives tbe cows exercise.\nAvoid heavy milkers; they con\nsume too much valuable time.\nHow to Failin>\nDairy Business\nParadoxically, sometimes tbe best\nway to show bow to di a thing is to\nTHK OOVSHNMaNT OF\nTHI _-_.OV-_.Cl_. OF BBITISH COM. MSI A\nRE SPECIAL\nTIMBER  LICENCES\nfor Thursday   night, whieh  was to when   he   could speak again; \"but show how not to do it. Thus a Weat\nTo Save   tlie   Cliild\nThe attention of Timber Licence\nholders who are taking advantage of\nthe provisions of the 1921 Amendment to the FORE8T ACT, whereby\narrears of licence fees accrued prior\nto 31st December, 1920, have been\nfunded and made payable in annual\ninstalments, is specially directed, to\nthe fact that any renewal fee which\nbecame due in 1921 is not included\nin the instalments above mentioned,\nand such 1921 and all subsequent re\noewal fees must be paid within one\nyear after the date of expiry of the\nlicence in order to maintain the right\nof the holder to obtain a renewal of\nthe licence.\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\nnpHE value of well-\n\u25a0*\u25a0 printed, 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\nVi; iting cards\nJ3h'p~ing tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\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\nYalr Hotel, First Stbikt\nSynopsis of\nLand Act Amendments\nA group of Russia's starving children  such aa are being saved from death by\nCanadian contributions.\nItnMla'i government may Save\n\u25a0inred: but ner little children have\nnot. Ruitii's people, a vast horde,\nbut dimly conscious, If at all, of\nsocial responsibility other than thnt\nwhicb each man felt for his own Im\nmediate family, may have brought\nadded trouble and disorganization tn\na war-thattered world. Her little\nchildren had nothing to do witb It,\n\u2022nd yet lt Is tho little children of\nRussia that are faced with thc\nhideout, ovor-powering brunt of it\nall. They are not facing it; it is\ntoo great for them. In millions thev\nare tottering to the ground to end\ntheir short lives of unrelieved horror in one last agonlted spasm.\nIn the famine-stricken province?\nef Russia there are, or were, 38,000,\n000 people. Millions already have\ndied of starvation; Nanscn says ten\nmillions more must die. That in\neludes men and women, patient.\nhumble peasants who have had no\nifcand, no thought, in thc making of\n-the unspeakable conditions that\nhave swept over their once happy\n.land. These know they must die,\nare almost content to die, finding\nin death the end of suffering and\nthe cessation of horror.\nBut their children\u2014the parents\na*re human beings; if they were mere\nanimals the long protracted death\n\u2022gomes of their little ones would\n\u2022nil be unbearable. To most of IV.am\nthere com** no help. Tbe task of feeding their children first and then them-\nselves  Is  too   great;   they  die   and\nPhis little chap, left alone in\nthe world, crawled into a\ndeserted cottage to die.\ntheir children are alone to wander\nabout the country in quest of something, anything to devour. Little\nclaws that should be the pretty\nhands of children dig in the ground\nfor roots, except when the ground\nIs frozen, and misshapen little r ec-\ntres crawl from refuse heap to ruined cottage to see if one small, eatable  fragment  may  not   be   over-\nMOBML\nAgain, if thty were animals it\nwould be different, and sailer. Instinctively they would know how ts\nwrest a living from Mother Nature.\nBut little children must be fed. They\nmust have food found for them, and\nin Russia there ls none, so they must\ndie. Death ls not the worst of li\nIf a peaceful death were all thev\nsuffered, it would not be to bad. It\nis the hideout horror of the drawn-\nout struggle, and it is helpless little\nchildren that are suffering. They\naro suffering to-day and mutt continue to suffer to death, unless\u2014\nUnless the civilized well-fed people of the world hear their awful\ncry for help, and give that help\nquickly, it will be too late for countless thousands of children. The call\nhat eome to Canada with evidence\nfar too horrible to print. The photographs reproduced herewith merely\nsuggest others, more dreadful, that\ncannot be published.\nWill Canada, land of happy,\nhealthy children, heed the call? Th*\nappeal is being made in the belief'\nthat she will. The \"Save The Children Fund\" has opened an office i\u00bb\nthe Elgin Building, Ottawa, and th*\nCanadian people are urged to send\ntheir subscriptions now to Sir\nGeorge Burn, treasurer of the fun*\nat that address. One dollar will feed\na child for one month; $500 will\nfeed one hundred children until next\nharvest.\n\"He gives twice who givet quickly.\"\nWe .Province Hotel\nBARBE R SHOP\nIs now OPEN under\nthe management of\nan old Boundary\nBarber.\nFRANK J. WILLIAMS\nIMI'tl'KIKr \u00bb t\nE. F. LAWS\nREAL ESTATE\n&\nINSURANCE\nOFFICE WINNIPEG' AVRNUB\nCorrotirH okowbbs kxciianue\nPHONE 164\nPACIFIC 8IIBBT METAL WORKS, LTD.\nVANOOUVM\nmbtal:\nIRRIGATION\nPIPES and      FLUMES\nB. F. LAWS\nHOLBIDIHTBICT AQBNT\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nDealer in\nSaved from death by the humanity of those who have already contributed to this fund.\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks, B.C.\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nAgent\nDominion Monumental Works\nAsbestos Products Co. Roofinft\nNew Type j\nJLatest Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColumbia Avenue and\nLake Street\nCtmiftetfi\nR101\nAUTO LIVERY\nAT YODI\na\nModern Rigs and Good\nHorses at All Hours at\nthe\nModel Livery Barn\nM. H. Barns, Prop.\nPhone 68 Second Street\nESTIMATES FURNISNED\nBOX 332 BRAND FORKS, B, C\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE HMMme\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly   Don\nR. G. MeCUTCHEON\nWNSlMfl AYUOf\nMinimum price of flint-class land\nreduced to Is an mt*; socond-class to\nH.tO an ten.\nPre-emption now confined to aar-\n\u25bceyed land* only.\nRecords wUl be granted covering only\nland suitable (or agricultural purposo*\nand which I* non-timber land.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished,\nbut parties of not mora than four may\narrange for adjacent pre-emptions\nwith Joint realdence, but each making\nnecessary Improvements ou respective\nclaims. *,\nl'ro-omptors must occupy olalms for\nAve yean and tnako Improvement* to\nvalue of |10 per aero, Including clearing and cultivation of at least 6 acres,\nbefore receiving Crown Grant.\nWhere pre-emptor in occupation not\nleas than I years, and has made proportionate improvements, he may, bees uae of Ill-health, or other causa, be\nrrantsd Intermediate certificate of Improvement and transfer his olaim.\nRecords without permanent residence may ba Issued, provided applicant make* Improvement* to extent of\nMM par annum and records same each\nyear. Failure to make Improvement*\nor record same will operate a* forfeiture. Title cannot be obtained In\nlea than b years,,and Improvements\ner 110.00 par acre, Including t acres\nrtasmd and cultivated, and residence\nof at least 2 years are required.\nPre-emptor holding Grown grant\nmaj- record another pre-emption, lf he\nrequire* land ln conjunction with his\nfarm, without actual occupation, provided statutory improvements made\nand residence maintained on Crown\ngranted land. v\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 10\nacres, may be loosed as homcsltea;\ntitle to be obtained attar fulfilling residential and Improvement conditions.\nFor graaing and Industrial purposes\nareas exceeding 140 acres may be\nleased by one person or eompany.\nMill, factory or Industrial sites on\ntimber land not exceeding 40 acres\nmay be purchased; conditions Include\npayment of stumpage.\nNatural hay meadow* Inaccessible\nhr _S!.te,\"V *0*qa \u2022****\u2022 *** purchased\nconditional upon construction of a road\nto them. Rabat* of one-half of coat of\nroad, not exceeding half ot purchase\nprice, t* mass.\nPRE-EMPTOR*'     mil      GRANTS\nACT.\n, V'm *B*lf* \" th\" \u25a0_>** *\u2022 \u2022n'srgsd \u00ab*\nnclud* all person* Joining and serving with His Majesty* Forces. Th*\ntime within whioh th* heir* or devisee*\nof a deceased pre-enptor may apply\nfor UU* und* tJlTTGr.. axuSSZ\nfrom for on* yaar from tb* death of\nsuch person, as formerly, until ono\nyear after the conclusion of th* present\nwar. This privilege I* also made retroactive.\nNo feee relating to pre-emptions are\ndue or payable l_y soldiers sn preemptions recorded after Jun* M. fill\nTax** an ramified fer Or* year*.\nProvision tar return of monon accrued due aod been uld since lan*\n4, 1114, on account ot payments\/fee*\nInterest on agreement* to purc-tas*\n*SJ[?.0JL5_.,,r M* **>*\u2022 ** \"MDlMn of\n#\"_\u00a3 ******. \u00b0* Attmtttlaata. aoqulred\ndirect or Indlreot, remitted ttrnat aa-\nItotment to March 11. UM.\nSUB-PURCHASERS Of CROWN\nLANDS.\nProvision mad* for -Moans* of\nCrown grant* to sub-purchasers of\nCrown Lands, acquiring rights from\npurchasers who failed to complete\npurchase. Involving forfeiture, on fulfillment of condition* of purchase. Interest and taxes. When sub-purchasers do not data whole of original parcel, purchase prloe due and tax** may\nbe distributed proportionately over\nwhole area. Applications must be\nmads by May 1, if\u00bb.\n. -BRAZING.\nGraaing Aet, 1(11, for systematic\ndevelopment of livestock Industry provides for graslng district* and range\nadministration under Commissioner\nAnnual graslng permits Issued based\non numbers ranged: priority for established owners. Stock-owners may\nform Associations for rang* management. Freo, or partially free, permits\nfor settlers, campers er travelWa up\n\u2022o ten bead.\nNEW HARNESS SHOP\nI have opened a new harness shop and am prepared\nto make harness to order\n\u2022 and do all kinds of repair\nwork. Shop equipped with\nmodem machinery. All work\nguaranteed:\nC. A. Crawford\nNwuTelephirae Office","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_1922_03_17","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\/1.0341076","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":"1922-03-17 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":"1922-03-17 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":""}]}