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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":" -egislative Library\nGRAND FORKS yt\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\ntbe city.\nV\nl#\nKettle Valley Orchardist\nTHp   SklHlV '9 \"ie f*vor'''e news-\nM-MMMi  OKJL*   paper of the citizens\nof the district.    It  is read  by  more\npeople in the oity and valley than any\nother'paper because it  is fearless, re\nliable, clean, bright and entertaining.\nIt is always independent but never\nneutral.\nTWENTY-SECOND YEAR\u2014No  2\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY,   NOVEMBER 10, 1922\n\"Tell me whst you Know is true:\nI csn guess ss well ss you.\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nFIRST WEEK IN\nTHE LEGISLATURE\nNew Minister of Railways\nFavors Completion of\nP.G.E. to PrinceGeorge.\nBootlegging Resulting\"\nFromExportWarehouses\nRedueed 75 Per Gent\na year and a balf of government\ncontrol, the situation appears mucb\nclearer. During tbe regime of tbe\npresent attorney-general, Hon. A.\nM. Manson, bootlegging bas been\nreduced materially in many districts\nand tbe minister in bis speech last\nweek reported tbat tbe bootlegging\nresulting from tbe existence of ex\nport warehouses bad been put down\n75 per cent. He appealed for ibe\ntbe cooperation of every member of\ntbe .legislature in enforcing tbe\nLiquor Control Act, and predicted\nthat within a few months if all\nwould assist, tbe liquor laws would\nbe enforced io a manher to reflect\ncreditably upon tbe province.\nSpecial Oorre.pondence of The Sun.\nVictoria, Nov. 8.\u2014More notice\nable than has been tbe case for severs\nal years is the harmony existing in\nthe government ranks at present.\nDuring the first week's nessionof\ntbe legislature withering attacks\nwere made upon tbe Oliver administration by W. J. Bowser, tbe opposition leader, and his followers,\nonly to be turned back witb marked\nsuccess by the government leader\nand members of bis cabinet. Aln\nthough tbere bad apparently been\nsome dissension among members of\nthe party, dissatisfaction exhibited\neven on tbe floor of tbe bouse with\nregard to certain details of policy.\nThe results obtained since tbe legislature last met bave unified the Lib*\nerals and resulted in a solid front\nbeing shown tbe opposition. Several\ndivisions bave arisen already in tbe\nhouse, but tbe government has bad\na good majority on eacb vot *. TheBe\ntests of strength served to exemplify\nthe fact tbat Premier Oliver bas a\nBolid party behind bim.\n' Tbe financial standing of any govs\nernment is the test of its strength,\ntnd the rehabilitation ot the credit of\nBritish Columbia, through the cares\nful borrowing of Hon Jobn Hart,\nminister of finance, has been largely\nresponsible for the growing feeling\nof optimism with wbich the bond\npurchaser views the offerings of the\nprovince. Though dire calamity was\npredicted by Mr. Bowser and hia\nsupporters, who claimed that the\nloans of the past few years would\neventually cost tbe taxpayers from\n15 to 20 per cent, the province hae\nbeen saved several million dollars;\nthe favorable exchange conditioo\nhas materially lowered the interest\nrateB which have to be met and\nshould American money depreciate\nstill further British Columbia loans\nwill take on some-hing of the nature\nof good investments.\nChief among the worries of the\nadministration has been^tbe fate of\ntbe Pacific Qreat Eastern railway\nAlthough adverse Jeports were subs\nmitted by Messrs. Sullivan, Dennis\nand Hinton, tbe experts engaged to\nexamine tbe line and its possibilis\nties, tbe government did not appear\nsatisfied and a dctermidation was\nreached to ontinue to. operate the\nline for at least one year more.\nWith the appointment of Hon. Dr.\n: MacLean ae minister of railways, an\nopportunity has been provided for\na minister to devote more time to\nthe affairs of the line than t'-e pre-\nmier was able to give, with bis\nmanifold duties. The new head of\nthe department favors the completion of the road to Prince Oeorge,\nand next spring will no doubt see\nconstruction commenced on tbe last\nlap. Hon. Dr. MacLean also proposed to bave a thorough survery\nprepared of the natural resources of\nthe country contiguous to the rail\nway, so that colonization work may\nbe carried on successfully.\nThe most difficult situation which\nthis  or  any   other government of\nBritish Columbia has   had  to face\nis that pertaining to tbe administra\ntion of tbe liquor laws. After nearly\nCalgary Wholesale\nFruit Quotations\nApples\u2014Mcintosh Bed, No. 1,\n\u20222.00to  $2.25\nCrates, $1 20 to   1.50\nJonathan, No. 1, $2.00 to  2.25\nWagner, No. 1, $2 00 to  2.26\nGreenings, No. 1  200\nWagner and Jonathan, crates 1.40\nStill a few No. 2 stock on market.\nCrabapples, Hyslop, per box ... 1.00\nGrapes, Tokay,per case,$3.25 to 3 52\nGrapes, Ontario, per basket 65\nCranberries, per 50-lb. box   9.50\nTomatoes, local H.H., per lb     20\nSweet ptatoes, per lb 05J\nCelery, B. C, pei lb.\u00ab 04\nCabbage, Danish  Ballhead, lb.. .02\u00a3\nCitron, pumpkin and squash, lb,\nPotatoes, B.C., per lb\t\nLocal, per lb\t\nLettuce, onions and radish, doz.\nOnions, per ton, $37 to 40.00\nLocal carrots,  beets and turnips,\nperlb 02\nB. C. Pears'D'Anjou, No. 1... 3.75\nDutchess   2.75\nHowell  2.75\nCuulirlower, per doz   1.00\nVegetable marrow, perlb 02\nGarlic, perlb 80\n02\n\u25a001*\n.01\n20\nEcho Answers* \"Aints\"\nMaster Lloyd George\u2014\"Well, here I am again.   Any jomplaints?\"\nAPPLE MARKET\nNot More Than 300 Cars\nGan Be Placed in Prairie\nMarket Before End of\nYear Without Complete\nDemoralizationof Prices\nThe Granby Company\nBonds Another Property\nThe Granby Consolidated Mining,\nSmelting & Power Company, Ltd.,\nhas takeu a bond on the Outsider\ngroup of claims, eitua'ted at Maple\nBay, about 35 miles down tbe Port\nland Canal from Stewart, and active\ndevelopment work is to start at\nonce.\nIn tbis connection, Vince Lade,\nJames Lade* and Monty Howe, of\nStewart, bave taken a contract to\ndrive a 200-foot raise for an air\nshaft, and also to do other work in\nthe form of tunneling, with a view\nto develop the ore bodies already to\na great extent opened up.\nTbe property, which is situated\nwithin one mile of the beacb, was\nlocated by William Noble and G. M.\nCollison in 1903, and was sold by\nthem to tbe Brown-Alaska company\nin 1905. This company, after doing\nconsiderable development work,\ncommenced active mining operations\nand shipped 14,500 tons of ore to\ntbe Hadley smelter, Princeof Wales\nisland, Alaska.\nAbout 1908 new interests acquired\ntbe property and beld it for a period\nof years, aud in 1917 spent something like $35,000 in development\nwork, driving a new tunnel on tbe\nsouth end of the vein, giving a total\ndepth to the ore of over 400 feet.\nThe second annual provincial potato fair will be held in\nGrand Forks from November\n27 to December 2.\nOn account of the deep interest shown in the first annual potato fair held last year\nin Chilliwack the department\nhas decided to give prizes for\ntable stock as weil as for seed\npotatoes this year.\nIt is hoped that the various\nagricultural organizations and\nall ethers interested will cooperate with the department\nto the fullest extent and help\nmake this fair a success. A\nseries of lectures on the potato industry will also be\ngiven at the same time.\nA general letter from the sales department of the Okanagan United\nGrowers showed tbe apple situation\non October 26 to be as follows.\nCars\nTo be shipped from Okanagan.. 1000\nTo be shipped from  Boundary\nand Kootenay  215\nTo be shipped from Keremeos..   20\nTotal 1265\nEstimated to be exported   to\nGreat Britain from Okanagan 165\nFrom otber districts    20\nEstimated to be exported to the\nUnited Ststes    60\nReported by shippers and growers that intend storing in the\nvalley -.-*  255\nBalance lo go immediately into\nCanadian markets  765\nConsidering tbe quantities absorbed by the prairies in otber years\nwith what has already been shipped\nthere, and the conditions generally,\nnot more than 300 cars can be placed\nin that market before tbe end of the\nyear without complete demoralization such as would not return even\nfreight rates.\nMQVEMEKT\nExpected That MoreThan\nLast Year's Total Will\nPass Through Port of\nMontreal Before Close\nof Navigation\nNear East; in consequence\nthere has been a much smailer\namount of debt liquidation\nthan was anticipated earlier\nin the season. Latterly, however, there has been a perceptible weakening in the tendency to hold grain, und this,\ntaken in conjunction with the\nmarketing of a fair proportion of the crop to meet current expenses, has led to a\ndemand for transportation\nand storage that wonld have\nbeen extremely difficult to\ncope with at all if the farmers\nhad placed their grain on the\nuiarkat in larger quantities at\none time. This season, up to\nthe middte of October, over\n116,000,000 bushels of grain\nhad been handled by the port\nof Montreal, and it is expected -fey grain exporters and\nshippers that last year's total\nof 138,453,980 bushels will\nbe surpaased before the close\nol navigation in December.\nAt Vancouver the grain hand,\nling plant will be taxed to its\nutmost, and at the Great\nLakes ports the gjain storage and handling facilities are\nlikewise fully employed.\nOF\nTwo Minutes Silence With\nDue Solemnity at 11\no'Cloek Requested by\nHis Majesty and the\nDominion Government\nNew Hog Grading\nEffctive October 30\nThe regulations under whicb the\nofficial grading of hogs will be undertaken have been approved by the\nCouncil as submitted after final\nagreement by all interests represented by the joint swine committee.\nThe swine graders appointed through\n.civil service commission following\nthe grading examinations' have reported for duty to the Dominion\nlivestock branch.\nHon. W. R. Motherwell, Dominion minister, of agriculture, announces that the hog\u00abgradiog regulations will be made effective on\nOctober 30, 1922. In the meantime\nthe new hog-grading staff is being\ngiveo a thorough course of instruction at tbe Toronto stockyards, so\nthat tbe official gradidg as established will be uniformly applied at all\nstockyards and abattoirs in Canada.\nIt took six days to make\nthe world and you can't\nchange it in one.\nThreshing reports receive d\nduring October fully bear out\nthe bright hopes of Septem\nber   that the volume of this\nseason's   grain   crop   would\nequal that of any prior   year,\nand the farmer is now able to\nmarket his grain at prices not\nout of line with the average\nof pre-war years. These favorable elements in thesiuation\nhowever, arc to a large extent\noffset by the fact that the net\nproceeds of his crop  will not\nbe such as to allow any material  reduction  in the grain\ngrower's immediate and pressing liabilities.  Although the\ncost of many items of expenditure has declined   slightly\nfrom that of last year, that of\nlabor has been high, and this\nhas been   especially true of\nthe   cost   of  threshing.    In\ntuany districts   difficulty has\nbeen experienced in holding\nmen long enough to complete\nharvest      operations,     even\nthough higer wages were paid\nNevertheless,   despite   these\ndifficulties,   the   amount    of\nwork which has been actually\nperformed   by  the     farmers\nthemselves in the handling of\nso large  a crop,  and in fall\nploughing, so far as has been\nalready   done, is   surprising.\nThey   were   assisted in their\nwork by fine   weather, which\nprevailed   well into October\nand enabled many, even at the\nend of tha month, to devote\ntheir time to preparing their\nland for another   crop rather\nthan to marketing their grain.\nOne factor in   the case was\nthe belief that prices would\nrise considerably as  a result\nthe critical   situation   in  the\nWorld's Potato Crop\nIs 128 Per Cent of\nProduction in 1921\nWashington, Nov. 7.\u2014Production\nof rye, barley and potatoes for all\ncountries reportidg is larger than for\nthe same countries last year, tbe department of agriculture announced\ntoday. Rye production for sixteen\ncountries is placed at 101 per cent\nof production for the same countries\nin 1921, but only 91 per cent of tbe\naverage yield for 1909-13.\nProduction in tbe United States\nand Canada is 163 per cent of the\n1921 crop, while production in European countries is only 92 per cent.\nThe barley crop of the United States\nand Canada this yer is 128 per cent\nof the 1921 crop and for fifteen Eu\u00ab\nropean countries it is 103   per cent.\nThe potato crop is repirted larger\nin nearly all countries, total pro\nduction being placed at 129 percent\nof that for the same countries in\n1921 and 101 per cent of the 1909-\n13 average.\nWheat production iu 1922,accord\ning to latest estimates, is 99 per\ncent of tbe 1921 yiold, being 109\nper cent in North America and HI\nper cent in Kuropo. Condition of\nthe new wheat crop is roporred good\nin Argentina, Australia and   India,\nCopper Sules\nNew York,Nov. 6.\u2014Copper sales,\nforeign and domestic, by American\nproducers, nre estimated to have\nbeen around 130,000,000 pounds\nduring September. This compares\nwith sales estimated at 100,000,000\nduring August, 125,000,000 ln July.\nHo.000,000 in June and 210,000,-\n000 in May.\nIt is estimated that foreign sales\nby Copper Export Association and\nindependents came to between 50,\u00bb\n000,000 and 55,000,000 pounds of\n130,000,000 sold.\nStocks of refined copper October 1\nare estimated to have been around\n250,000,000 pounds including metal\nin hands of Copper Export Association, which is placed at 140,000,000\nShipments to consumers during\nSeptember,.foreign and domestic, by\nAmerican producers are estimated to\nhave been around 150,000,000\npounds, making an average for tbe\nlast two months of about 165,000,-\n000 pounds, ae large as for any similar peace period in the history of\nthe industry.\nTomorrow, tbe ltth inst., iB Armistice day and it should be appropriately observed. No fixed program\nfor the observance of the day in this\ncity bas been arranged, but the city\ncouncil will observe tbe same by\nholding a short ceremony at the city\nhall at a quarter tu eleven o'clock a.\nm. The pub ic are invited to attend this meeting and to participate\nin the ceremony.\nIn connection with the o^sfrvn\nance of tbe day, Deputy Provincial\nSecretary J. L White at Victoria\nhaB transmitted a copy of tbe following telegram from Under Secretary of State Thomas Mulvey at Ottawa to Mayor Geo. H. Hull:\n\"Tbe prime minister bas directed\nme to inform you tbat his majesty\naud tbe Canadian government desire tbat the two minutes silence at\n11 o'clock on Armistice day shall\nbe obcerved witb due solemnity aud\nfull appreciation of tbe important\nevent which il commsmorates. lt is\ndesired tbat all municipalities of tbe\nDominion sbould cooperate to make\ntbe observance a reality, nod I am\ndirected to request you to take such\nsteps as may he necessary to bring\ntbe matter to the attention of tiie\nmunicipalities in your province io\nthe most effective way.\"\nJSiews of the City\nJ. B. Hayes, of tbe North addition, sustained a serious accident on\nSatuday by falling off a wagon and\nbreaking a bone in bis neck. It was\nat first thought that his neck had\nbeen broken, as be became partially\nparalyzed. He was removed to the\nGrand Forks hospital, and Dr,\nKingston wired to Spokane for a\nspecialist. The two doctors made a\nsuccessful operation and extracted a\nBmall piece of broken bone from the\nneck. At present the patient is apparently making good progress toward complete recovery.\nTuck Harper, who has been cooking io a construction camp on the\nCascade Hossland highway all summer, returned to tho city today.\nThis link of the trausproviucinl\nhighway is now in condition so that\ncars can pass over it, but it will nut\nbe officially inspected and opened\nto traffic before next spring. The\nroad iB forty miles long from Cascade to Rossland; has an excellent\ngrade; is of double width, 14 to 16\nfeet, and passes over two mountain\nsummits.\nTHE WEATHER\nThe following in the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\nday during the past week, a.\u00ab recorded by the government thergiom-\neter on E. P. Law's rancb;\nNov.\n3-\n4-\n5-\n6-\n7-\n\u25a0 8-\n9\nMax.\n-Friday    45\n-Saturday   38\nSunday   45\n-Monday '58\n-Tuesday  43\n-Wednesday.. 58\nThursday  58\nMin.\n20\n31\n28\n30\n'.I'm\n35\n38\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^       Inches\nSnowfall 04\nRainfall  001\nNothing is as  high\nhigh cost of loafing.\nas ill THE   SUN,   GBAND   FORKS,   B. 0.\n3ta (Irani Iteka #utt\nAN   INDEPENDENT   HEM.*t\\Pm\u00bb\nta. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year (in Canada and Great Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States)    1.50\nAddresr \u2022-\" \u2014\u2014'cations to\n..Thk Grand Forks Sun\nPhonk 101R Grand Fobks, B. C.*\nOFFICE:    COLUMHIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1922\nPatriotism more than saluting thc flag.\nOne or the recent \"demonstrations\" to trap\nthe unwary investor is that of the man with a\ncheap substitute for gasoline\u2014something that\nhe says he can produce for a few cents a gallon. The \"inventor\" fills the tank of an automobile half full of water and adds his mysterious fluid. The car runs, for what he added\nwas wood alcohol. Tho chemist is a good m an\nto consult before buying stock in aoheap\ngasoline company.\nTo \"strike oil\" in Bolivia, according to a\nhandbook of the department of commerce, one\nneeds no drill rig. Oil seeps through the soil\nin many places and forms in pools. The na\ntives dip it up as they would water and carry\nit away to use for domestic purposes. Such\nstories of wealth are as alluring to the present\ngeneration as the stories of South American\ngold and silver mines were to the Spaniards\nof four hundred years ago.\nlosses has been so large and the araouut involved is so great that the insurance companies\nare considering the necessity of some form of\nprotection against this increased hazard\nHouseholders should remember that great\ncare should be exercised in the use of electric\ncurrent for domestic purposes.\nKeeping awake days picks mire golden ap.\npies than lying awake rights.\nTo -Have and to Hold\nTlie Paris London air service has an ingeni\nons instrument for measuring the depth of fog\nabove the starting poiut at Croydon or Abbe\nville, and  so to determine  whether there is\nclear,  dry  weather a few  hundred  feet up.\nThe instrument, which is based on   the  prop\nerty of human hair of constracting sharply on\npassing from wet to dry air, consists of a hair\nattached to a trigger that holds a ring.   The\ninstrument is sent aloft with toy balloons on\na string; as soon as it reaches dry air the hair\ncontracts, pulls the trigger, and down  comes\nthe ring on the string.\nWhile praying to be delivored from a temptation, do not peep at it through yonr finger s.\nThe two-foot shelf of books chosen  by   the\nAmerican  Library association and the Na -\ni.ional Education association as  most worthy\ni.o be read by boys and girls includes:   Louisa\nVI.  Alcott's Little Women, Lewis Carroll's\nVlice in Wonderland, Defee's Robinson Cru\n-oo, Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer, Stevenson's\nTreasure Island, Nicolay's Boys' Life of Abra,'\n'iam Lincoln, Kipling's Jungle Book, Ander\nnan's Fairy Tales, v^Esop's Fables, Steveuson's\nChild's Garden of Verses, Pyle's Merry Ad\nventures of Robin Hood, Lamb's Tales from\nShakespeare, the Boys' King Arthur adapted\nrom Malory, Van Loon's Story of   Mankind,\nWiggin's Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Bur-\ni in E, Stevenson's Home Book of Verse  for\nVoting Folks, Dickens' Christmas Carol, Irv-\n; ig's Rip Van Winkle, Mother Goose,Dodgo's\nHans   liiinkcr,   Hagedorn's   Boys'   Life   of\nTheodore  Roosevelt,   Hawthorne's   Wonder\nItook, Seton's Wild Animals I Havo Known,\nand the Arabian Nights.\nVarious domestic electrical devices are being multiplied, the ingenuity of the inventor\nbeing backed up by the advertising activities\nof electrical comphnies which seek to increase\nthe use of their current. The papers and maga\nzines are full of advertisements of electric\ntoasters, plate warmors, hair curlers, electric\nirons and sewing and washing machinas. The\ninterest of the makers is chiefly in disposing\nof the device and they are not specially inter\nested in seeing that proper installation is secured. Often the connections are made by\nthe puchaser without any knowledge of electrical conditions, and they result in serious fire\nhazards. Heaters are often installed on electro circuits the wires of which are already so\nfully loaded that any codsiderable increase of\nthe current is likely to set fire to the property.\nA great many fires have resulted from leaving\nelectric irons on the ironing board without\nturning off the current.   The number of such\nWhat is land hunger? Pecuniary interest?\nOh, no. A struggle for oxistence? The cities\nseemed to oftor the popular specific for that,\nnot the frontier.\nNo. Land hunger is compounded of the\nhopes of the centuries, of villein and crofter\nclinging to the manorial landshare of Sir Edwin Sandys with the brain, of tho trudging,\ntree-blazing George Washington brain, of\ntrudging-tree blazing George Washington, of\nveterans of 1776 with warrants, of Mexican\nsurvivors w th scrip, oi Yazoo opportunities,\nConnecticut reserve offerings, of pre emption,\nsquatter sovereignty, homesteaditig, of a vast\narmy of the vigorous vanguard of the raee,\nmoved mightily forward not by necessity or a\nhope of wealth, but by a vision that is born of\ntraditional desire and commands men not to\nthe measure of dollars and cents, but to the\nthrobbing drumbeat of a mightly instinct of\ndominion.\nIt will not respond to the direction of senti\nment,  nor can adventure  lure or  necessity\ndrive it.\nI know the poets paint for the pioneer a\npicture with warmth of sun, the scent of flow\ners, the caress of gentle winds, the fragrance\nof new mown hay, the stimulation of rain upon\na dusty field, the song of bi.ids, the satisfac\ntion of achievement, the comforts of earned\nrepose, but I doubt the efficacy of the advertisement.\nI know that the economists balance birth\nrate against available land areas and graph\npopulation pressures to prove that necessity\nis in command.\nBut it is not so. The pioneer is moved by\nsomething more than economic necessity\ngreater than adventure, deeper than p:etry,\nthat is to say, he is possessed by the magic of a\nvision born of an age-old desire\u2014to have and\nto hold.\nThe echo of it trembled in Touchstone's\nnimble brain, as he surveyed and presented\nAudrey:\n\"An ill-favored thing, sir. But mine own!\"\n\u2014Victor Murdock, in Harper's Magazine.\nYour Heart's Desire\nIn the way of Jewelry can be easily\nsatisfied if you come here. VVe carry\nan up to\u00bbdate stock of the most pop\nular novelties and the newest nnd\nmost artistic designs in\nFine Jewelry\nCome  in  and   see our display and\nmake selections.\nOur prices are always moderate.\nJ. C. TAYLOR\nJeweller ond Optician\nBridge Street Grand Forks |\nIf there is one line of business where advertising would seem to be not only unnecessary but a distinct liability it is a bootlegger's.\nNevertheless, one of these gontlemeb in Vin-\ncennes, Indiana, appeared to think otherwise.\nHe used an old white mule in his bid for trade.\nA sign on the stable, \"White Mule for Sale,\"\nattracted the inqnisitive. If they passed inspection they were that another kind of mule,\nwhich had no legs but plenty of '\u2022kick,\" was\nfor sale. If a suspicious looking person ap -\npeared he was sh won the actual mnle.for whic h\nan enormous price was asked.\ncAncient History*\nllama Taken Prom Tha Orand Forks Sun for the Corresponding\n'Weak Twenty Yean Ago\nWork on the erection of the Knox Presbyterian ch urch\nmanse was commenced last Saturday. The estimated\ncost is $2000.\nThe Sun possibly would have forgotten to mention\nthat a heavy fall of snow occurred last night had not a\ncommunication reached cur office this evening treating\ntha event in blank verse. We feel grateful to tbe local\npoet for jogging our memory.\nMrs. John Sucksmith and five children left on the 4\no'clock train this afternoon for Yorkshire, England, the\nold home of Mra. Sucksmith,\nThe work of rebuilding Lequime <fc Co.'s sawmill, recently destroyed by fire, is progressing rapidly. It will\nhave a capacity of 30,000 feet per day.\nMayor Holland returned from Toronto last Wednesday.\nAccountant T. H. Mahan, of the Granhy smelter, returned last week from a trip to Butte, Mont.\nK. S. Craddock and Miss Craddock have moved to Columbia from the Cooper estate across nhe river.\nGentlemen who use crab arguments can be heard on\nthe street corners almost any day declaring that railway\ncompetition does the general publio no good.\nE.C, Henniger Go,\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nS. T. HULL\nsEstabliflhed 1910\nIleal Estate and Insurance\nResident Agent Qrnnrt Parks Townsite\nCoinpany, l.lmlte1!\nFarms      Orchards     City Propcrl.c\nAgents at Nelson, Calgary, Winnipeg ami\nother Prairie points.  Vancouver Admits:\nPKNDB1IINVKSTMBMTS\nR.VrrKNBUHY L.1N1M LTIf.\nEstablished In 1910, wo are In a postilion lo\nlurnlih reliable information coneeriiliiir thin\ndistrict.\nWrite (orfreo lltaratiire\nGRAND FORKS\nTransfer Company\nDAVIS S HANSEN, Propt\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal,  Wood and   Ice\nfor Sale\nOffice at R. F. Petrie'i Store\nPhone 64\nC.V. Meggitt\n(Real Kstnte and Insurance\nOHCHAHDS, FABM  LANDS   AND CITY\nPROPERTY\nExcellent facilities for selling your farms\nWe bav* agent* at   all   Coast and Prairie\nPolnta\nWB CARRY AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE.\nDEALER IN POLBS, POSTS AND TIBS,\nAND FARM PRODUCE\nReliable Information regarding; thia dliSrot\ncheerfully furnished. We sollelt your inquiries.\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nDealer in\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nAspirin\nUNLESS you see the name \"Bayer\" on tablets, you\nare not getting Aspirin at ail\nAccept only an \"unbroken package\" of \"Bayer Tablets oi\nAspirin,\" which contains directions and dose worked out by\nphysicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions foi\nColds Headache Rheumatism\nToothache       Neuralgia Neuritis\nEarache Lumbago Pain, Pain\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tablets\u2014Also bottles of 24 and 100\u2014Druggist*.\nAspirin Is lho trado mark Crnrlslrrcd In Canada) of Bayer Manufacture ol' Mono-\nacetlcacidcster of Salicvllcacld. While It Is well known that Aiplrln means Hayer\nmM\u00ab?actur\"to\"aalat the Public, againat Imitation*.- the Tablets of Bayer Company\nwill Lo stamped with their general trade mark, tho ''Bayer cro**.\nCity   Real Estate For\nSale\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPrices :--From $25.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms i\u00abCash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be seen at the\nCity Office.\nJOIIN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nTOVE\nCooking Heating\nWood Coal\nElectric Gasoline\nOUR PRICES ARE RIGHT\nMILLER & GARDNER\nComplete Home Furnishers\nWhen your telephone is left accidentally off the hook, it registers the same\nas a call at central. If the operator gets\nno response to her \"Number, Please,\"\nthe number is handed over to the repairing forces as being out of order. All this\ninvolves tests, reports and time. In the\nmeantime, no one gets you on your telephone.\n\"Off the hook, is a very common cause\nof interruption to telephone service. By\nthe exercise of care in this connection\nyou will protect your service and avoid\ninconvenience to yourself and others.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nTell The People\nWhat   You     Hav*\nto Sell THE   SUN.   GRAND   FORKS,   H. C.\nmmtm\nmm\nEVENTS     IN     THE     PASSING     NEWS\nSTANDING  OF PUPILS\nThe following is tlio .standing of tlio\npupils of tlio Grand Forks Ceutnil\nschool, in order of merit, for llio\nmontha of September and Oetober, 114\nbased upon touts nnd work done:\nprincipal's class.\nEntrance Candidates \u2014 William\nFoote, Winnifred Savage, Frank\nGordon, Faye Walker,Marjorio Fisher\nand Ciarence Truax equal, Lorne\nMurray, liertlia Mulford, Eleanor\nBradley, Holon Mills and Louh\nO'Keefe and Georgo Tutt oqual, Jack\nStafford, Marguorite Stevenson, Paul\nKingston and Euost Hadden equal,\nEruia Laing, Harry Cooper, George\nMacArtliur. George Manson, Darwin\nAhern, Ellen McPherson, Edith Mat\nthews, Wesley Clark, Marion McKii',\nPauline Mohler, Arthur House, Janus\nInnes, Annie Bowen, Henry Ucid,\nRupert Snllivau, Lydia Oolaroh,\nRuth Helmor, Harry Acres, Jeannette Kidd, Vera Lyden, Fred Gali*\npeau. Not ranked: Alex Cuinming,\nEarl Fitzpatrick.\nDIVISION   II.\nJunior Fourth\u2014Frank Price, Ro\u00abii\nHansen, Gordon Clark, Peter Pailtfcit\nEdith Euerby, Albert Colarch, Francs\nOtterbine, Marjorio Cook, Joso|)|i\nSimmons, Harold Wardo, Margarot\nLuscombe, Francis Larama, Alice\nGeerge, Marion, Kerby, Mildred\nPrendergast, Genevieve Harkness,\nBlanche Mason, Grace Glaspell, Ar\nthur Bickerton, Jessie Downey, Law\nrence O'Connor, Alice Scott, Elvira\nHansen, Aubrey Dinsmore, Dorothy\nGrey, Joseph Lyden. Edgar Galip au,\nAlbert   Haw,   Walter   Haw,   John\nGraham.Staffnrd Barff, Dorothy Heav\nen, Paulino Baker.\ndiyision 111.\nJuuior Fourth\u2014Irene Jeffery,Herbert Ommanney, Edmund Crosby,\nGlen Murray, Parma Cooper, Willie\nHenniger, Kuth Pyrah, Jessie Rossis\nEugene Fitzpatrick, Walton Vant,\nRuby Savage and Ruth Savage oqual,\nEdna Wiseman, Alex McDougail,\nMartha Otterbine, Donald McKinnon, Bruce Brown, Josssio Allen.\nClarence.Fowler, Daniel McDougail,\nGeorgo Hadden and Lilia Frechette\nequal, Edmund Euerby, John Santano\nJohn Dompier, Ethel Mayo, Union\nNystrom, Arthur- Morrison, Helen\nMcKinnon, Winnie Smith, Antone\nDeWildo, Dorothy Kidd, Pete San\ntano, Mary Aores,   Linden Benson.\nDivision IV\u2014 No report.\ndivision v,\nSonior Third B\u2014Betty McCallum,\nHazel Elliott, Jean Clark, Albert\nKinnie, Lily McDonald, Gladys Pear-\nsou, Churlotto Acros.Elizabeth Mooy\nboor, Norman Cooke, Frod Mason,\nLoo Gowans, Charlie Robertson,\nPatsy Cook. Solma Laing, Buth\nWebster, Koy Walker, Harry Nucich\nMike Morelli, Georgo Priest, Thurlow\nGumming,\nJunior Third A\u2014Joan Love, May\nHobbins, Marvin Ilaily, Carl Hansen,\nCatherine Gowans, Colon Graham,\nHarold Helmer, Raymond Dinsmore,\nErnest Hutton, Elvera Colarch, Evelyn Innes. Childo Pisacreta, Nul lie\nBerry, Katherine Henniger, Ian\nClark, Robert Foote, Harry Ander\nson, Florence Bird, Roy Cooper,\nBeverley Benson.\ndivision vi.\nJunior Third A\u2014Fred Smith,Marie\nKidd, Holon Morgan, Delbert Kirk-\npatrcik, Louis Brow, Mary Kingston,\nMildred Patterson, Edith Patterson,\nLydia Mudio, Nathan Clark,   Elaine\nBurr,   Vina   Boots,    Louis  Santano,\nEdward Wright (absent)\nJunior Third A\u2014Harold  Jackson,\nVilmer  Holm,    Rosamond    Buchan,\nMarjorie Taylor, Clarence Hardy\nEllen Hanson, E'sie Egg Jack Aores.\nEuphy McCallum, Glabys Smith\nZolma  Larama, Sereta Hutton, Km\nout Danielson,   Helen    Beran,\nBickerton, Arvid Anderson.\nContinued on l'at\/e 4.\nEarle\nB. C. Veterans Weekly  Football   Competition\nM0,000 sseS in prizes\nINSTRUCTIONS FOR FILLING IN COUPONS\nYou   simply indicate whether lho HOME TEAM will seoro MOKE,   LESS,  or theSJkME   NUMBER   of    ; ,,U 1 lun they scored   in   the   corresponding game of last year, by pUuiug an \"X\" in Un iw'.uinn provided iu oiupoa. 2Je ontjtiei bhe subscriber to   Ive  weoks' subscription   to tho B  C\nVETERANS   WEEKLY and one coupon; 50c entitles the subscriber to ton weeks' subription ami two coupons; 75c entitles the  subscriber   to   fifteen\nweeks' subscription ami three coupons; 81 entitles the subscriber to twenty five weeks' subscription   and live ooupom,\nCanada's Standard Remedy for Pala\nTHE simple fact Is IhU: there it\nnot hint, quite so good for\npains and aches as Templcton'e\nRheumatic Capsules. The medicinal power they contain is absorbed\nby the blood and so carried to theseat\nof the pain. T. R. Ci contain no\nhabit-forming drugs. Their action ll\nlo remote the cauee of the pain,\nIISINfi T.R.C.'s Is not an experl-\n\u2022*-\" ment, many thousands of Canadians have proved the effectiveness\nof T.R.C.'s. The best test yon oan\nmake Is to get a dollar box from\nvour druggist, or tor free sample\nTI) n *-> lade U \"6et\" Rheumatism write J. fi.TempletonS Co., Toronto.\n,ft\\t\\t, 9 Meet Otlier paint are easy.    K postal cart will briag It\n\u25a0out by woodland* oo.\n(NOTICE\u2014You will noto that SI subscription entitles you to five\nadditional weeks' subscription and onooxtracoupon). There is no limit\nto the length of subscription and nuniher of coupons which may be\nsent in by any one person in  0110   week.\nGAMES  TO BE PLAYED  NOVEMBER   18th\nCompetition No. (} Close, Friday Midniulit, Nov. I7tli,\nTHE B. C. VETERANS WEEKLY LTD.\nP. O, Drawer 938,  Hurter-Cotton  liuiltlisia\nCorilcr lltisliiiu* mil Cutnbio   <ls. VANCOI'VUK, B. C.\nOOOl'ON  MOST BE  OUT\nALOMO BORDER\nr\\lOW SKKIKS\nNo.6         FOOTBA1\n(JAMES '111 BE 1'\nCompetition Ciomi ill o'clock Midnight Friday, Nov. 17th\n1 enter lho B. t:. Vctcr.-niH Weekly Football Competltl\nnecopl the Auditor's decision as final and legally binding\nnvo oehts enclosed for flvo weeks' subscription entities <-,\nthree estimates; tfi.00 twonty-flve weeks and five estlmat\nNOTE\u2014Mark with X in column provided whether you\nthe corresponding Bame last season.\nNAME\t\n[X COMPETI\nI.AVED SATURDAY, NOVKMllK.lt 18th,\nMall Cou\njii and agree lo abide by the rules ns put'\niu nil matters concerning Hit* competition,\nimpetltor to one estimate; ooo ten woeks\ns.\nthink tho  HOME loam will score MOKE\nA DORR\nRK.       IjIsIESS.       Bin SAME,\nli, < . \\ ETEBAUS WKK.HIA' MD.\nTION\n1)112\nions iii p. <\u00bb. Drawer i\u00bb:tn. Vancouver, B. o.\nlolled In Uu   13. C, Veterans Weekly, nnd to\nand onler on that understanding.   Twenty*\nand two ostlmatos;  70c fifteen weoks and\nLESS or tlie SAME number ot goals as In\nM Is MO\nL.::;l\nHOME   TEAM                    Year's\n.Score\nLast\nAway Team       Toar's\nScore\nCoupon Mo.  1\nMLS\nCoupon No. 2\nMLS\nCoupon No. 3\nMLS\nCoili-tm No.  4\nMLS\nCoupon No. 5\nM        L        8\nLIVERPOOL                2\nASTON VILLA            0\n|          |\n|         |\n1          1\n|                     j\nMANCHESTER CITY 2\nBOLTON  WAND'KS   3\nj          |\n|\ni   !   -\nPRESTON N. E.          1\nMIDDLESBORO           1\n|\n|\nSHEFFIELD UNITED 1\nOLDHAM   ATH.          0\n|\n|          |\ni\nW. BROMWICH A.      1\nEVERTON                     1\n|         |\n!   I\n1\nFULKAM                      1\nBLACKPOOL                0\n|         |\n|          |\n1\n|\nWEST HAM TJ.            1\nCLAPTON OBIENT    .\ni\n|\ni\n:\n|\nBRENTFORD               2\nBEADING                     0\n|          |\n|\n1\n1          1\nCHARLTON A.           2\nBRISTOL R0VEB8     0\n1\n1\n|\n|   1\n|          I\nAYR UNITED             2\nALBION EOVEBS      1\n!\n|          |\n|   I\nI   |\n|\nMOTHERWELL           2\nPART1CK THISTLE   1\n!    |\nI\ni\ni   1\n1\nTHIRD LANARK        1\nFALKIBK                     1\n|\nI         1\ni\ni\n1         1\nFigures alter each tttat denote lut uimm'i snore.\n(Copyright ai>i>lind  (or) ffHE   SUN.   URAND   FORES,   B. C.\nfrom Cooper's undertaking parlors\nWednesday afternoon, interment\nbeing made in Evergreen cemetery.\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101B\nFOR FINE PRUTING\nNews of the Gity\nWork waa commenced this morn-\nng oq a mw cinsrete sidewalk o n\nitbe south side of Bridge street,   bes\ntweao rijcood and Third streets.\nEngineer D. A. Graham is  busy\nhaving tin concrete foundations con \u25a0\nstructed for the pumps in tbe No, 2\nunit of tin irrigation system. This\nwirk is ojiug cirrioi on with funds\nthat werd left ovjr after the comple \u25a0\ntion of N)   I unit.\nSome of the boys who tote down\nfences Hallowe'en had the fun of\nreconstructing them.\nKelowna is now receiving its electric power from Bonnington Falls.\nMiss Lilian M. Demuth, wbo\nformerly lived in Grand Forks, and\nWilliam C.JMcLean were married in\nPenticton on  Wednesday morning.\nRev. M. D. McKee, formerly pastor of Knox Presbyterian church in\ntbis city, is now in charge of St.\nAidon's Presbyterian church, Victoria.\nDouglas Lamb, aged 53, C.P.R.\nwatctimao at the Fisherman tunnel,\nnear this city, died at that place on\nMonday last.   The funeral waa held\nSTANDING OF  PUPILS\nJ. W. Hayes, promoter of the\nBertha-Pathfinder mine, came up\nfrom Spokane on Wednesday and\nvisited that North Fork property.\nThe Granby company disposed of\nconsiderable scrap iron at the smel\nter in this city this week.\nConcluded from, Paye ii.\nDIVISION VII.\nJunior Third B\u2014Lora Frechette,\nElHce Donaldson, Bruce McDonald,\nErnest Crosby, Madeline McDougail,\nMargaret Kingston, Marjorie Otterbine, Violet MoDougall, Billy Tutt,\nElsie Scott and Wilhelmina Weber\nequal, Kdna Wenzel, Evelyn Collins,\nBernice Donaldson, Peter Vatkin,\nAleck Hobbins, Charlie McLeod.\n.Senior Secodd \u2014 Margaret McCallum. UolwTn Glaspell, Donald Ross,\nWinnifred Truax, Ethel Massie,\nChester Boothron, Louise Dompier,\nRuth lioyce and May Waterman\neijual, Peter Jmayoff, Clarence Henderson, Ronald McKinnon, Edmond\nMiller, Charlie Harkness.\nDIVISION  VIII.\nJunior Second\u2014Lura Canfield, Win\nlifred Lightfoot, Dorothy Liddicoat,\nJhristiue IJiew anil Mildred Smith\noqual, Hazel Mason, Bessie Berry,\nAlma Frechette, Harold Montgomery,\ni (arry Murray, Kliso Prudhomnie,\ntfillia Wright, Florence McDougail,\nMarguerite McDonald,Garnott Boots,\nMildred Anderson and Richard Mich-\nu ier eijuai, Mazie Henderson, Harold\n: Wiley and Joe Lyden equal, Mary\ni'iitterotu, John McDonald, Charlie\nI'^'g, Daisy Malm, Thomas Mudie,\ni.\/elyu Cooper, Helen Pell, Sheila\nIvylett, James Allan and Minnie Mc-\nNivqd, George Bird, Ernest Fit\/.-\n\u25a0 ..trick, Angolo Colarch, Goorge Savage, Laura Maurolli. Fred Wenzel,\n<..' ara Wright, Eleanor Lindley, Joe\n. icicli, June Choo, Edith Graham,\n.' ihn McLeod,   Annie Olosoff.\nDIVISION IX.\nSecond      Primer\u2014Katie    Dorner,\nAlex Woods, Bruce Grey, Jean   Mur-\ny,Albert   Euerby,   Jewell    Baker,\nUll win Waterman,   Jack Love, John\niker,    Josephine   Kuzicka,   George\ni i'Keefe, Crawford McLennan, Mara\nb He Elliott, Albert Deporter, Eyrtle\nKidd, Mary Dorner, Grace   McLsod,\nI ibn  Horry, Mowat Gowans.\nFirst Reader\u2014Walter Sherstobetoff\nlay Junes, (Jessie   Henderson,   Alex\n\"ikuratolV, Jamus Robertson, Clayton\ni'lttorsun, Hoy Clark,  Clarence  MoDougall,   Willie  Prendergast,   Tony\n-ultimo, Elsie Withers,  Jack    Mul-\ni ini,   Roderiok   Kavanagh,    Robert\nMurray, Peter   DeWilde, Andy Pisa-\nret a, Mary   McKinnon,  Irene   Bick\nrtuii, George steel, Gordon Wllkins,\nLgneiAhorn, Windsor Miller,\nDIVISION X,\nSecond Primei \u2014Edna Scott, Kath\n!ecu Chandler, Shepherd Boyce,\nGarry Hanson, Chester Hutton,\nKathleen Davis, Isabel Huffman,\nNorman MacDonald, Victor Rclla,\nEthel Boots, Bruce Harkness, Eugene Dompier.\nFirst Primer \u2014 Dorothy Innes,\nFlorence McDonald, Margaret Rob\ninsoo, Teresa Frankovitch, Ernest\nAriglisB. l<eliee Seliaff, Gordon Mudia\nDorothy Donaldson, \\ Lola Ogloff,\nGenevieve Dacre, Barbara Love, Dolores Kirkpatiok, Elizabeth Peterson,\nWinnifred O'Keefe, Wilma Davis,\nWilbert Cooper, Phyllis Simmons,\nAlice Bird, Lena Pisacreta, Nels Anderson.\ndivision XI.\nTeceiving Class\u2014Willie Gowans,\nLola Hutton, Mona Rylett, Junie\nDanielson, George Ronald, Eunice\nPatterson, Grace McDonald, Marian\nColarch, Janet Mason, Donald Massie,\nAlice Shaff, Jack McDonald,Veronica\nKuva, Benjamin Rella, Howard\nBryant, Jimmle Graham, Lindsay\nClark, Florence Helmer, Wallace\nWright, Helen Harcoff.\nThe Best Christmas Gift\nChristmas fo. the Boy I\nChristmas for the Girl!\nChristmas for the Fathers!\nChristmas for tbe Mothers!\nChristmas for one and all bound\nup in 52 weekly issues of The\nYouth's Companion for 1923. No\nother periodical can take tbe place\nof The Youth's Companion at tbe\nfamily fireside\u2014no nther reflects so\ntruly tbe home spirit.\nThe 52 issues of 1923 will contain\nfrom eight to a dozen serial stories,\nnearly two hundred short stories,\nbesides sketches, special matter for\nthe boys, tbe girl, the domestic circle. The Children's Page and tbe\nDoctor's Corner will, as they have\nfor years, prove indispensable features of the paper. ^Subscribe now\nand receive:\n1. ^The   Youth's   Companion \u2014 52\nissues in 1923.\n2. All the remaining issues of 1922.\n3. Tbe Companion Home  Calendar\nfor 1922.\nAll for $2.50.\nOr include McCall's Magazine,\nthe monthly authority on fashions. Both publications, only\n$3.00.\nThe Youth's Companion, Commonwealth Ave, and St. Paul St.,\nBostan, Mass. Subscriptions received at this office.\nWATER NOTICE\nUSI AMI MTOBAUE.\nTAKE NOTICE that Clement Vaoher, whoso\naddreii ii Boom 8, Dtivls Blook, Orand\nForks, British Columbia, will apply for t\nlicence to take and use SOO gallon! per min\nute and to itore 50.0(H) mlloiii of water out of\nGoose Moose Croelt, whioh flows South Easterly and drains luto the Kettle River, about\nSmiles below Curlew, Washington, t'.S A.\nTh,> itorHge dam will be iooated at North West\nCorner of \"New St. Maurice\" Mineral Claim\nand about the oentre ol the \"City of Denver*\nMineral Claim. The catmoity of the reservoir\nto be created is about 00,000 gallons. The\nwater will he diverted from the str -am at a\nimlnt about 4000 feet Irom the United States\nBoundary Une or where the stream crosses\nthe Northern Boundary of the \"City of Denver\" .Mineral Claim, aud will bc usetl for min\nmn purposes upon tlie mine deiorlbed as\n\"New St. Maurice\" Mineral Claim, This uotloo\nwas posted on the ground on tho 2nd day of\nNnreiuher, Wli, A oopy of this notice and an\napplication pursuant thereto and to 1'\n\"Water Act, 19U.J' will be filed In the office \u201el\nthe Water Recorder at Urand Forki. 11. C-\nObjeotlous to ihe application may be filed\nwith the said Witter Keoorder or with the\nComptroller of Water Klghts, Parliament\nBuildings. Victoria, H, 0., within thirty days\nafter the first appearance of this notico in a\nlooal newspaper. Theduteof the first publication of tills notioe Is November lot li, 1022.\nCLKMBNT VAC1IKR, Applicant.\nCiuk. F. It. Pincott, Agent.\nSpecials\nFor Saturday Only\nPure Fruit Jams\nStrawberry, Raspbsrry and\nLoganberry. ff| flfl\n41b tins  JM.UU\nString Beans if\nPer tin  \u00ab vC\nChristie's Tin Sodas\nSpecial Price for       ffb\nSaturday only OUC\nChristie's or Mc-\nCormick's   Sodas.     OC\nIn cartons       \u00bb3C\nDonaldson's\nPhone 30\nCity Grocery\nA choice line of Teas and Coffees and a complete\nstock of Staple and Fancy Groceries at reasonable\nprices. If yon are not already one of our customers, give us a trial order.\nPhone 25        H. H. Henderson, Prop.\nRailway News\nHardisty,   Alt*.\u2014Work   has   just\nbeen completed on thc C.P.R. bridge,\nHardisty,   after   a   great   deal   of\nlabor has been spent on it.\nThe trestle was begun in 1906,\nwhen the railway eame to Hardisty,\nand trains ran over in 1908. The\ntrestle is 2,714 ft. long, 70 ft. high.\nand has in it 1,800,000 ft. board\nm\u00bbasure of lumber, as well as 27,000\nft. of piling. It is estimated that\nit has taken 800,000 tons of material to make the fill.\nThe   present   bridge   presents   \u2022\nsafe and perfect means of transit.\nSt. John, N.B.\u2014Five members of\nthe Baseball Writers' Association of\nthe United States arrived in St\nJohn from Montreal. They were\nFred Lieb of the New York Evening\nTelegram, who is president of the\nWriters' Associate ; Sid Mercer of\nthe New York Evening Journal; Irvin Vauglian of the Chicago Tribune; Denman Thompson of thf\nWashington Star, and Ed. Ballinger\nof the Pittsburg Post. They left on\nthe S.S. Aranmore for Digby, en\nroute to the Kegemakoogee district\nwhere they will hunt big game. The\nparty are the guests of the C.P.R.\nThe trip was arranged by Joe Page,\nbaseball writer and snort enthusiast,\nwho is a special representative of\nthe C.P.R. He met the majority of\nthe writers in New York and ao\ncompanied them to Montreal, Quebec and as far as this city.\nThe visitors were met at the station by G. Bruce Burpee, district\npassenger agent of the C.P.R., and\nC. B. Allan, secretary of the New\nBrunswick Tourist and Resources\nAssociation, and driven to the Royal\nHotel.\nCalgary Gar Arrivals\nFrom Ootober 16 to 20\nFrom British Columbia\u2014Apples,\n15; onions, 3; mixed vegetables, 7;\nmixed fruit and vegetables, 1; cabx\nbage, 1.\nFrom Alberta\u2014Potatoes,7; mixed\nvegetables, 1.\nImported\u2014Grapes, 2.\nA farm bureau report says\nlambs are short. But there\nare plenty in town.\nMontreal\u2014A press dispatch from\nCalgary crediting to the secretary\nof the Federated Shop Trades there\na statement to the effect that the\nC.P.R. and certain other railways\nhad knowledge of the conciliation\nboard's award some days before it\nwas filed with the department of\nlabor and ih consequence thereof\nhad paid the reduced rates of wages\nas set by the conciliation board,\nprior to the announcement of tha\naward by the department of labor,\nwas brought to the attention of\nGeorge Hodge, assistant general\nmanager of the C.P.R., Eastern\nlines, who conducted the case for\nthe railways before the board of\nconciliation   and   investigation.\nMr. Hodge denied most emphatically the correctness of the statement. He said furthc- that as far\nas the C.P.R. was concerned it had\nno knowledge of the report until it\nwas received at the company's offices on September 4, and that instructions to restore rates of pay\nwhich had previously been put into\neffect as from July 16, were issued\nunder date of September 6, making\nthe reduced rates effective as from\nAugust 16.\nWATBH NOTICE\nAPPLICATION for a Licenoe'to take  and\ntlr, ?**. *J.t**.r ****)   be   made   under   the\nWater Act\" ol Britlih Columbia, a. follow:\n1. Tho name of the applicant it Grand Korkt\nIrrigation DUtrlot'\n2. The address of thc applioant ll Grand\nPorks, B. C.\n8. The name of the ttream 1. Kottle River.\nThe stream hat ita tource between Okanagan\nand Lower Arrow Lakot, flows ln a 8oulheril\ndireotlon and emptlct Into Columbia River\nahout Murtut.U.S.A..approximately 85mlloi\nSoutheast of Grand ForkH, B. c.\n4. The water It to be pumped from the\nstream on the south aide about V\/i mlleR Sou th\neatt from Grand Forkt. B.C.,In north-east\ncorner Lot SM.\nIS. Ehe purpose for whioh the water will be\nuied it Irrigation.\n6. The land on which the water is to be\nused iidoioribedai follow!: District Lot 182\nand 10 aorei in North-eait oorner Lot 584.\n7. The quantity of water applied for Is at\nfollows: 210 aore feet.\n8. Thli notioe wai posted on tho ground on\nthe 12th dav of October, 1922.\n9. A copy of thia notice and an application\nP.,,rf'.1Snt \"\"ereto and to the requirements of\ntho \"Water Act\" will bo Bled at the ofBce of\nthe Hater Kocorder at Grand Forki. B.C.\nObjections may be filed with the laid Water\nReoprder, or with tho Comptroller of Water\nRight!, Parliament Bulldinga, Viotorla, B. C.\nGRAND FORKS IRRIGATION DI8TRIOT.\nApplioant\nBy D. A. Giuham, Agent\nWATER4NOTICE\n\"T\t\nA PPUCATION for a Licence to take and uie\n\" Wator will be made under the \"Water\nAot\" of Britlih Columbia, si follows:\n1. Thc name of the applioant Is Urand Forks\nIrrigation Diitrlct.\n2. The adnress of the applioant la Grand\nForks, B.C.\nI. Thenameof tho boilv of wator ls Huokle\nSlough, In Clstrlot Lot SM, Graud Forki.!\n4. The wator is to be pumped from tbe\nSlough on tho south side, about '4 mile from\nGrand Foi ks.\n5. The purpose for which the water will be\nuied ii Irrigation.\n6. The laud on whioh the water Is to be uied\nIs deiorlbed as follows: Northern portion of\nDlltrlot Lot SM.\n7. The quantity of water applied for Is al\nfollows: SO aore feet.\n8. Thli notioe wai posted'on thc ground on\nthe 12th day of October, 1922.\n9. A oopy of this notice and an applloatlon\npuriuant thereto and to tbo requirements of\nthe \"Water Aet\" will he tiled fn the otfloe of\nthe Watsr Recorder at Urand Forks, B. C.\nObjeotlons may be Bled with the laid Water\nReoorder. or with the Comptroller of Water\nRighti. Parliament Buildings, Viotorla, B. C,\nGRAND FORKS IRRIGATION DISTRICT,\nApplicant*\nBy I). A. Gbaiiam, Agent\nMoose Jaw\u2014\"One hundred pei\ncent more grain has been handled by\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway up to\nthe middle of October this year\nthan ever before for the same period. That will give you an idea of\nthe way the grain is being taken out\nof the country\" said Mr. Chas.\nMurphy, general manager of Western Lines of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway.\nHo expressed himself very well\npleased with the movement of the\ncrop throughout the whole West.\nWhen asked as to the possibility of\na grain blockade, Mr. Murphy stated\nlhat the Canadian Pacific was accepting all grain that was being offered. He pointed out that on one\nday over four million bushels had\nbeen taken out of Fort William and\nPort Arthur. Mr. Murphy pointed\nout that there was difficulty in getting bottoms on the lakes to Uke the\ngrain out, but the elevators wer*\nfar from being full, and the Canadian Pacific still had the big Trans-\ncona elevator empty.\nAlready Mr. Murphy stated there\nwas n large quantity of grain being\nshipped out from the head of the\nlakes by the all rail route. He declared that he could see no grain\nblockade in sight\nMr. Murphy pointed out tbat the\nCanadian Pacific had moved 14,000\ncars off the Saskatchewan division\nof the railway. This was five thousand more cars of Saskatchewan\nwheat than had been moved in tiie\nsame period in any year.\nHe also pointed out that even\nwith the unprecedented grain movement the Canadian Pacific was moving from 250 to 276 carloads per\nday from the Western coal mines.\n\"There was thirteen thousand tons\nmoved yesterday,\" he declared. 1\nwas here three weeks or a month ago\nand at that time I stated we were\nmoving 250 to 276 cars of eoal a\nday, and the movement has been\nkept at that ever since. We realise,\nhe declared, that the wheat can be\nmoved during the oold weather and\npeople can live, but if the cold\nweather comes and there is no coal\nthere will be great suffering in the\n\u2022\u2022entry, and possibly wots*.\nNever count your chickens\nbefore they return from a\nfriend's garden.\nA wise man will make more\nopportunities than  he finds.\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\n.'CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\n'A&t>ttt\nDominion Monumental Works\n''jJAsbratos Products Co. Roofing\nESTIMATES FURNISNED\nBOX 332 E6RAND FORKS, B. C.\nRIDE THERE 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. R. MOOYBOER 8H\u00ab&5^\nOpen Saturday Evenings Till 10 o'Cloek\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\n\u2022 from 100 up to 2500\nbooks.\nThe Sun\nJob Department\nHobby\nis\n\"\"  Good\nPrinting\n\u2022TPHE value of well-\nprinted, neat ap-\n\u25a0pearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBail programs\nBusiness cards\nVi i* ing cards\nSh'i \"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\nNew Type\nLatest Style\nTHE SUN\nColombia Avenue and\nUke Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nE. F. LAWS\nREAL KSTATK\nUk\nINSUHANCB\nOPFICB WINNIPBO AVBNUB\noppowri oaowaaa uciuNai\nPHONE 164\nPACIFIC SIIBBT MBTAL WORKS, LTD.,\nVANCOUVER\nMBTAL\nIRRIGATION\nPIPES and      FLUMES\nB. F. LAWS'\nSOU DI9TBICT AGENT\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMIN6\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly   Don\nr. c. McCutcheon\n;WlNNlfHa AVMOI\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYai.iv Hotrl, Pikdt Strrkt\nSynopsis of\nLand Act Amendments\nMinimum   nie*  of   \u201e \u201e\u201e\nreduced to $5 an aot*; \u25a0soond-clm to\nU.50 an twn.\nPre-emption now ootid nod to nr-\n\u25bceyed lands only.\nReoorsto will be (ranted covering only\nland miltable for agricultural purposes\nuid which Ib non-timber land.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished,\nnut parties of not more than four mar\nv.-raiist, for adjacent pre-emptlona\nwltb Joint realdence. but eaeh making\nlureaaery Improvements on respective\nclaims. \u00a3\nPre-eeaptors must occupy elalms tor\nAve years and make Improvement! to\nvalue of |1\u00ab per acre. Including clearing and cultivation or at leaat \u00bb acres,\nbefore receiving Crown Grant\nWhere pre-emptor In occupation aat\nI*?\".^\"1 *. \u25a0*****\u2022 \u00bbnd ***** ******* Pro-\nporueaate Improvements, he mar. because at Ill-health, or other cause, be\ne-rantod Intermediate certllleate of tm-\npi ii i Ms nit and transfer tab* sjaun.\nReoorde   without\n\u2014\u2014~~w wiw.uui x*r*rxmmmxwttt. rem-\n\"\u2022\" mar be tainted, provided applicant makes Improvementa to extent of\neta* par annum and records same eaoh\nrear. Failure to make Improvements\nor record namo wlU operate aa forfeiture.    Title cannot ba obtained ia\nZPJi***? * \u2022*****\u2022 ***** Improvement*\nm WM* par acre, Includint i acre*\n\u2022toared and cultivated, aad residenoe\n\"a* toaat > rears are ragsnred.\nPre^rapjor hoidmc Cao-rrt (rasa\nmar reoord another pre-emption, if ha\nrequires bsnd In conjunction with hts\nfarm, without actual occupation, pro-\n mta made\naT.-nt\".d\"\"linor\u00a9 ** 0nw*\nUnsurrered arena, aot eseeedlna M\n***<*-.   mar   be   leased   ha   bomeeW\n2S5sS ^*StJ\"n,,<l \u25a0\"\u2022 *ss-tmatSS*\n\u2022nnttal and ImproTemant oondMons.\nFor (raslnsr and Industrial mirnoaae\narea*   exceeding   ***   aeres   auiybe\ntimber land   not   exceeSnT *^\nmay be purchased; oottdltibi\nvtded   statutory   lmproveipen\nand residenoe  mslntalrsui  jj\n\"SE^aST^\nr^n**s^^^fftx^\nrceTn.t'EXXreS^i-\nprase, li mada. \"\u25a0\u25a0,\"\nORANT*\ni anlaraad to\nPRE\ni%\u00bb5!l^^*trto2\nIthla whicb tho hesre or devisees\ntoron. yaarftoaittto SSS ^\n.I1]***?.*' ** ?\"'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*.  \u00abntU  one\n^th\u00a3rS\u00ab^.\u00a3J*ra\u00a3\nr.tl*M -mmm*.    .mm\nwar.    \u201e._\ntruoctlva.\nNo fees isjallne to\n.**.?* \"\u00bbJ5kfcil> a-Wata'ea~arV\net. unions reooroad after Jane at. fill\nT.uies are remitted *\u2014 S^^-~-\nITuvieson tm feton ef monerVass\norue.1 \u00abao J3 x^TfL,**-g??7aauM\nt. I\u00bblt. oa ecoount ofpnJ^stTTS\nInterest on agreements to purchase\ntossm or e*lj .lota held trj neambeVTef\nIIitment to March tClSHi    ^^\n8UB-PURCHAJRR\u00bb  Of CROWN\nLANDS*\nProvision    made   for    Im ui   *e\nCrown   greats  to  sub-penmhsssrs    af\nCrown Landa, acquiring righto from\npurchaeers who failed ta oomplete\npurchaae. Involving forfeiture, on fulfillment of conditions of\nterest and taxaa. Where \u25a0\nurs do not claim whole of original par.\neel, poKhase price due and taxaa mar\nbe distributed proportionately ^^\nwhole area. Applications\nmade by May 1, in*.\nORAZINO.\nGraslng Act. UM, tar\t\ndevelopment of livestock tadnstrr pro-\nvldes for graslng districts and range\nadministration under CSommlssJoner\nAnnual graslng permits Issued based\ncm numbers r&ngea^nrlarlty for established owners. Btook-ownera may\nform Associations Isr range management.   Free, or partially free, permits\nfor settlers, e         -J^\nto ten head.\nNEW HARNESS SHOP\nI have opened a new harness shop and am prepared\nto make harness to order\nand do all kinds of repair -\nwork. Shop equipped with\nmodern machinery. All work\nguaranteed:\nC. A. Crawford\nNtau Ttjb^MM Offia*","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_11_10","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\/1.0341247","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":"1922-11-10 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":"1922-11-10 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":""}]}