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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":" f\\   _^****-r\nToo many people nowadays look upon home as merely a place at which to sleep\n^\nLegislative Library\n- * ;\u25a0-\u2014v .\nc_Ana KETTLE VALLEF ORCHARDIST\nWith Main Population\nCenters Dry, Where\nWill the Beer Parlors Be\nLocated?\nVictoria, August 25.\u2014Although\nit voted \"net\" lust wetk by it narit\nrow m jirity, the riding of Grind\nForks-Greenwood will get an extremely attenuated dose nf beer-by--\nthe-glass, officials of tbe liquor control board indicated.\nThe only two Urge centers of\npopulation in tbe riding, Grand\nForks and Greenwood, voted \"dry\"\nand will not be allowed beer privileges. This leaves few places wbere\nlicenses for beer parlors can be\ngranted. Liquor officials are gome\nwbat puzzled, in fact, to know just\nwhere tbese establishments can be\nopened.\nIt is tbe policy of the liquor board\nto grant no licenses in these points\nin wet ridings, which voted dry, and\ntbis polioy will apply to tbe Boundary riding. Tbe oity of Cranbrook,\nwbile in \u00ab wet territory not far\naway, ba* not been granted b\"er\nlicenses for thiB reason. Another\npolicy of tbe liquor board which\nwill operate against beer drinkers\nin Grand Forks-Greenwood ie that\nwbich bars the establishment of beer\nparlors along the international\nboundary. This rule has kept beer\nby the glass out of all towns within\na few miles of the boundary, regurd-\nlesB of the legal liquor condition cf\nthe riding suirouodiog them It\nmay prevent tbe establishment of\nbeer facilities in tbe old town of\nMidway on the boundary line, although it voted \"for beer. The\nliquor board's attitude on thiB aspect\nof tbe iiquor traffic is that boundary\ntowns should not be made into\ndrinking resorts for United gStatee\nresidents a short distance aw\u00aby.\nGrand Foiks-Greenwood will be\ndeclared legally wet shortly, bnt\nthat it will be wet in actual praotice\nie doubtful. Only a few places in\nit need hope for beer licenses. Tbe\nelection writs will be returned here\non September 7, wben the government will issue the necessary proclaw\nniation declaring the area a place\nwhere licenses may be granted.\nTWENTY-FIFTH YEAH\u2014No  43\n\"Tell me what you Kuowls trar'e\nI csukueu es well u you.\"C\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1926\nhon. john a. macdonald\nLatest photograph of the representative from Kings, Prince Edward\nIsland, who was taken Into Hon.\nMr. Meighen's cabinet as Minister\nwithout Portfolio.\nL\n\"ITS\" HAVE A\nThe vote on beer parlor plebiscite taken in this riding iast Saturday resulted in a email majority in\nfavor of the \"wets.\" Tbe vote by\npolls follows:\nYes No\nBeaverdell  23 2u\nBoundary Falls  ..    6 12\nBridesville  27 16\nBrown Creek  23 2\nOarmi  11 2\nCascade  62 20\nChristian Valley     b' 1\nEhelt   12 0\nFife  31 4\nGrand Forks 250 278\nGreenwood   44 95\nMidway  35 31\nPaulson     3 2\nRock Creek  28 22\nRiverside...  25 27\nWestbriage   17 5\nTotals 593 542\nMajority...  51      \t\nL\nThe regular meeting of the city\ncouncil was held io tbe counsil\nchamber on Monday evening, tbe\nmayor and all the aldermen being\npresent.\nTbe tender for 50 cedar poles was\nawarded to Peter Matioda at f.\neach, delivered.\nThe matter of repairs to tbe bouse\nat the smelter eite occupied by S. T.\nDinsmore was laid over until the\nnext meeting.\nTbe new waterworks and electric\nlight regulations bylaw was finally\npassed and a copy of it was ordered\nforwarded for the approval of tbe\nlieutenant governor in council.\nA traders' license bylaw was introduced, and it passed'its Becond\nreading.\nTbe council adjourned to Friday\nevening, August 27, at 8 oclock, to\ncomplete tbe traders' license bylaw\nand to deal wilh the bylaw authorizing tbe construction of a cement\nsidewalk on Winnipeg avenue ad-\njuioiog block 35.\nB.C. CITIES IN\nGOOD SHAPE\nVernon, August 25.\u2014Municipal\niffaira in Britieh Columbia are in\nexcellent condition, Robert Baird,\ninspector of municipalities, told dele\ngates to the \"twenty-third annual\nconvention of the Union of British\nColumbia Municipalities. His address was received with enthusiasm.\nAid. Woodside of Vancouver, in\nproposing a vote of thanks, dedal ed\ntbat it was tbe first optimistic address he ever heard Mr. Baird give\nbefore a union meeting.\nTbere had been times iu tbe past,\nsaid Mr. Baird, wben he had doubts,\ned. whether some municipalities\nwou d be r ble to meet tbeir financial obligations. Somehow, however,\ntbese municipalities had found a\nway out of their difficulties, and\nwere today io much better condition.\nIt was just ten years ago when\nthe convention had met at Vernon\nthat he had much criticism to offer\nabout tbe administration of mu-\nnicial affairs. Today, said Mr.\nBarid, be bad no such criticism. He\npaid tribute to the work of the Municipal.Officers' association, whicb\nhe said was doing good work, particularly in improving municipal\nstatements,so that today tbese statements were intelligible to tbe gen\neral publio.\nIn addition to an improvement\nin municipal sffairs, said Mr. Baird,\ntbere is a general trend of improves,\nment in conditions throughout the\nprovince.\nA fairly large audienoe gathered\nin the Empress theatre on Tuesday\neveniog to listen to tbe addresses of\nGrote Stirling, Conservative candi\ndate for Yale, and Mr. Taylor, late\nmember for New Westminster. As\nneither of these gentlemen are ora.\ntors of the first magnitude, the ed<\nthusiasm of tbe audience was kept\nwitbin proper bounds.'\nMost women keep a  lot of ready,\nmade sympathy on hand,\nISAAC PITBLADO, K.C.\nWho will represent the railroad\ncompanies on the Board of Conciliation to examine into the differences between the C.P.R. and C.\nN. R., and their conductors, trainmen    and    yardmen,    concerning\nSHORT TARIFF\nE\nEDITORIAL NOTE\nThe verdict oft acquits the raven\nand condemns tbe dove.\u2014Juvenal.\nHe's armed without  that's inno..\ncent witbin \u2014Pope.\nCharles W. Eliot, LL D., famous\npresident of Harvard, and Valentino\nthe dancer died on the same tbia\nweek. Dr. Dliot was 92 years of\nage, and his fame encircled to globe;\nValentino was 31, bad been divorced twice and was making prepr-\narattons for bis tbird marriage,\nValentino's death waa heralded to\nthe world in wood type headlines on\nthe front page of the city papers;\ntbe announcement of Dr. Eliot's\npassing was crowded to tbe ioeide\npages among lhe advertisements. A\nVancouver daily deplores thie ua\nequal distribution of fame. In tbe\ncaBe of Valentino, it ia possible tbat\ntbe Vancouver paper mistakes pub\nlioity and notoriety for fame. It is\nnot an unusual thihg for a murderer\noo a criminal to get more publicity\ntban Ihe ruler of a great country.\nBut publicity isn't fame. Valentino\ndid nothing to improve tbe world;\nin fact, if one bad tbe time to argue\nthis point to its final analysis, it\nmight be proved that the world\nwould be better ofi lf he had not\nbeeu born. Dr. Eliot's fame will\nlast as long as English ianguage ie\nwritten or spoken; Valentino's publicity will never carry his bust into\nthe h 11 of fame.\nWbat one does not need is dear at\na penny.\u2014Plutarch.\nBreeds Tailless Sheep\nNine years' experimental work in\nthe development of a tailless breed\nof sbeep under the direction of Prof.\nJames W. Wilson, director of the\nSouth Dakota experimental station\nat State collegers beginning to sbow\nresults. Lambs have been born in\nthe State college flock with tails so\nabort that they do not bave to be\ndocked. Tbey bave been developed\nfrom crossing native Siberian rams\nwith fewes of the Shropshire and\nRambuillet breeds.\nA Superb Dive Against Superb Scenen\nOne of the most remarkable photographs ever taken ln the Canadian Rockies, a work of art that\nblends in equal proportions beauty,\ngrace, poise, in one unique effect\nagainst a background of noble mountain scenery, is shown here where\nMiss Lydia Fulcher, fancy diver, is\nportrayed high In air poised like a\nbird as though flying over Saddleback Mountain In the infinitesimal\nfraction of a. second before she sinks\nto oleave the waters ot the pool.\nThe swimming pool vs^eic 'lie i*\nstaging her great art ls tho newly\nconstructed one of Lake Louise,\nabout 90 feet long and 8 feot deep.\nThere aro springboards at different\nheights'to suit the expert or amateur\ndiver and the water is warm enough\nto attract those who are chary of\nattempting the cooler swimming In\nLake Louise Itself.\nMiss Fulcher champion of the Calgary Swimming Club is a true mermaid ot toe Canadiaa West     She\nle-uiscd vo swim in tho Canadlai. joy-\nernmont's great pool, \"Tho Cave and\nBasin\", at Banff when she was a\nmere child. She became a champion\nlast year at the Banff Winter Carnival when swimmers were diving\ninto the Cave and Basin filled with\nhot sulphur water from Sulphui\nMountain, whon the temperature outside was hovering around the zero\nmark, while tho water of tho po*!\nwas well within summer temper. \u2022\ntures.\nFROM EVERYWHERE\nW bat is a tariff)   A ta jiff ii a tax\nlevied against articles  produced be\nvoud the national boundaries wbich\nis collected wben they are imported,\nWhat is its -fleet? It increases\nthe cost of imported articles aod the\nprices, when sucb articles are imported fir raFale. A* an instance, a\ntix oa tea,8hoes,cars,etc.,adds to th\"\nprices wben imported, henae a tax\noo Imports inceases the prices of\nimports\nDoes a tariff restrict importation*\nand thu- protect the markets? No,\nthe ruling prices in a country with\nor without a tariff determine whether\ngoods eto be imparted aod sold at a\ndrofit or not, aod are tbus tbe real\nfactors in market protection. Ae\nexamples the dresent price- Itvel of\nthe metals, fish, wheat, livestock,\nthe forest products, etc., prevent im\nportations of such things except at\nosaes, consequently wheo tbese\nprices are below thoa* of such im -\nported articles tbey are the real barriers against imports. Tbe only\nfunction a tariff performs ia to raise\nthe prices of imports, wbich doea\nnot of itself protect the markets, for to do tbia it ia necessary to\nregulate tbe price of the home product, and it has baen ofjen demon -\nBttated that to acquire and controf\nmarkets the prices must he kept be.\nlow tbose of competitors, whether\nlocal or foreign. This is a fundament-\ntal priuciple of economics tbat a\nkindergarten class could understand,\nyet tbe protectionist politician is\nblind to tbis point. This fact can be\nclearly shown by means of an illus\ntrillion, thus:\nSome tradesmen are making and\nBelling a particular type of wagon\nfor $100. A foreign manufacturer\nenters the field with an article of\nequal value (the price of wbich, like\nall imports, cootoins both profits\ntaxea) and Bella it for $100. Tbe\nlocal manufacturers apply for a tariff\nof 25 per cent, wbich is placed on\nsuch wagons, thua raising the price\nof tbe imported wagon to $125 by\nadding the duty to tbe competitive\nprioe. If he pricea of tbe locally\nmade implements were kept at $100\nby .imposing an excise tax, to be\napplied in case tbe prices were In.\ncreaaed, the foreign made article\nwith a market price of $125 could\nnot be imported on a commerical\nbasis. ThiB would moan \"protection\"\nset up by controlling local prices,\naud with such control,- a Banff as a\nprotective measure, ia a subsidy\nonly. If tbe price ol tbe local products ware increased, however, and\ntbere is nothing to prevent it, accordingly as tbe price waa increased,\nrestriction on import' would be reduced, and when the price reached\n$125 to that of the imported Article\nimplement would be placed on a\ntree trade basis. If tbe price were\nraised above this level, say $130,\nwithout any change iu the tariff,\nthe market would be lost to the\nforeign competitor. It is tnu* lhat\na monopolist who controls ao article\nof commerce upou which there is a\ntariff may probib t importations uf\ntbat article for resale, place it upon\na free trade basis, or surrender the\nmarket to a foreign competitor by\nsimply regulating tbe price on it.\nK. W. O'BeirneJ ditor aod manager of tbe Penticton Herald, was in\ntbe city on Saturday with tbe visiting tennis player-.\nHe that would eat the kernel muat\ncrack the nut.\u2014Plautue.\nlt Is anticipat-xTtnat the wool clii*\nin Southern Alberta will reach the\n2,000,000 pound mark this year; Of\nthis a million and a quarter pounds\nwill be handled through the Canadian Co-operative Wool Growera'\nAssociation. The fleeces this year\nare stated to be unusually large.\nCanada, in proportion to population, has more golf courses than tha\nUnited States. With its 464 courses\ntbere is no need for the summer\ntourists to miss their game. Ontario\nleads with 160; Quebec, 70; Alberta,\n60; Saskatchewan, 63; Manitoba, 61;\nBritish Columbia, 89; Nova Scotia,\n17; New Brunswick, 11; Prince Edward Island, 8.\nThe recent appointment of the Rt\nHon. Reginald McKenna, former\nChancellor of the Exchequer of the\nBritish Government, and E. R. Peacock, a director of the famous Bank\nof Baring Brothers, to the directorate of the Canadian Pacific Railway, haB caused very favorable\ncomment in Canadian and English\nfinancial circles.\nThe annual across-Canada educational tour carried out under the\nauspices of tbe Canadian Pacific\nRailway, terminated recently at Toronto and Professor Sinclair Laird,\nDean of Macdonald College, who was\nin charge of the party of over 100\nteachers, students and professional\nmen, stated that their entire trip\nhad been an unqualified success.\nOver 8,000 tickets were Sold recently for the annual picnic and outing of the Angus Shops in Montreal\nto Ste. Rose, which proved the most\nsuccessful ever held. Prominent\nofficials who took part in tbe day's\nouting were: Mr. Grant Hall, vice-\npresident of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway; John Burns, works manager at the Angus shops; J. D. Muir,\nassistant works manager, and W,\nPeterson, shop engineer.\nPromptness in First Aid handling\nby C.P.R. In the case of a man whose\nleg was completely severed while\nhe was at work unloading the S.S.\n\"Montroyal\" at Quebec recently undoubtedly saved the man's life, according to the Burgeon of tbe \"Mont,\nroyal.\" The First Aid rendered by\nSergeant Murphy and Constable\nKelly, of the Canadian Pacific Railway, was reported to have been tbe\nmeans of saving the injured man's\nUfa.\nA Canadian owned Ayrshire cow,\n\"Nellie Osborne of Elmshade tbe\n16th,\" owned by W. C. Wylie, of\nHowick, has displaced the American\nowned Ayrshire for the world's record milk and butter production for\nthis .breed. In a 806-day official\ntest she produced 21,241 pounds of\nmilk and 909 pounds of butterfat.\nThe previous record production for\nthe same number of days was 18,266\npounds of milk and 739 of butterfat.\nImmigration to Canada for the\nfirst two months of the fiscal year\namounted to 36,113, according to an\nofficial statement issued by the Department of Immigration and Colonization. This is an increase of 11,-\n791 over the same two months a\nyear ago. Immigration for May,\nwhich Is the latest month included\nin the statement, was 18,620 this\nyear, as compared with 13,388 last\nyear. British immigration has increased from 6,659 in May, 1925, to\n7,986 in May, 1926. For the same\nmonths immigration from the United\nStates has increased from 1,757 to\n2,063 and from other countries 5,022\nto 8,671.\nAnnouncement was made from tho\nheadquarters of thc Canadian Pacific Railway at Montreal recently\nof the retirement of W. B. Lanigan,\ngeneral freight traffic manager\nfrom the services of the Company\nwhich he has served for forty-two\ncontinuous years. Mr. Lanigan Is\nregarded as one of the outstanding\nauthorities on rail rates, and, although relieved from active official\nduties at his own request, he will be\nretained in the company's service in\norder that his special knowledge and\nlong experience in traffic matters\nmay be available in connection with\nenquiries before the Board of Railway Commissioners. *\nV\nA grass fire in Roadmaster E\nJohnson's yard on Wednesday after\nnoon called out the fire department.\nAt one time tbere seemtd to be\ngreat danger ot tbe fire spreading\nb.-.yond control, but it waB finally\nextinguished before the danger point\nwas reached.\nThrice i. he armed tbat bath  hig\nquarrel jjist.\u2014Shakespeare. THE SUN: GBAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n3fa> (Srattb Sfarka Bun\nAN INDEPENDENT   *CW3P\u00abPE*\nG. A. EVANS, EDITOR AHO PUBLISHER\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year (in Canada and Great Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States)    1.50\n. Address\" -\" ------\u2014-cations to\nsiThb Gband Fork* Sun\nPhokb 101 Gbawd Forks, B. C^\nOFFICE:   COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFKIDAY. AUGUST 72, 1926\nroad north of tbe town. The rabbit took to\nthe road ahead of the car, which was traveling\nat the rate of about twenty-five miles an hour.\nThe speed of the car was increased to thirty\nand then to thirty-five miles, with the long-\neared bunny holding hisown. The.speed was\nfurther increased, md when the speedometer\nshowed thirty-eight miles the car started to\ngain, and as the forty mile mark was reached\nthe jack, finding the pace too swift, leaped to\nthe ditch and disappeared in the darkness\nThis race lasted for moie than a mile.\nIn t: e last election Premier King promised\nthe people reduced taxation. The Robb budget, which is conceded to be the hest budg t\nsince confederation, fulfilled that promise.\nIn this election Mr. King is promising the\nCanadian people still further reductions in\ntaxation if he is returned to power. There is\nevery reason to believe that this promise will\nalso be kept. Mr. Maighen has nothing bettor\nto offer the country than a chimerical program\nof tariff tinkeriug in such a manner as to increase the living costs of the entire population\nof the Dominion.\n.-. The latest dispatches from Victoria are reassuring to the \"drys\" of the Grand Forks-\nGreenwood i riding. Some apprehension was\nat first felt that the beer parlors would be\nforced upon the big centers of population by\nthe \"wet\" rural vote. The liquor control\nboard, however, seems to take a difforent view\nof the situation, and its policy, as outlined in\na dispatch from the capital of the 25th, is per\nfectly. fair and would be in accord with the\nwishes of the people of the entire district.\na . It seems hard for Mr. Meighen to keep bis\n-bonds off the Canadian National railways in\nthis campaign. At the end Mr. Meighen's\nlast administration the Canadian National\nrailways were the laughing stock of\nthe entire continedt. When Mr. King assumed power he took the roads out of politios,\nplaced them under competent management,\naod they are now earning their own way and\nwiil soon earn a revenue for tee country if let\nalone. Every Canadian citizen now takes\npride in being part owner of these railways.\nIt is incomprehensible o helieve that the people of Canada wili do anything on the 14th\nof next najiithto jajp*,riize this gr:at heritage topostet-ity.\nIt isn't alwaysthat lovely woman can stoop\nto folly without getting a crick in her back.\nHon. H. H.' Stevens is the biggest false\nalarm British Columbia bas yet produced.\nNotes \u2022 Notions \u2022 Notables*\nBail oad crossing accidents continue to be\nevidence that the Canadian people are not\nsuperstitious and do not qelieve in signs.\nTHE BRICK FOR BRICK ARGUMENT\nSpeaking at Orillia the other day, Mr.\nMeighen said:.\n\"Tariff revision on farm products will be\nin the very first tariff revisin we make. We\nwill make only one revision, and in that re\nvision we will place the tariff on farm  products entering (Janada to just as high a\nlevel as the American tariff.\"\nBut there is a joker in the pack. On agood\nmany farm products the United States tariff\nis lower than that of Canada.   Mr.  Meighen\napparently likes the \"brick for brick  argument\" when talkiug in Ontario\u2014that is, he\npromises a tariff wall of tha same dimensions\nas the United Stajes \"brick for brick.\"\nIf such a policy were followed the duties ou\nsome United States products entering Gana d\nwould be lowered. In this connection the following statistics are illuminating:\nU.S Bate,\nItem. (1926);\nBoots and shoes, wholly or\nin chief value of leather. Free\nLeather, all leather   not\nspecial ly provided for... Free\nHarness and saddlery ...  Free\nLeaiher shoe laces.    Free\nPlows  Free\nHarrows  Free\nMowers and reapers  Free\nThreshing machines  Free\nHorae rakes  Free\nWagons and carts    Frae\nFresh sea herrings  Free\nSmelts  Free\nMilk,condensed (unaweHt) lc per lb\n\" \"(sweetened) ljc per Ib\nRye flour  45c per cwt\nCereal foods in packages,\nn it exceeding 25 Ibs ..  20 p.o.\nApples   75c per brl\nBerries.\u201e     l*\\a perlb\nPeaches       |c per lb\nTomatoes        Jc per lb\nTurnips  12c per cwt\nVegetables, n.sp.f  25 p,c.\nOnions     lc per Ib\nWhite lead ground in oil,\nnsp.f  25 p c.\nIron in pigs  75c per ton\nApplication is now being made before the United\nStates tariff board to increase the rate on iron in pigs' to\n-\u2022$1,124 Per -*>**\u2022\nSEES YELLOW PERIL\nRt. Hon. H. A. L. Fisher, former\nPresident of the Hoard of Educa\ntion ln tho Lloyd Oeorge Government, and a noted historian,\nliliimos 'certain armament firms\"\nfor a condition ln China that\nthreatens the peace of the world.\nFormerly peaceful, China ls now\narmed to the teeth.\nCanadian Rate to\nU.S. (1926)\n{pegged 25   p.c,\nn. o. p. 30   p c,\n{dressed 15   p.c,\nsole        17Jpc\n30  pc.\n30  p.o.\n10   pc.\n7\u00a3p.c.\n6   pc.\n10   p.c.\n7-Jp.c.\nfarm wagons, 10   p.c\nper Ib   lc\nper Ib   ic\nper Ib   3fc\nper ib   3|c\nper cwt 50c\n27-i p.c:\nper brl 90c\nper lb   2c\nper lb   lc\n30   pJ.\n30   p.c.\n30   p.o.\n37-Jp.c\nper ton 82.50\nMust Pay for Paper\nIn giving judgment azainst ade.\nlinqueot subscriber recently, Judge\nO'Reilly, of Cornwall, Ont., made\nthe statement tbat newspaper publishers had a hard enough time io\nfinancing the business without be\niog dooe out of their subscription*.\nIf a person desires to stop anews*\npaper tbe proper way is for bim to\npay all arrears and get a receipt, or\nif he bas paid, refuse to take the\npaper at tbe post office and have a\nrecord hade of his refusal. A man\nwho owed for a newspaper could not\nstop taking it and expect tbe publisher to go without his pay.\nIt may be added tbat oo publisher\nwishes to force his newspaper on\nany one, aod any subscriber desirx\ning to discontinue bis paper will not\nhave the slightest trouble if he does\nso in an honest and businesslike\nway.\nHundreds of dollars are lost every\nyear to publishers by those, who after\na subscription bas expired for tbree\nor six months, discontinue tbe\npaper and send it back as \"refused '\nThe amount is too small for tbe\npublisher to make a fuss .over, but\nall the same it amount* to a neat\nlitlL sum in a year.\nFaults are easier seen\ntues.\nthan  vir-\nFor alfalfa s leet a field tbat is\nwell drained, botb as to surface aod\nsubsoil drainage. Alfalfa will Dot\natsnd \"wet feet.\"\nWhile it may be impossible to prevent a\nviiit from the holdup man,therc is no need \/or\na merchant to give up a big sum of money\nsimply because he demands it. In the first\nplace, all the money possible should be banked\nlate in the afternoon. If the'bank closes at\nthree o'clock everything should be cleaned up\nand banked by that time. If the bank keeps\nopen to a later hour, so much the better, for\nmerchants should see that their cash registers\nor money drawers do not get too full. Along\nabout the time the crowd begins thinning out,\nand before straggers start coming in, the bulk\nof the money, tbe big bills, most of the fives\nand all those of larger denominations, are\ntaken, from the piace where the money is kept\nand c ange is made. This money should be\nhidden away without even the clerks knowing\nwhere it is pnt. One suggestion made by a\ndetective is that one of the keys of the cash\nregister be wired in such a way that, when it\nis pushed, the signal of distress is sounded.\nWhile a pretty woman may not care to be\nbrainy, a brainy woman always wants to be\npretty.\nPoems From EasternLands\nArabia\nA Little Man With a Very Long Beard\nHow can thy ehin that burden bear?\nIs it all gravity to shock I\n18 it to make the people stare?\nAnd be thyself a laughing stock?\nWhen I behold thy little feet\nAfter thy beard ob'equious run,\nI always fancy that I meet\nSome father followed by his son,\nA man like thee scarce e'er appear'd \u2014\nA beard like thine\u2014where shall we find it?\nSurely tliou oherishest thy beard\nIn hope to hide thyself behind it.\n\u2014Isaac Ben Khalif.\nTbe Sun Presses have twice the\nspeed of any otber presses in the\nBoundary. We caa save you money\non botb long and short runs of com\nmercial printing and give you a su\nperior class of work.\nDr. H. L Balthouse of McPherson, Kan.,\nbelieves he has settled the time-worn argument as to how fast aKsnsas jackrabbit can\ntravel. One evening recently the doctor on\nirs way home \"scared up ' a jackrabbit on the\no4ncient History\n[TakenFrom Twenty-*Year Old Sun Files,]\nThe Kettle Valley line engineers on Wednesday commenced locating Hie line on Third\nstreet between the Kettle river and the end\nof the grade on Sixth street. 15 *-\nAn important business deal is ln progress.\nTbe transaction involves the transfer of the\nmercantile business of .the Hunter Kendrick\ncompany in this city from the present owners\nto James Hunter of Rossland. Henceforth the\nfirm will be under the management of N. L.\nMclnnes, late of Nelson.\nHeavy forest fires are raging near Eholt.\nThe Boundary Iron Works, in jhe Ruckle\naddition, was completely destroyed by fire last\nFriday.   Loss $15,000.      it\nGe . Manson, of ihe Granby force, returned\nlast Saturday from  a six weeks' trip to Chi\ncago and other eastern points.\nYOUNG AT 50\nDr. Legard's New Life Tablets\nImparts to the Old and Middle-aged\nYouthfillness, Energy and Fitness, retards mental and physical\ndecay, thus promoting longevity,\nPreserves the arteries and tissues,\nSufferers irom Deafness with its many\ndistressing accompanying ailments,\nas Homl noises, deriveal most immediate benefit, Calm refreshing sleep\nassured. Gloom, Depression and Nervousness is banished under the influence of thesej Life-giving Tablets\nWrinkles, hard lines aud blemishes\ndisappear.    The skin becomes clear,\night and elastic and the complexion\nbright and smooth. Think of the\nblessing* of perfect health, the possesion of few; the joyof a clear Youth*\nful appearance and tingling blood, of\nlustrous hair, bright eyes and health-\ntinted cheeks; the beauty of radiant\nlife and the realisation that Tima has\nbeen put bacE Ten years to the envy\nand admiration of your friends, and\ntheuabounded satisfaction of' your,\nself. Can you allow a golden opportunity like this to pass? Remember\nthere are no arduous rules to follow,\nno restriction on diet, not are there\nany ill effects after. Un the contrary\nit gives the entire system a feeling of\nexhaltation with increased mental\nand bodily vigour. Why not look\nand feel 30 at 50? Do not delay,\ncommence the treatment at once.\nYou will never regret the alight cost\nIncurred for such incalculable benefits. The price of these Marvellous\nTablets including Mail Charges is\n3 Dollars per bottle, dispatched in\nplain wrapper on receipt of amount.\nObtainable from\nDr. Legard's Laboratories,\n106, Liverpool Rond,|Bnrnsbarj-,\nLondon, England.\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for\nColds\nPain\nHeadache\nNeuralgia\nNeuritis\nToothache\nLumbago\nRheumatism\nI DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART |\nS*t^\nAccept only \"Bayer\" package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tableta\nAlso bottles of 2* and 100\u2014Dntggiita.\nAi'plrln 1- Uso tre* mi* (rtil-tdwl in Otintlt) of Bi-w Munfactin of V<>iiMCt-lt-\n\u00abcl ilcatrr of Htsllttyllt-acl d (Acetyl S.lleyllc Add, \"A. S A.\"). White Itta __*}JggSS\nthit Aspirin tnetmB Bayer mswiifacture. to uslstt the pnbllo tjtlint lmlUUoM, the J**_***\nOt Btsyer Company will be iUmpetl with their general trade mul-, th* \"Bttfer Onee,\nCit'zens of Grand Forks are asked to note the following extracts from the 1925 Amendments to the\nHospital Act:\n(4) Where there is, either within or without tbe limits of any\nmuuicipalily, a hospital wbicb is maintained by tbe municipality,\nor to the support of which th* municipality is chief contributor\nwith tbe exception of the Crown, the municipality\" sball not be\nliable in respect of any patient treated in any otber hospital, except\nin cases of emergency, or where the hospital so maintained or supported is not in a positioo to furnish tbe epecial treatment necessary for any certain patient, nnd authority for tbat patient to apply for admission to tbe otber hospital hag been given by the\nMivor or Reeve or some duly authorized officer ot the municipality, in which cases the municipaliry shall be liable to te extent\nset out in subsections (1) and (2).\nJOHN A. HUTTON,\nCity Clerk\nMassey-Harris\nIMPLEMENTS\nWe are agents for the well known Massey-\nHarris line of farm equipment. Let us\nfigure on your needs.\nA Complete Line of Garden Tools\nMILLER & GARDNER\nFurniture nnd Hardware\nAll Lines Tested\nEvery Morning\nAll long distance telephone lines in\nthe B. C. Telephon Company's system\nare tested every morning to be sure they\nare ready for the day's business. This\nis another service safeguard.\nBritish. Columbia Telephone\nCompany\nTHE SUN prints all the loeal news\nand carries a number of interesting\nfeatures found in no other Boundary\npaper   $1.00 per year yp\nSelection of Dairy Cattle Breeds\nInfluenced by Shows\nA good typical Ayrthire tire\nMany a man who Is undecided as\nto the breed of dairy cattle that ho\nwill select haa been Influenced In\nmaking his decision by the animals\nof a particular breed that ho has\nseen in public.\nThe Individual breeder secures a\ngreat deal of advertising as the result of exhibiting at fairs, or in. offering good animals at public sales.\nIt gives people a chance to see and\nknow the kind of stock that a man is\nbreeding and paves the way'for future business.\n' It is essential that special care and\nattention be given dairy animals far\nIn advance of the time that they are\nto be exhibited or sold. Exhibiting\nor selling animals publicly in their\nevery day clothes ls poor advertising\nand puts them at a disadvantage\nwhen the competition ls keen. It\ntakes' several weeks to put a dairy\nanimal ln good, show condition and\nwhat applies to fitting for show applies as well to fitting for sale.\nIt Is Important that the dairy animal to be exhibited or sold be in\ngood flesh. A good covering of flesh\nadds to size, increases smoothness\nand Indicates that the animal is\nthrifty and tn good health. Dairy\nanimals being fitted need extra feed.\nStabling and blanketing are great\naids in putting the hair and hide Iri\ncondition. (Hy stabling In summer,\nthe animal is protected from the hot\nsun which makes the hide harsh and\nstiff to the touch. A roomy box stall\nthat ls kept clean and well bedded\nPetting on Hs finishing louche,\nprovides desirable quarters. Continuous blanketing helps keep the animal clean, sweats tho hide, thus Improving its handling qualities and\nmakes the hair lay to the body. The\nblanket need not be expensive but\nlt must be tied on securely.\n-Every dairy animal that is to be\nexhibited should have the hair\nclipped from the entire body about\nthree weeks previous to the date of\nthe show or sale. This will get rid\nof the old hair and allow a new,\neven growth to develop which will\ngreatly Improve the appearance and\nincrease the selling value of the\nanimal.\nA point often overlooked ln the\npreparation of a dairy animal for\nshow or sale is that of training to\nlead and stand properly. An untrained animal cannot display its\ngood points to advantage if lt combats the eit'orts of the attendant to\nexhibit it properly. A little time\nspent each day in training to handle\nproperly will save effort and embarrassment at the show or sale and\nIncrease the financial return.\nWhile in the show or sale ring, tha\nman ln charge of an animal should\nhave one main thought ln mind,\nnamely that of showing the animal\nto advantage. By this ls meant that\nwhen it stands, its feet are properly\nplaced, back straight and head alert.\nAny movement on the part of the attendant or animal should be as\ngraceful as possible. Until the ribbons are placed or the auctioneer*!\nhammer falls, take no chances.\nPutting Farm Work Horses in Condition\n\u00a9Un-sjnswdiDBitewiwl ..,\u201e,.     .\n. Harvesting small grain in Ihe great Norlhwell.\nProgress ln farm Held work in the\nooming months depends largely on the\ncondition of the work horses. Soft\nfrom the winter's rest, farm work\nhorsos require conditioning just aa an\nathlete requires training for his test\nEvery farmer knows that two or\nthree weeks spent in a gradual toughening and conditioning of a horse for\nthe heavy work ls moro than made up\nb\u00bbfore the season of heavy field work\nls over. Not only does this conditioning Include breaking them in to the\nlong hours of hard pyll that they\nmust undergo, but applies as well to\nbreaking them ln to a working ration.\nIt Is poor practice to allow a horse\nto pasture on much new lushy gross\nif he is to go on a strenuous work\nschedule. A little grass Is good for\nhim, helps to condition him, but he\nmust have oats, bran or old corn, or\n\u25a0till better, a combination of the three\nand good sound hoy. Theso are tlio\nbest possible rations ln tho spring and\nearly summer. The horso that Is fed\na major ration of grass soon gets soft,\nsweats profusely, lags and quickly\nplays out. Oats, bran, corn and hay\nWill give him stamina and leave him\nin the best condition at the end of\nthe day.\nBy treating old Dobbin fairly, getting him ready for spring work with\ndaily exercise, keeping him thoroughly\ngroomed, especially while shedding,\nand a work ration Instead of his\nwinter feed will pay big dividends ln\na short time.\nIf the horse takes a long time to\nshed his coat, this can bo facilitated\nby thorough, frequent grooming and\nif this does not do the work, a clipping\nall over will get him through the shedding period quickly. After the horse\nhas started to work In the Held, It Is\nadvisable to bathe tho shoulders and\nnock two or three times daily with\ncold, soft, salty water or with white\noak bark tea which toughens and\ncleanses tho chafed parts.\nA prominent veterinarian states\ntliat \u00bb-ccessivo sweating ls remedied\nby clipping the horse. Excessive\nswcatlna* weakens tho animal and it is\ndoubtless quito advisable to clip him\nto relieve this condition, It is also\ntrue that this practice enables the\nhorso to bo thoroughly groomed In\nmuch loss time than when It retain*\nits long winter coat of shaggy hair.\nSpilt Milk Costs Uncle Sam\n$77,399,685.00 Annually\nV\nI It take, a herd of Of*?,-\n097 cows each giving\n6000 lit. of milk yearly\nto mpply the milk\nmuled annually tn the\nU. 8.\nAccording to a schedule showing\nthe division of dairy products, pub\nlished by the United States Department of Agriculture, the annual Cost\nof wasted milk in our nation would\nmake a happy pay day for the army\nand navy and still leave an appropriation sufficient to build enough\ncombat planes to saUsfy even the\nmilitant Mitchell.\nThe amount ot milk split, soured,\nrejected and otherwise wasted annually, ls 3,389,986,000 pounds. ThiB at\n$2.25 per hundred would approximate annually the stupendous\namount of $77,899,685.\nHowever, a cheerful note rings\nthrough this tale of economic loss to\na nation. The same report shows\na 1924 increase of 108 pounds of\nmilk per cow over 1923 production.\nDeducting this from the figure previously given, leaves a loss through\nwaste of only $13,607,325, a mere\nbagatelle, compared with our national debt of more than twenty billions of dollars,\nThe increased yield per cow is due\nto heightened efficiency on the farm;\nand future years promise even\ngreater increases.\nDairymen have discovered the futility of feeding non-paying members\nof their milk herds. They have\nlearned that losses lurk in insanitary\nmilk production. They havo discovered the advantages that lie in\nswatting the bacteria that hide in\nunclean stables, undipped, un-\nbrushed flanks and udders of milk\ncows and unsterillzed utensils. As\ntime goes on, the unavoidable waste\nof milk will be more than offset by\nintelligent feeding, complete sanitation and more efficient herd management. *\nTHB SUN: GBAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nPREVENT\nFOREST\nFIRES\nYOU CAN\nHELP\nB.C. FOREST SERVICE.\nWhy Home-brewed\nBeer Can Be Bad\nFor Your Health\nBREWING beer at home, a habit that has\nbecome widespread in the United\nStates since prohibition deprived the people\nof the right to purchase pure and healthful\nbeer legally and openly, presents difficulties and dangers of which those who\nengage in it are rarely aware.\nHOME-BREWED beer can be actually dangerous to those who drink it, for the home\nbrewer works by rule of thumb, perforce, and\nusually has no acquaintance with or control over\nthe complex physical and chemical reactions that\ntake place in the brewing of beer. Pure beer can\nonly be made in a modern brewery by scientifically trained brewmasters who have at their disposal the most modern equipment and who are\nbound by the most exacting standards.\nTHE same materials which, in a modern brewery, are\nmade into pure, healthful beer, can become, in the\nhands of a home brewer, a raw, incompletely fermented, indigestible and harmful mixture unfit for consumption.   But where an established brewery uses only\nthe highest grade of material\u2014malt and hops\u2014tested for\nfiurity, the home brewer i.s forced to purchase in stores\nmported syrup concoctions of inferior malt and low-grade\nhop extracts frequently blended with synthetic essences.\nTlie product of such mixtures is always harmful to the\nstomach and digestive system and dangerous to drink for\nany length of time.\nTHE home brewer is hampered not only by lack of\nknowledge of the science of brewing, but home\nequipment docs not include the elaborate plant necessary for prolonged sterilization and filtering to assure\na pure, healthful Deer free from bacterial infection. In\nbeer that is the product of a perfectly equipped brewery\nall fermentation is complete; in home-brewed beer fermentation continues, and continues after it is consumed.\nIi Is really an explosive mixture, whether in your stomach\nor in the bottle, as shown by the way in whieh bottles\nexplode and tops are blown off.\nHOn-UIWlD beers tn usually hlghar tn aloohollo coat-sat than they should be. In th* bears aupplled by ths\nAmalgamated Breweries to tho people of Britlih Columbia\nthrough lloanaad premises or through Government stores tha\naloohollo strength la only 4*4 per cent, tha moat favorable\nstrength for tha stimulation of the stoin-oh toward aiding\ndlf-estlon. Home-browed beers also usually contain greater or\nlass percentages of deadly fuaol oil, from which prooerly\nbrewed, stored and aged beers are free.\nAtTT physician can teU of the dangers of home-brewed baer,\nfrom which, happily, the people of Brit'eh Columbia ara\nfree, for they have the privilege of obtaining pure, -rood bear\nmada by tba Amalgamated Breweries of Britlah Columbia ln\nplants that ars equipped wltb every faculty for tha browing\nof purs bear, perfectly flavored, well matured and healthful.\nVisitor, are cordially welcomed at the plants\nof the members of the Amalgamated Breweries of British Columbia: Vancouver Breweries, Limited; Rainier Brewing'Co. of\nCanada. Limited; Westminster Brewery,\nLimited; Silver Spring Brewery, Limited; and\nthe Victoria Phoenix Brewing Co. Limited.\nDO YOU WANT\nTHE PEOPLE\nTO READ YOUR\nADVERTISEMENT\nPeople take The* Sun\nbecause they believe\nit is worth the price we\ncharge for it. It is\ntherefore reasonable to\nsuppose that they read\nits contents, including\nadvertisments. This\nis . not --always the case\nwifh newspapers that\nare offered as premiums with chromos or\nlottery tickets\nWE DO NOT\nWANT CHARITY\nADVERTISING-\nAdvertising \"to help\nthe editor.'* But we do\nwant businessadvertis-\ning by progressive business men who, know\nthat sensible advertising brings results and\npay. If you have something to offer the public that will |ben<-fit\nthem and you as well,\nthe newspaper reaches\nmore people than a bill\nboard\n\u2022*\\**'-9tf**\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nSUN READERS\nKNOW WHAT\nTHEY WANT\nand if you have the\ngoods you can do business with them THB SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nYou Should Try\n\"SALADA\"\nGREEN TEA ,.\nwhen you want a change.   It's delicious.\nNEK OFTHE CITY\nForty representatives of the Vancouver board of trade touring tbe\nprovince passed tbrougb the city\nlast nigbt on tbeir way to Trail,efter\nvisiting eeveral Okanagan points. A\nnumber of motor cars from tbis city\nmet tbe train at Midway and brougbt\nmost of tbe delegates bere overland,\nthus giving them about balf an bour\nin wbicb to view tbe city and to interview.the citizeos, besides afford*\niog tbem an opportunity to see some\nof tbe orchards in the valley.\nThe beer parlor plebiscite carried\nin tbe Grand Forks-Greenwood district on Saturday by a majority of\nabout 45, the vote being 563 io favor\nof tbe proposal and 518 against it.\nGrdod Forke went dry by 278 to 250\naod Greenwood likewise by 95 to 4 4\nand two other points gave small dry\nmajorities. Tbe remaining polls\nwent net. At Cascade tbere seems\nto bave beeu a cloudburst.\nBible Students' association,deliver a\nlecture on the subject, \"Is Hell a\nPlace of Torment?\"\nMr.   and   Mrs.   \u00a3\nBeaverdell   motored\nTuesday.\nI   Lutuer\nto    town\nof\nMrs. Anna Hlrschberg, aged 84\nyears, died in tbe Grand Forks hospital yesterday after about a\nmonih's illness. Deceased came\nbere a number of years from Eog.\nUud. Sbe was tbe mother of Mrs.\nsi. F. Laws of this city. The funeral\nwill be held on Sunday afternoon\nat 2 o'clock from Holy Trinity\nchurch, where sen ices will be held.\nInterment wiil be made in Ever\u00ab\ngreen cemetery.\nMrs. Biggs, late of the Ideal\nBe uty Parlor, left today for Vancouver.\nMrs. J. C. Taylor and daughter\nMarjorie returned Sunday nigbt\nfrom a month's vacation to Vancouver.\non Saturday, and presented tbe\nmpmbers of tbe Grand Forks Darling club with a crate of cantaloupes.\nRobert Campbell made an over\nland trip to Oliver and Penticton on\nSaturday.\nJobn Zurflu , of tbe Midway\nhotel, paid a visit to Gaand Forke\non Monday.\nH   W. Gregory of Greenwood was\nin tbe city on Saturday.\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPhone 30\n'S\nGovernment Agent Chas. Mudge\nrelurned on Tuesday evening from\na two weeks' vacation trip to Vancouver. J. A McCallum relieved\nhim white he was away.\nA fair-sized audience gathered in\nthe Empress theater on Thursday\nev ning to hear C. Roberts, of tbe\nlecture staff  of the   international\nAll the local garages sent cars up\nto Midway yesterday to meet the\nVa couver board of trade delegates.\nW. J. K. Bizer of  Nelson,  comp\ntroller of water rights, passed through\ntbe city :n Tuesday and was met at\ntbe station by a number   of bis old\nfiiends. \t\nA cantaloupe grower of Keremeos\nwbo is also a curler waB in the city\nShort Sketch of tho\nLiberal Leader of Yale\nF, B. Cossitt,   nominated  Liberal\ncandidate at  Veruon last  week, is\nwidely known as a successful Cana\ndian fruit commissioner at the laet\nWembley exhibition.\nHe was born at Smitb Falls.\nOntario.\nHe came to Vernon sixteen years\nago and for fourteen years has been\na member of the real estate firm of\nCossiit, Lloyd & Beattie.\nHe was seven years president of\nthe North Okanagan Liberal association aod Yale Riding association,\nten years on the b jard of the Ver-\nnoo Fruit Union and two years ite\npresident. He is the father and\nmoving spirit of tbe ernon Country\nclub, was two years president of\nthe board of trade, is president of\nthe newly formed Vernon Real\nKstale exchange, and a member of\ntbe board of the new Vernon Box\ncompany.\nHis genial manner and disposition\nbave won bim hosts of friends everywhere, tbougb bis modest disposition has always made it necessary\nfor hiB friends to push blm farward.\nIn his many iectures and business\naddresses since he returned from tbe\nImperial exhibition be has shown\nhimself intimately acquainted with\nproblems of the overseas fruit trade.\nTry our Special Tea\nat     65c per lb\nShoes,- Shirts, Overalls\nGood values for your\nmoney.\nCall and see\npurchasing.\nus before\nFOR A SPECIAL CUP OF TEA TRY OUR\nCHALLENGE   BRAND\nThis Tea vns have  had especially blended.\nCall in and ask for a sample.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25\n\"Service and Quality'\nJi\nJOHN  DONALDSON\nGeneral Merchant\nS. T. HULL\nEstablished 1010\nKealEstate and Insurance\nResident Agent Grnnd Porks Tow mi to\n1 Contpany, Limited\nFarms    JOrchards     City l'roperty\nAsjeutt at Nelaon, Calgary, Wihulpcg snd\nether Prairie polnta.  Vanoouver Agenr ;\nFENDER IN,\nBATTENIIU\nTMBNT9\nLANDS LT I,.\nWords are but holy as ahe deeds\nthey cover.\u2014Shelley.\nTrail Riders Finish Romantic Journey\n1.  Trull Rider* lUltift down to the Ptarml 'an\nVull.y.   1.   -Kull Killers\" with tho party.\nAcnvulcarle of 260 horsemen, the\nTrail Riders of the Canadian\nRockies, wlitme Ion-- rides and exploits over thc twisted trails of \"The\nTop of the World\" have become\nclassic, returned recently to Lake\nLouise from their annual ride, thus\nadding another romantic pace to the\nhistory of this organization in the\nWest.\nTheir return was strangely silent\nand different in fact than one might,\nwithout thinking, expect. No undue\nceremonies or song terminated the\nmountain journey of these men and\nwomen from all parts of America and\nEurope, for being true nature lovers\nthey had, in their communion with\nthe silences of the mountains found\nthe solace therein. The spirit of their\norder, was, they knew, \"a reverence\nfor the majesty and beauty of nature\".\nTheir homage had been paid and\ntheir journey ended. They would\nrevel in the memory of it silently, ior\nthey had learned, as someone has\nput it, that \"great joys like great\ngriefs are silent.\"\nBut the spirits uf the Riders on\nthe trail at all times ran high. While\ncamped on the flat heights of Pt.\nMargin Pass a rodeo was held with\nno end of local western color.\nHarry Knight, Canadian bucking\nhorse champion, (iuy Weadick of\nCalgary Stampede fame, Bill Bugby,\nChief Buffalo Child Long Lance, and\nmany other well known figures in the\nweat accomplished the Trail Riders.\nThis  rodeo   was  carried  on  at   an\ndtitude of 8,000 feet and brought\nabout an important discovery\n-amongst the scientists of the party.\nIt was found that a horse that bucked\nfour feet into the air at the Calgary\nStampede was only capable of a two-\nfoot leap at this high altitude. Guy\nWeadick was in charge of this novel\nstampede above the clouds.      \u00ab.\nThe great Pow-Wow which took\nplace in the Ptarmigan Valley on\nAugust 14th, combined the Riders of\ntwo parties which had set out from\nBanff and Lake Louise with plans\nto meet at this point. The two\nparties met on the second day near\nBaker La],,;. A picturesque scene\ntbey made with their bright scarves\nfluttering as the long line of horses\ncantered down the trails. Perhaps\nmost picturesque of all the group\nof Philadelphia school girls in their\nbreeches and cowboy hats, all expert\nriders and splendidly mounted. Each\nwas eager to earn the gold button of\nthe Trail Riders given to those who\nhave ridden 500 miles in the saddle.\nArtists, writers, scientists, explorers\nand others of international reputation\nmade up the parties. In the ranks of\nthese loyal devotees of the trail were\nmen with such distinguished titles\nas Duke de Leuchtenberg, Count of\nBeauharnois, and the Marquise D'Al-\nbizzi. Other prominent members who\nrecently completed the ride at Lake\nLouise were, Morley Roberts, John\nMurray Gibbon, Lawrence J. Burpee\nand Madge MacBeth all well known-\nwriters, and Carl Rungius, Leonard\nRichmond, R.B.A., A. C. Leighton\nand other prominent artists.\nThe directors have decided that\nnext year's ride should be a six day\none through the Assiniboine country\ncovering over 100 miles. On the third\nday this party will be joined by a\nthree-day contingent through ftp\nEarth Creek and Mt. Ball.\nEitrbllshcd In 1910. we are itt s. position  to\niirnlsh reliable information -\">uoer--.ing tltlf\ndistrict.\nWrite for Ires literature\nA. E. M-DOUGALL\n^CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nAgent\nbssminion Monumental Works\nf JAsbr-t<w Products Co. UooBn-Jl\nESTIMATES FURNISNED\nnOX'335 6RAND FORKS, B. C\nK. SCHEEB\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nealer.iii\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\n'    Grand Forke, B. C.\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture  Made to Order.\n' Alao Repairing of all Kinds,\nUpholstering Neatly Done\nR. G. MoCUTGHBON\nW1NNIPK0*VB-\u00abU\u00bb\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONB 101R\nFOR FINE PRINTING\nA complete line of \u201e colored bonds\nin all shades for fancy letterheads\naud otber classes of commercial\nprinting.   Sun Job Department.\nDid you ever notice that business\nfirms wbo think tbat they can reaob\nTh* Sun's readers tbrough other\npublicatione bave a great deal of\nlei-ure time tba*. might be more\nprofitably employed? A number of\nsucb firms bave involuntarily retired\nfrom business.\nCHEVROLET\nSee the new Superior Chevrolet before you buy a\ncar. There are more cents in theCHOV\u00a3OLlsT\nDOLLAR than iu any other automobile dollar.\nCHEVROLET Touring ,  |885\n\" Roadster     885\nCoach...  1080\n\" Coupee   1080\n\" Sedan .1200\n\" L-ndeau Sudan   1250\n\" One-ton Truck    935\n- GRAND FORKS GARAGE\nE.C. Henniger Go.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGKAN1) P  KKS\nITransferCo.\nDAVIS 8 HANSEN, Prop.\nI-City Baggage and General\nTransfer\nI Coal,   Wood and   Ice\n(or Sale\n| Office  at  R.  F.  Pctrie'a Store\nPhone 64\n|Yale Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nClassic blank cards for - lassy in\nvitatione and announcements Sun\nJob Department.\nOur\nHobby\n.Good\nPrinting\nTUNS value of well-\npriated. neat appearing stationery as\na meansof getting and\nholding desirable business has bcen amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelse whore.\nWedding invitations\nBail programs\nBusinses cards\nVi'''.'. ing cards\nSh'r'ing tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNev   Type\nLatent Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nOi' umbia Avenue and\nlake Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYale Hotrl,  First  ikrbt\nSYNOPSIS OF\nUND ACT AMENDMENTS\nPRE-EMPTIONS\n\"Vacant unreserved, surveyed'Grown lands\nmay be pre-empted by Brltlh subjeots over\n18 years of une, and by alien- on declaring\nIntention to become British subjects, oontll-\ntlonal upon retliennc. occupation aud Improvement for agricultural purposes.\nFull Inforaiallon concerning re'-iiUtlotii\nregarding pre entiillous la glveu In Bulletin\nNo. 1, Ltin I Series, \"Uow to Pre-empt Land,\"\ntopics oi wbioh can be obtained freo of cliurge\nby addressing the Department of Lauds.\nViotorla, B.C., oreuy Uoraruraenl Agent.\n\u00b0-*lleci)<ds will be made covering only land\nsuitable for agricultural purposes, and which\nla uot timberland. I e\u201e oarryiug over 5,00s)\ntotird feet ner acreweitof tue (Joust lUnge\nand 8 (100 feel per aere east cf thut range.\nm'pplicutlou* for pre-emptions .are to be\naddressed to the Laud Cuniinlasloiier of tha\nLaud ltecordlng Ui vision, in wbioh the land\napplied for ls situated.aud are mail* ou\nprinted forms, ooplca of oju Jbu obtained\nfrom the Laud Commissioner.\n-.Pre-emptions must be ooo it plod for flr*\ny-arsaud Improvements mude to value of 110\nper aore, luoltidltiK olcuriug aud oultlvatlug\nal least ava acres, before a Grown Uraut eau\nbe received.\nFor more tlutatieuitttortnaitou teethe Bnl*\nletln'-lltsw to Pre-empt Laud.\"\nPUROHASE\nAppllcatlonsaru received for purohaa* of\nvaoant aud unreserved Crowu Lauds, not being timberland, for agricultural purposes:\nminimum prloe of llrit-olaaa (arable) land Is\nJi per aoro. snd seemid-class (graaing) laud\n$*.ft0 per aore. Fiir.her Information regarding piiroaaseor lease of Crown lauds Is given\nIn Hulle~ln No. 10, Laud Series. \"Purchase autl\nLeaae of Crown Landa.\"\nM1U, factory, or Industrial site, on timber\nland, not exoeedlng 40 aore), may be pur*\nchased or leased, on oondltions Inoludlng\npayment of stumpage.\nHOMESITE  LEASES;\nt\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 20 aorea,'\nmay be leased as homesltes, conditional upon\na dwelling being eeoted in the Brat years\ntitle being obtainable after residenoe and\nimprovement oondltions are fulfilled and land\nhaa been surveyed.;\nLEASES\nFor grailng aud Industrial purposes areas\nnot exceeding 840 acres may. be leased by ona\nperson or aoompany.\nGRAZING.\nVnd-r tbe Graaing Aet the Province la\ndivided Into grailng districts and the range\nadministered under a Graxlng Com*\nmissioner. Annual graslng permits are\nIaaued bated on numbers ranged, priority being given to established ownera. Stoek.\nownera may form associations for rang*\nmanagement. Free, or partially free, permits\nare available* for settler., tampers and\ntravellers op to ten bead.\n4","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. 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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":"1926-08-27 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":"1926-08-27 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. 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To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}