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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":" IK The owl acquired his reputation for wisdom by saying one thing and sticking to it\nINTO THB FEDERAL ARENA\nBon. P. jr. Venlot, former Premier\nof New Brunswick will resign aa\nLiberal leader In thit provinoe and\ncontest tbe Gloucester constituency\nIn the coming Federal election.\nTWEJ-TT-J-FIFTH Y\u00bbATl-No, 41\n\"Tell me what you Know js truV\nI can-jftucss as well ai you\/'C\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 1926\nIHE CASCADE-\nWESTERN CANADA\nGOLF CHAMPION\nDESTRUCTIVE FIRE\nThe regular meeting of tbe oity\noouocil was beld io tbe council\nchamber od Monday eveniog, the\nmayor and all tbe aldermen being\npreeent.\nMr. Pittendrigh interviewed tbe\noouocil in regard to a building on\nlot 2, block 12, pl-n 52, recently\nreverted to tbe city but upon whicb\nbe bad paid $15 to tbe former owner\nTbe clerk was instructed to writ - to\nthe former owner demanding the return of the money, and the bouee\nwas sold to, Mr. Pittendrigh for $26,\nTbe time for lbe removal of tbe\nmaterial from tbe smelter site was\nextended toAprilj30, 1927.\nTbe insurance policy on the city\noffice and tbe firemen's furniture\nand equipment for $1000 was placed\nwitb H. A. Sbeads.\nTbe couocil ordered tbe sum of\n$5000 to be transferred to tbe sinking fund account to meetdebeotuies\nmaturing in September.\nTbe water and light com. mittee\nrecommended that tenders be called\nfor 50 cedar polee; also that in case\ninterruption to tbe power service\ntbat the water be shut off and tbe\npeopla notified; also recommended\ntbat tbe old fire engine be tested by\nInspector Sutherland at as early a\ndate a* poaeible. All of tbe recommendations were approved\nTbe board of works reported tbat\ntbe usual amount of repair work to\nstreets and sidewalks had been done;\ntbe provincial public works department bad spent $280 on tbe provincial bigbway tbrougb Qrand Forks,\nand a like amount would probably\nbe spent during tbe balance of tbe\nyear* also tbat tbe bouse occupied\nby S. Dinsmore at the Qranby -ite\nrequired considerable repaiee; aleo\nrecommended tbat tbe silent police\nmen be removed from tbe street\nintersections, and that tbe proposed\nstreet oiling be left over for the present season. Tbe report and tbe\nrecommendations were approved.\nAn offer of $25 from James Don\u00bb\naldsoD for tbe old city ambulance\nwas accepted.\nTbe cemetery committee reported\nconsiderable trouble in keeping tbe\ntrees at tbe cemetery . properly\nwatered.\nNotice of a traders' license bylaw\nwas given, to be introduced at the\nnext meeting.\nTourists who are planning\nto take a trip to the coast via\nthe Rossland-Cascade high\nway need have no qualms\nabout their safety, in spile of\nthe rumors and reports of the\nbad state of the road from\nthe proximity of the Rock\ncreek fire, says yesterday's\nTrail Bulletin. Following\nenquiries locally, it was re*,\nported this morning from the\nColumbia garage, Rossland,\nthat the situation was by no\nmeans impossible, and that\ncars, were using the road\ndaily. Oyer twelve cars, it is\nstated, came through yesterday f and reported that there\nwas no great danger along\nthe way.\nCustoms Probe Hits\nChief Tory Whip\nStayner, Ont., August 10.\u2014One\nof tbe keenest election contests in\nOntario will take place io tbe riding\nof North Simooe, where W. A.\nBoys, K.C , Conservative wb p in\nthe last bouse, is being opposed by\nHon. E. C, Drury, former prime\nminister of Ontario iu the United\nFarmers administration.\nIt ie likely the figb-t will be bt\u00bb\ntween these two. In the contest last\nOctober Boys wae successful by a\nm>ijority of 590.\nIn tbe nomination address Saturn\nday Mr. Drury criticized Boys for\nacting as counsel in alleged bribery\nand smuggling case at Barrie, tbe\nWaisberg case, tbe Progressive\nnominee dealing at length witb tbis\nmatter, in wbicb Boys interviewed\ncustoms officials on beb\u00ablf of a constituent wbo bad been arrested on a\ncharge of smuggling.\nWilliam Smith's fine residence,\nacross the Kettle river from the\nWest ward, was destroyed by a fire\nwhich broke out in the garage between G and (? o'clock on Sunday\nevening. The barn, garage and an\nautomobile were a so burned. The\nhousehold goods and a truck were\nsaved. It is said that tbere was\n81000 insurance on tbe bonsehold\ngoods, but none on tbe buildings.\nThe family bad just returned f om\nGreenwood, and it is supposed that\nthe fire started from an overheated\npart of tbe car.\nForest fires reached such a density lo the dangerous sector south of\nNelson Wednesday nigbt tbat P.\nCaverhill, chief forester, and otber\nleading officals of the forestry service at Victoria hurried to tbe inn\nterior to take charge of fire-fighting\noperation*. Reporlefrom tbe Salmon\nriver area indicate that rangers can\nnot hope to bring the existing fires\nunder control until a break in tbe\nweather occurs.\nFROM EVERYWHERE\nMayor Martin, of Montreal, on Behalf of 100 pilgrims to the Eucharis-\ntic Congress at Chicago, recently\npresented a handsome engraved gold\nwatch to Edward P. Whelan, city\nticket agent of the C.P.R., at Windsor Station, Montreal, in appreciation of the care and attention bestowed upon them by Mr. Whelan,\nwho accompanied the party on their\njourney to Chicago.\nThe second, greatest half-year in\nthe history of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway has been completed with\nthe month of July, the official financial statement for this period showing an increase in the gross earnings over the preceding six months\nof $10,071,966.66. The increase in\nthe net profits for the same period\namounted to $6,159,041, or an increase nearly double that of iha\nprevious half year in 1925.\nHENRY E. SPENCER\nHe bas again been nominated aa\nProgressive candidate for Battle\nRiver, Alberta. He represented that\nconstituency ln the lost parliament\nand was Progressive Whip In the\nHouse.\ns\nNED McKENNA,\ngolf pro. at Minakl Inn, the Canadian National Railways summer\nhotel at Minakl, Ont., who captured\nthe open and professional golf\nchampionship of western Canada\nduring the recent tournament held\nin Winnipeg.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Latham, of\nSaskatoon, Sask , are visiting at tbe\nhome in thie city of Mrs, Latham's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. N Taylor.\nMr. Latham waB formerly a resident\nf this city, but he is now engaged\nia the hardware business in Saska.\ntoon.\nElection Leaflets\nFranked by Government\nR-gioa, August 9.\u2014Canada is being flioded by Conservative bead\nquarters, Ottawa, with a pamphlet\nviciously attacking the name and\ncharacter of Hon. Qeorge H. Boivin.\nMr. Boivin died on Saturday..\nTbe pamphlet, copies of wbich\nhave been received bere, was mailed\npost free, by lbe ceuiral Conservative organization committee in tbe\nbouse of commons Ottawa It\no-rme tbrough tbe mails under tbe\naffioial \"frank\" of Rt Hon. Artbtir\nMeighen.\nTo* leaflet wo* mailed oo Thurs\nday last, though at that time it wa~\nknow-i throughout Canada tba\nHon. Mr. Boivin was   critically   ill\nUnfailing Method of\nJudging Age of Eggs\ni\nBy holding  ao egg between tbe\neye and a 50-candlepower metal\nfilament lamp, or a similar light, it\nis possible to tell its age to within\ntwelve boars.\nA newly laid egg, less tban an\nbour old, appears uniformly transparent, except for a few -dark spots\nbere and tbere due to inequalities in\ntbe shell. Twelve hours afterwards,\nhowever, lighter patobee appearand\nthe egg looks more or less blotchy\nnear tbe ''end*\" (the '\"top\" and\n\"bottom\") These patches are\nmore or less blurred in outline-\nAs time goes on tbey Increase in\ndefinition and numbers aod are\nmore easily seen from 24 hours of\nage onward. R*cent reeearcb shows\ntheBe patches to be due to hydros,\nscopicity, or affinity for water, of\ncertain parts of the shell Water is\nabsorbed and transparent patches\nare formed. Otber parts of the shell,\noo the other band, lose wafer by\nevaporation, and so become more\nopaque. Tbe forma ion of the\nblotches is prevented by keeping the\neggs in an atmosphere aaturatad\nwith moisture.\nShort Sketch of the\nLiberal Leader of Yale\nF. B. Cossitt, nominated Liberal\ncandidate at Vernon laet week, is\nwidely known as a successful Canadian fruit commissioner at the last\nWembley exhibition.\nHe was born at Smith Falls,\nOntario.\nHe came to Vernon sixteen years\nago and for fourteen years has been\na member of tbe real estate firm of\nCossiit, Lloyd & Beattie.\nHe was seven years president of\nthe North Okanagan Liberal association and Yale Riding association,\nten years on the b ard of tbe Vernon Fruit Union and two years its\npresident. He is tbe father and\nmoving spirit of tbe ernon Country\nclub, was two years preeident of\ntbe board of 'trade, is president of\ntbe newly formed Vernon Real\nEstate 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 hae always made it necessary\nfor bis friends to push him farward.\nIn his many iectures and business\naddresses siuce he returned From the\nImperial exhibition be bas shown\nhimself intimately acquainted with\nproblems of tbe.overeca* fruit trade.\nChained His Daughter\nIn the Basement\nVernon, B.C., August 11.\u2014Hears.\ning gr ans from the basement of a\nbouse occupied by J. Shullder,\nUkranian, a polce officer bere de-\nmandtd adati tince and investigated\nMonday nigbt.\nHe found Sullder's 17-year-old\ndaughter, without shoes and with\narms outstretched above ber bead\nchained in the basement for at ifling\noffense. Her father bad retired to\nbed upstairs.\nShullder explained to tbe magistrate Tuesday tbat bis parents punished blm that way. He was given\nthirty days in jail to reconstruct his\nideas to conform with Canadian\nviews,\nFollowing a slight recession in\nApril the production of automobiles\nln Canada continued its upward\ntrend in May to reach a new high\nlevel of 24,934 units, valued at f 15,-\n761,615. Tbis output compares with\n21,502 units, worth $13,754,390 ln\nthe previous month. For the five\nmonths ending May the cumulative\nproduction was 103,127 units, valued\nat $62,685,152, as against 78,227\nunits valued at $49,497,988 in the\ncorresponding period last year.\nCanada leads the nations of the\nworld in thc proportion of years of\nprosperity to years of depression,\nsays a report now in preparation by\nthe National Bureau of Economic\nResearch, Ltd., an American organization. Covering the period 1884-\n1924, Canada shows 1.86 years of\nprosperity per year of depression.\nThe United States comes next on\nthe list with 1.79 years of prosperity\nper year of depression, covering the\nperiod 1890-1923.\nDied in Philadelphia\nThe reason why love is\nbfind is so that it will not see\nits finish.\nIf   it's a woman and  the   shoe\npinches ahe bays it.\nTelegram Got Results\nHer mother's death was an\nnounced in a telegram received by\na Parisian woman from her native\nvillage. Overcome with grief sbe\nnotified other relatives, and they\nhurried borne, wearing mourning\nand carrying wreaths and other\nfloral tributes. As they came witbin\nsight of the old home tears streamed\ndown their faces, but a moment\nlater thay saw their mother .in the\ngarden. \"I was longing to see you,\nmy children, and I knew that telegram would be eure to bring you,\"\nwas her explanation.\n\u00bb*-\nti$''W8J__^__^__^__^__Wi\n^_V           ^-(|\nL     \/:.'\u2022 lL     i^H\nDefinite indications of the largest\nbuilding year Canada has had in\nmore than a decade are now shown\nby the record of the first six months\nof this year. The very large and unusual total of $194,543,600 worth of\nnew construction for the first half\nof the current year and contemplated\nnew work to the value of $304,598,-\n600 forecasts great activity for the\nremaining months. During June\ncontracts awarded totalled $64,186,-\n400, an increase over June, 1926, of\n63 per cent.\nOne of the greatest foundations\nupon which the Canadian national\nspirit rests was laid by the Canadian\nPacific Railway was the conviction\nuttered by J. D. Cameron, of Glasgow, in an address before an audience at Pembroke recently. \"Not\nmerely did this railroad act,\" he\nsaid, \"as a bond between all the\nprovinces of thc Confederation, but\nit was, by its conception and final\nconstruction, a greater force than\nanything else for the unification of\nthe scattered provinces.\"\nHon. George H. Boivin\nMinister of customs in tbe late Liberal government, who died io a\nPhiladelphia hospital last Saturday\nfollowing an operation for appendis\ncitis.\nVbe average railroad tie, in its\nnatural state, lasts about seven aod\none-haff yeare; if treated with pret\nservative, sbout fifteen years.\nThe sea-faring settlers of the Hebrides are not all fishermen as on*\nmight expect, but farmers in a small\nway known in the rugged northern\nIslands as crofters. Father R. A.\nMacDonnell, the clergyman in charge\nof the immigration of these hardy\nfolk to Western Canada, disclosed\nthis interesting point recently en\nroute to his headquarters at Red\nDeer, Alberta. Father MacDonnell\nhas been in Canada about fifteen\nyears and has been engaged in immigration work during that time.\nMontreal, August 10.\u2014In\nannouncing his decision to\ncontest the constituency of\nJacques Certier at the coming federal election, Hon. E.\nD. Patenaude, acting minis-\nister of justice, explained his\nposition before a Conservative\nrally last night.\n\"I had occasion to differ\nwith leaders of the governs\nment and leaders ofthe party,\"\nsaid Mr. Patenaude, \"and\neach time that I felt it to be\nin thc interests ofthe province\nand the country I did not\nhesitate to say so or fear the\nconsequences.\n\"I said last fall that I was\nfree of men, bnt not free of\nprinciples, and again I say\nthat I am free of men but not\nof principles and convictions.\nIt is under these conditions\nthat I wa.s asked to enter the\ngovernment and I entered\nwith my opinions and my\nconvictions. When my opinions and convictions are contrary tojjthose with whom I\nam associated, I hope Providence will not deny me the\nforce to leave as I have doue\nbefore.\"\nMr. Patenaude recalled that\nin 1917. when he had left the\nBorden government, he had\ndone so in a letter of resigna--\ntion which had expressgd the\nhope that when the storms of\nthe time had died away over\nthe world and in Caneda, it\nwould be the the duty of all\nCanadians to renew the .lines\nwhich had for the lime been\nbroken.\nThe Earl of Clarendon is responsible for the statement that of the\n25 families whom he personally interviewed, sent out to Canada under\nthe Overseas Settlement League, be\nhas not met with one malcontent.\nHe intimated that the settlers were\nunanimous in the opinion that Canada had been good to them. His\nLordship, accompanied by the Coun-\ntoss of Clarendon and their three\nchildren, Lord Hyde, Lady Joan Villon and Hon. Nicholas Villers, ij\nmaking a study of the immigration'\nproblem as he travels to Banff, Lake)\nLouise, and otber points west in the\nL-minion. i\nGovernment's Latest\nCrop Forecust Low\nOttawa, August 11.\u2014Canada's\ntotal wheat yield is estimat d at\n316,960,000 bushels for the piesent\nyear, in a crop report issued by tbe\nDomiuion bureau of ttatistics this\nafternoon. The final estimate for\nlaBt year was 411,375,700 bushels.\nToday's estimate is based upon the\npielimiuary estimates of fall wheat.\nThe total wheat yield as estimated\nin the report issued today is a decrease of 31,666,000 bushels from\nthe las* estimBte given out at Ottawa\nThe last estimate gave the total\nyield as 34tj.626.000 bushels.\nThe really hard thing is to\nbe able to say whether it is\nopportunity at the door or\nanother demonstrator.\nI   -    One forgets nearly everything ex-\nNothing   is   impossible   tOj    Blessed are the  innocent, for  they I cept tbe times when be made   bim.\nindustry. have a tot to learn. ' self ridiculous. THB SUN: GBAND PORKS, BBITI8H COLUMBIA\nWm (Sratti. Sfarka Bun\nAN  INO'-ENOENr   NEWSOAfER\nQ. A. EVANS, EDITOR AHO PUBLISHER\ni \t\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year (in Canada and Qreat Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United Statea)    l.\"50\nAddresr -** \u2014*\u2014-\"Nations to\ns!Thk Grand Fork.* Son\nPhonb 101 Graud Forks, B. C,\nOFFICE:    COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nCanary islands,  by  way  of Bilooa, Madrid,\nSeville, Cadiz,  Tangier,  Mogador and Capt-j\nJnby.    All the personnel and material  must I\nlbe Spunish and line must be opened within  :\nI year.\nFltlDAY. AUGUST 13, 15)26\nNotes \u2022 Notions \u2022 Notables\nWe are told that constant dropping of water\nwill wear away stones. So will continuous en\ndeavor overcome obstacles to any worth-while\nundertaking. Persistent adherence to right\npurpose creates a \"succassful life\" in the best\nmeaning of that term.\nIt has been calculated that w eat flonr bread\nand crackers, pastry and similar products constitute 19 per cent of tbe total food ot the\naverage family,furnishiug about 27 per cent of\nthe total protein, 6 per ceut of ths total fat\nand 45 per cent of the total carbohydrates\nThey contain a high percentage of starch and\nmay be profitably combined with materials\nrich in protein, meats, eggs, etc., to form a\nwell-balanced diet.\nPurple became associated with kings in the\nnarly days because it was the finest and mosr\ncostly dye of the ancients It was obtained\nfrom two kinds of shells found in the Mediterranean sea. The ancieiits attribute its discovery to tbe Phoenicians and the story is\nthat it was first discovered by a dog biting a\npurple fish. It is stated that in Caesar's time\na pound of Tyrian purple wool cost above\n1000 denarii, which is, r ughly speaking.equal\nto $217.50. Purple robes were used at an\nearly date by the Greeks as a mark of dignity\nTyrian purple was introduced into Rome in\nthe middle of the first century, B.C , and from\nthat- time it became a luxury. Its use was\nchecked by imperial decree. A complete robe\nof \"blatta,\" the finest kind of purple, was re\nserved as an imperial privilege, and auy pri\nvate person wearing it was punished as being\nguilty of high treason.\nPoetry is the music of the soul, and above\nall, of the great and feeling soui.\u2014Voltaire.\nPoems From EasternLands\nArmenia\nA study of the original meaning of words is\ninteresting. For instance when we say\nthing is dilapidated, we bring up an image ofi\nan ancient temple crumbling to ruin, for the\nroot meaning of th word is \"crmbling stone.\"\nSimilarly, the word stunned means thunderstruck, and ardent formerly meant burning.\nWhat a remarkable picture the word scandal\ncalls up. Its original application was to that\npart of a trap on which the bait was placed\nand which, when the trap was touched.sprung\nup and caught the victim Another odd word\nis scruple, which originally meant a little\nstone, in weight means twenty grains, aud io\nmodern use means s mething which hurts or\ntroubles the conscience.\nA stone which paralyze the hand which\nholds it has been discovered on   a farm  near\nSpencer, S.D., and is creating a sensation\namong those wbo have tested its mystejious\nqualities, states the Sionx Falls Press.   The\ndiscovery was made by Charles  Curtain, a\nyoung farmer who resides on his father's plnce\ntwo miles south and two miles east of this\nplace.    Mr. Curtain told The Press last night\nthat the mysterious qualities of the rock had\nbeeu proven upon other persons. He found it,\naccording to his own story,  when he was\nworking in a cojnfield and discovered a blackbirds pulling up cornstalks.   Attempting to\nfrighten the birds, he picked up a stone,but the\nflew be'ore he could throw.   As he   stood\nholding the rock in his hand he became suddenly aware that the arm and hand were paralyzed. He descri es the sensation to that experienced when a tight ba .id has been  placed\naronnd th  arm, cutting off the blood supply.\nTransferring the stone to his left hand he experienced the same sensation, and wishing to\nreach the house witb his discovery placed the\nrock in his pocket. Before he could get there\none of his legs was well on the way to an\nafternoon siesta    Others are reported to have\ntested fhe rock with similar results. All agree\nthat the stone is possessed of mysterial quali\nties, and none are able to explain its influence.\nAccording to Mr. Curtain the stone is about\nas big as a closed fist, dark grey iu color with\na stripe running through it.   It is porous and\nlight in  weight.   Many who have viewed it\ndeclare they have never seen other rocks or\nstones of the same texture either in South\nDakota or in other  places.   The  theory, .* as\nbeen advanced  that it may  be a fragment\nfrom a meteor thrown off  by some   distant,\nburning  world, possessing minerals of a far\nmore potent quality than any found upen  the\nearth.   At any rate, Mr. Curtain   declared\nthat he will place the stone en   exhibit   in\nSpencer, where he will also allow any of the\nskeptics  to  test its   miraculous quaiities for\nthemselves.\nSpain has accorded to Manuel de River?\nJuer a concession for mail, passenger .md parcels air line from St. SebastianT Spain, to  the\nThe Woe of Araxes\nMeditating by Araxes,\nPacing slowly to and fro, s\nSought I trace* of the grandeur,\nHidden by her turgid flow.\n\"Turgid are thy waters,  Mother,\nAs they -beat upon the shore.\nDo they offer lamentations\nFor Armenia evermore?\ni     \"Gay should, be thy mood, 0 Mother,\nAs the sturgeons leap in glee;\nOcean's merging still is distant,\nShouldest thou be sad, like me)\n\"Are thy spume drifts tears, O Mother,\nTears for those that are no more?\nDost tbon haste to pass by, weeping,\nThis thine own beloved shore?\"\nThen upr*st on high Araxes,\nFlung in air her spumy wave,\nAnd from out her depths maternal\nSonorous her answer gave,\n\"Why disturb me now, presumptuous.\nAll my slumbering woe to wake?\nWhy invade the eternal silence\nFor a foolish question's sake?\n\"Know'at not that I am widowed-\nSons and daughters, consort, dead?\nWonldst thcu have bo go rejoicing,\nAs a bride to nuptial bed?\n\"Wouldst thou have me decked in eplendor,\nTo rejoice a atranger'a sight,\nWhile the aliens that haunt me\nBring me loathing, not delight?\n\"Traitress never I; Armenia\nClaims me as her own;\nSince her mighty doom hath fallen\nNever stranger have 1 known,\n\"Yet the glories of my nuptials\nHeavy lie upon my soul;\nOnce again I eee the splendor\nAnd I hear again the music roll,\n\"Hear again the cries of children\nRinging joyfully on my banks,\nAnd the noise of marts and toilers,\nAnd the tread of serried ranks.\n\"Bui where, now, are all my people?\nFar in exile, homeless, lorn,\nWhile in widow's weeds and hopeless,\nWeeping, sit I here and mourn.\n\"Hear nowl while my sons are absent\nAge-long fast I still shall keep; '\nTill my children gain deliverance,\nHere I watoh and pray and weep.\"\nSilent, then, the mighty Mother]\nLet ber swelling tides go free,\nAnd in mournful meditation\nSlowly Mandered to the sea.\n\u2014Raphael Patkanian.\nARTHUR HAWKES\nThe coming election affords a great\nopportunity for prohibitionists to\nrise above party consideration, says\nMr. Hawkes, who ls Chairman of\nthe Political Action Committee of\nthe Ontario Prohibition Union, and\nls known all over Canada as a\nnewspaperman and speaker.\nMust Pay for Paper\nIn giving judgment against a de.\nlinqueot subscriber recently, Judge\nO'Reilly, of Cornwall, Oot, made\nthe statement tbat newspaper publishers had a bard enougb time io\nfinancing the business without be\ning done out of their subscriptions.\nIf a person desires to stop a news*\npaper tbe proper way is for him to\npay all arrears and get a receipt, or\nif be bas paid, refuse to take the\npaper at tbe post office nnd bave a\nrecord bade of his refusal. A man\nwho owed for a Dewspaper could not\nstop taking it and expect the publisher to go without hiB  pay.\nIt may be added tbat no publisher\nwishes to force bis newspaper on\nany one, aod any subscriber desir*\ning to discontinue bis paper will not\nbave tbe slightest trouble if he does\nso io ao honest and businesslike\nway.\nHundreds of dollars are lost every\nyear to publishers bv those,who after\na subscription bas expired for tbree\nor six months, discontinue the\npaper and send it back as \"refused '\nThe amount is too' small for tbe\npublisher to make a fuss over, but\nall tbe same it amounts to \u00bb neat\niitll sum in a year.\nFaults are easier seen\ntues.\ntban vir\nFor alfalfa s led a field tbat is\nwell drained, botb as to surface aod\nsubsoil drainage. Alfalfa will not\natsnd \"wet feet.\"\nTbe Sun Presses have twice tbe\nspeed of any otber presses in the\nBoundary. We can save you money\non botb long and short runs of commercial printing and give you a su\u00bb\nperior class of work.\nolncient History\"\n[TakekFrom Tweotv-Ybar Old Sun Files.]\nAngus McDougail, the contractor and\nbuilder, left this moruing on the stage for\nFranklin camp with six men. He has the contract to erect a hotel and several frame structures there.\nThe finishing touches are now being put on\nCharles Brown's new residence on Winnipeg\navenue.\nSam Horner yesterday started work on the\nfoundatiou of L. A. Manly's new residence\nopposite Bridge street across the North Fork.\nThe last car of machinery fo.i the Grand\nForks Steel Structural Works orrived in the\ncity yesterday.\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for\nColds      Headache      Neuritis Lumbago\nPain       Neuralgia      Toothache     Rheumatism\nDOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART\n^\nAccept only \"Bayer\" package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tablet*\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Alio bottles of 24 and 100\u2014Druggist*.\nAapirln U the trade mark (t-egssterc-] In Canada) of Bayer Hannfaetnfe of Menoaeetle-\nat-Meater of Sallcrllcacltl (Acetyl Salicylic Acid, \"A. 8. A.\"). While It la well known\nthat Aspirin mt-aiia liayer manufacture, to aaalat tbe pnblle againat lmltatlona, tbe Tableta\not Bayer Company will be atamped wltb tbelr general tnd* mark, tb* \"Bayer Os-oaa,\"\nCitzens of Grand Forks are asked to note the following extracts from the 1925 Amendments to the\nHospital Act:\n(4) Wbere tbere is, either within or without the limits of any\nmunicipality, a hospital which is maintained by the municipality,\nor to the support of wbich the municipality is chief contributor\nwitb tbe exception of tbe Crown, tbe municipslity shall not be\nliable in respect of aoy patient treated in any other hospital, except\nio cases of emergency, or where the hospital so maintained or supported is not in a position to furnish the ppecial treatment necessary for any certain patient, nnd authority for tbat patient to apply for admission to the other hospital has been given by the\nMayor or Reeve or some duly authorised officer ol the municipality, in which cases the tnunicipaliry shall be liable to te extent\nset out in subsections (1) and (2).\nJOHN A. HUTTON,   .\nCity Clerk\nYOUNG AT 50\nDr. Lejjard's New Life Tablets\nImparts to the Old and Middle-aged I\nYouthf ulness, Energy and Fit-'\nness, retards mental and physical\ndecay, thus promoting longevity,\nPreserves the arteries and tissues.\nSufferers irom Deafness with its many\ndistressing accompanying ailments,\nas Head noises, deriveal most immediate beneflt. Calm refreshing sleep\nassured. Gloom, Depression and Ner-\nvousness is banished under the influence of these j Life-giving Tablet*\nWrinkles, hard lines and blemishes\ndisappear. The skin becomes clear,\nlight and elastic and the complexion\nbright and smooth. Think of tho\nblessings of perfect health, the possesion of few; the joyof a clear Youthful 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 back Ten years to the envy\nand admiration of your friends, and\ntheunbounded 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, noi are there\nany ill effects after. On 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.\nTou will never regret the slight cost\nIncurred for such incalculable bene\nfit*. 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 Koad,|Barnsbn*ry,\nLondon, England.\nMassey-Harris\nIMPLEMENTS\nWe are agents for the well known Massey-\nHarris line of farm equipment. Let us\nfigure on your needs.\nA Complete Lino of Garden Toola\nMILLER & GARDNER\nFurniture and Hardware\nWhat A Speedway!\nSlender copper wires are strung across\nthe count yside. They are highways\nready to carry your words at a speed of\nthousands of miles per specond. For\n-business \"or social calls\u2014th. long-distance telephone.\nBritish   Columbia Telephone\nCompany\n\/..\nTHE SUN prints all the loeal news\nand carries a number of interesting\nfeatures found in no other Boundary\npaper   $1.00 per year THB SUN: GRAND FOBKS, BBITISH COLUMBIA\ntf\nNew $5,000,000 Cold Storage Plant\nNegotiations bave been completed for the erection\nand work will bo commonced upon a terminal\nwarehouse and cold storage plant to cost in the neighborhood of five million dollars and to be located just\nbelow the Place Viger Station on Craig street, Montreal, according to information given out at Canadian\nPacific Hallway headquarters. The plant will be built\nhy the Montreal Rail and l.arbor Terminals, Limited.\nIt will have a space area of 600.000 square feet, of whicli\none-third will be devoted to refrigerator, purposes, tho\n\u25a0talan.ee to be used as dry storage for package freight\n>nd other merchandise. It will bo of the most mod-\n'.ru construction of concrete throughout.\nThe building, 'which will be ten storeys in height,\nwill, it is stated, be completed in ten months' time\nand the roof will be on before frosts commence.\nThe Montreal plant will be built on property purchased from the Canadian Pacific Railway and will\nBerve tho tracks and shipping facilities of that company. It will be In no se:i:;e competitive with any\nother concern of a -imilar nature in Mo.-.'r*al, but will\ndevelop and expand its own business**, handling in p*r\nticular butter, chee.-e, vr.s ''-nd other dairy jH-oduc\ncargoes, bo far as Its Sold storage end is corcernet\nwhile its dry storage apace will be amply taken u,\nwith package freight and olhe.r aor.-haudino.\nFROM EVERYWHERE\n262 Certificates were awarded to\nsuccessful Sleeping and Dining Car\nemployees of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway for passing their examinations in the First Aid Instruction\nclasses. The extent to which First\nAid instruction among C.P.R. teams\nis growing is indicated by the fact\nthat the McAdam, N.B., team wai\nrecently awarded the Wallace N-ss-\nbitt Trophy, in which competition\nMichigan and Maine also lent contestants.\nDefinite indications of the largest\nbuilding year Canada hai had in\nmoro than a decade are now shown\nby the record of the first six months\nof this year. The very large and\nunusual total of $194,648,600 worth\nof new construction for the first\nhalf of the current year and contemplated new work to the value of\n{304,598,600 forecasts great activity for the remaining months.\nDuring June contracts awarded\ntotalled (64,186,400, an increase over\nJune, 1926, of 63 per cent.\nStriking Fish Trophies\nAbove, Replica of Small month tsaaa for\ncompetition at French River. Left, The Nlpl-\n(on trophy. Right, Muaky for Lake ot the Wood*.\nThese three handsome trophies of unusual and striking design have been offered by the Canadian Pacific Railway\n(or annual competition between guests at each of its three Ontario Bungalow Camps and will be awarded to\nangler catching largest fish of specified variety in each case.\nThe trophies have been prepared from exact moulds made of exceptional specimens of fish and, with white\nmetal as a base underneath a dull silver finish, faithful and lifelike facsimiles have resulted. They are displayed to\nadvantage on a black oak panel.\nFor French River Bungalow Camp a .% pound small snouth bass has been reproduced; while the trophy for\n*ibe Camp at Nipigon is a replica of a .\\i pound speckled trout. A feature of the Devil's Gap Camp (Lake of the\nIVoods) trophy is the realistic and fierce expression of the head of a large muscalunge, with its bristling array of\nteeth.\nIt is expected that these trophies will create wide-spread interest and keen rivalry among anglers from all over\n**ne continent.\nNet profits of the Canadian Pacific Railway for the month of May\nat $2,448,876, compare with $908,-\n913 in the corresponding month of\nlast year, an increase of $1,539,962,\nbeing the best showing in this respect since 1921. Gross earnings for\nthe month are shown at $15,492,768,\nan increase of over three millions,\nwhen compared with May of last\nyear, and the highest gross shown\nby the road for any May since 1920.\nWorking expenses for the month\nunder review aro shown higher by\n1V4 millions.\nTwo officials whose tenure of\noffice was practically contemporary\nwith the existence of the Canadian\nPacific Railway, have recently retired from that company. They are\nC. J. Flanagan, auditor of freight\nand telegraph receipts, and J. H.\nShearing, auditor of passenger receipts, both were presented with\ngold watches suitably engraved,\nwhiles members of their staffs gave\nto Mr. Flanagan a travelling bag,\nand to Mr. Shearing a malacca cane\nwith a gold band engraved with an\nexpression of the esteem of his staff.\nMayor Thomas Foster, of Toronto,\nand Mayor Mederic Martin, of Montreal, took advantage of the newly\ninaugurated Canadian Pacific trains\n\"The Rideau\" and \"The York\" between their respective cities to exchange letters ot greeting. When\n\"The Rideau\" pulled out of the station at Toronto on its initial run, the\nengineer carried a letter from Mayor\nFoster conveying his greetings to\nMayor Martin, who replied the following day in th? -**ne manner, but\nby \"The York.\" iJoch trains make\nthe run i***-****--*!*- ' ivonto and Montreal I.i c ...11 iiOUl-.\nPREVENT\nFOREST\nFIRES\nYOU CAN\nHELP\n\u00b1*\nB.C. FOREST SERVICE.\nPURE BEER IN\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nWHEN you purchase beer in British\nColumbia, either in sealed bottles at the\nGovernment Stores, or by the glass or in\nopen bottles on licensed premises, you receive pure beer.\nIn the Licensed Premises, or Beer Parlors,\nyou not only get pure beer, but you are\nserved It under regulated and orderly conditions. Ileer Parlors are conducted under\nthe direct supervision of the llritish Columbia Liquor Control Hoard and according to\nthe rules ond regulations of the board.\nGOVERNMENT Inspectors appointed for\nthai duly see lhat Beer Parlors are\noperated in a strictly sanitary manner. The premises must be kept well ventilated and airy; the beer-drawing apparatus\nmust he kepi immaculately clean. Storerooms and ice boxes must be sanitary in\nevery respect, and glasses must be thoroughly washed and dried eaeh time they\nare used. All brer must be kept and served\nat Ilie correct temperature.\nAll these regultfiions arc for the protection\nof the public, furthermore, all beers furnished liy the Amalgamated Brewers are\nCeriodically subjected to careful analyses\ny well-known and reputable firms to assure that the people are being supplied with\nnothing but thc best and purest of beers.\nTHE advantages of such rigid regulations\nfor the protection of the public can not\nbe over-estimated. The consumer receives\npure beer, a healthful beverage of low alcoholic content, recognized as such by the most\neminent medical authorities, and the people\nof British Columbia are to be congratulated\non the sane and protective rules governing\nits consumption.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\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 thlt\nare offered as premiums with chromos or\nlottery tickets\nWE DO NOT\nWANT CHARITY\nADVERTISING-\nAdvertising \"to help\nthe editor.\" But we do\nwant business advertising by progressive business men who; know\nthat sensible advertising brings results and\npay. If you have something to offer the public that will |benefit\nthem and you as well,\nthe newspaper reaches\nmore people than a bill\nboard\nSUN READERS\nKNOW WHAT\nTHEY WANT\nand if you have the\ngoods you can do business with them THE SUN: GBAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nThe Aroma Captivates\nGREEN TEA\nT78\nPure, uncolored, delicious. Ask for it.\nNEWS OFTHE CITY\nOne car came over the Cascade\nR-isaltind highway yecterdsy, but\nthe road has not yet beeo officially\nopened to traffic, as a number of\nculverts bave been burned out on\nthe Rossland end.\nMre. W. 8. McPhersia and two\ndaughters left for the coast via Revelstoke on Wednesday.\nMrB. Benson and son Beverley left\nfor Idaho on Monday.\nIt is stated that the Sand creek\nforest fi.e near tbis oil; is cieting\nthe government $800 per day for\nfire fighters alone. Even this large\ngum ie small when compared with\ntbe value of the timber it is destroy\"\ning.\nMiss Lillian Hull returned ibis\nweek from tlie teaohere' summer\nschool al Victoria.\nG. C  Egg untie a trip  r.o Briilm-\nville yesterday.\nDr. Paxton and sin Willie arrived in the city from N*l*nn this\nweek. Mr. Paxton will relieve Dr.\nAcres for a mootb.\nA grower frnm Keremeos came in\nwith a-truckload of cantaloupes on\nMonday afternoon. He disposed of\nthem before the stores cln6ed that\nevening. He stated that he bas\n<-ighteeti acres in cantaloupes; tbat\nhe his alreidy realized 42100 from\nthe crop this year, and that tbe\ncrop bis only start-d to come in.\nWallace Chalaier-, fire lookout at\nPhoenix, wns in'be city Saturday\nevf-oini*.\nMi'8 Tnwn=en, of Ideal Beauty\nParlor, left this week for ber home\nin Scotland.\nAnnouncement has been received\nin the Kootenay country of tbe marriage of Miss Florence Rich* ids, of\nLondon, Ktigland, at Cilgary or.\nJuly 27, to Fred A.St rkey, cnon-\nmis*it)uer of the Associated Boards\nof Trade of Eistern British\nColumbia to tbe Empire fair at\nWembley. Mr, Starkey, who is\nW' II known in Grand Fokre, will be\nat home in Nelson after August   18.\nH. H, Henderson spent the week\nend at Jerome, Was. Mrs, Henderson and family, wbo have been\nspending tbeir vacation at the home\nof the former's parents, returned\nhome with Mr. Henderson on Monday.\nCORPORATION OF TUB CITY OF GUAND\nFORKS, B. G.\nTENDERS FOR CEDAR\nPOLES\nSEALED and marked tenders will\nbe received by the undersigned up\nto ft p.m on Monday, August 23rd\n1926, for 50 cedar poles 35 feet in\nleiigib, 8 inch tops, delivered as and\nwhere required in the City of Grand\nForks and subject to approval of the\nChairman of the Fire, Water and\nLight Committee of the City Council.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted\n-      JOHN A. HUTTON, Clerk.\nSave The Forests!   Everyone Loses If-They Burn!\n1\u2014FsMsMt. provide the raw srsnterlol for ona\nofCssnssda'. great-sat lodsititrifit. 2\u2014A beau*\ntlfsil atand of .lately rett ceslarts in 11. C.\nb\u2014Fire fighting equlpmesst, 7O0O Rttltostsi of\nwater and a half a mile of hoste, ou C. I*. It.\nIndiflerencc, ignorance and carelessness,\nan the malevolent forces which result\nin forest fires and only a thorough\neducation of the public to the great\nneed of forest preservation can eradicate\nthese evils. Until the general public\nunderstands the full significance of the\nloss occasioned through forest fires un-\nnecessary destruction of thousands of\nacres of fine timber will continue. The\nmenace to the financial health of Canada\nthrough forest fires hns not been fully\nappreciated by the vast majority of the\npeople. And Canadians especially\nshould be vitally concerned in the welfare of their forests.\nThe various phases of the lumber\nindustry in Canada represent an invested\ncapital of approximately five hundred\nmillion dollars. The associated industries give employment to thousands of\nmen the year through. Further, out\nof every five dollars the lumber industries pay back to the country more than\nfour dollars for the wood, the labor and\nthe taxes involved in the enterprises.\nIn the province of Ontario alone,\nabout 20,000 men are employed in the\nbush while 10,000 are employed in pulp\nand paper mills. The capital invested\nin these industries in Ontario is estimated at about $175,000,000. Tlie organisations employed by thc Ontario\nprovincial government for forest fire\nprotection cost $3,000 a day. Yet with\nall this forest fires consume twelve times\nthe amount of lumber which is the life\nof these huge Canadian industries. In\nthe province of Quebec the value of the\nlumber out, including pulpwood, exceeds\n140,000,000 annually.\nIn co-operation wilh tho Associated\nAdvertising Clubs of thc World, the\nMontreal Publicity Association has\ngiven generous leadership in drnwing\npublic attention to the meaning of Forest\nConservation Week, wbich is held\nannually in the United Slates and Canada\nfrom April 11) to 25. Scores of public\nbodies all over North America have\njoined in the effort to stimulate public\ninterest in tbe forests and means for\ntheir preservation.\nWhen a forest burns everybody loses.\nThe destruction of a wooded area means\njust so much less of a natural heritage\nfor the generations to como. During\nForest week thc object is to impress this\nimportant fact on the public.\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway has been\ndoing all in its power to prevent fires hy\nmaintainingfirefightinRapparatus of the\nmost up-to-date pattern. In order to eliminate the possibility of fires heingstarlcd\nby passing trains, locomotives on the\nCanadian Pacific Kailwuy linos aro examined at the end of each trip and great\ncare is taken to see that ash pans and\nfront ends are in perfect condition.\nEach spring the right of way is cleared\nwith care of all scrap and inflammable\nmaterial.\nNotices dealing with fire prevention\nand protection, issued by the C.P.R., the\ndominion and provincial governments\nand by various nre prevention organizations are-posted in all stations and other\nbuildings where they will be effective.\nThe mechanical equipment maintained\nby the Company for fire fighting consists\nof a number of tank car units and hose,\nkept ready for immediate operation ai\nconvenient points. Each unit consists\nof two tank cars each of 7,000 gallon\ncapacity, equipped with powerful pumps\nand about one mile of hose.\nThe fire-fighting forces maintained by\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway co-operate\nto the fullest extent with the provincial\nforces and the other fire-prevention\norganizations, and do everything possible\nto assist in the righting of fires which an\nat ail adjacent to their tefiitodas.\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPhone |0\n'S\nTry our Special Tea\nat 65c per lb\nShoes, Shirts, Overalls\n\u25a0Good values for your\nmom-y.\nCall and see us hefore\npurchasing.\nJOHN  DONALDSON\nGeneral Merchant\nS. T. HULL\nEstablished 1910\nUealEstate and Insurance\nResident Agent Grnnd Forlji Tow mite\nm,   .    Company, I-luilteJ\nI-until    ^Orchards     City Property\nAgente at Nalaon, Calgary, Wihiilpcg aud\nether Prairie polnti.  Vanoouver Asristir :\nFOR A SPECIAL CUP OF TEA TRY OUR\nCHALLENGE  BRAND\nThis Tea wa have  had especially blended.\nCall in aod ask for a sample.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25\n\"Service and Quality'\nI\nCHEVROLET\nSee the new Superior Chevrolet before you l.uv a\ncar. There are more cents in theCHOVROLKT\nDOLLAR than iu any other automobile dcllnr.\nCHEVROLET Touring...*.,  $885\n\" Roadster     886\n\" Coacb  lOWl\n\" Coupee   1080\n\" Sedan        1200\n\" Landeau S-dan   1260\n\" One-ton Truck    935\nGRAND FORKS GARAGE\nPBNDBK IN.\nBATTKNBU\nTMENTS\nLANDS LTb,\ngstpbllshed In 1910, we are su a poelllun lo\nfurnish reliable information concerting thlt\ndistrlot,\nWrite lor (rets literature\n. E. MCDOUGALL\nContractor and builder\nAgent\nIxiniinien Monumental Worka\nf,]Aahr'lox ProducJsCo. ltooHntli\nESTIMATES FURNISHED\nEOX'33? BRAND FORKS, P. C\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\neiler in\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forka, B. C.\nPICTURES\nMD PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly Done\nR. G. MeCUTGHBON\nW1NNIM0AVM0I\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFORFINEPRPNO\nA complete line of, colored bonds\nin all shades for fancy letterheads\nand other classes of commercial\nprinting.  Sun Job Department.\nDid you ever notice that business\nfirms who i hink tbat they can reach\nTh* Sun's readers through other\npublications have a great deal of\nleisure time tha*. might be more\nprofitably employed? A number of\nsuch firms have involuntarily retired\nfrom business.\nCUsnc blank card* for ,'la-sy in\nvitatiooeaod nonouncemfnts Sun\nJob Department.\nE. C. Henniger Co.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nObi tent and Plaster\nPoultry SuDplics\nGrand  Forks, It. C.\nOur\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\n-TPIIK value of well-\n***** printed, neat appearing stationery as\na meansof getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us beiore going\nelse whore.\nWedding invitations\nBall programs\nBusiness cards\nVi 'ting cards\nSh'r'iug tags\nLetterhends\nStatemsnts\nNotehoads\nPamphlots\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNev.   Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nGit AND F   RKS\nTransfer Co.\nDA?ISaHANSBN.Propf\n\u2022City Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal,   Wood and   Ice\n(or Sale\nOffice  at  R.  F.   Petrie's Store\nPhone 64\nYale Barber Shop\nRazor Km-ng a Specialty*\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYale Hotrl,   Pihst hikkt\nSYNOPSIS OF\nLANDAGTAMENDMENTS\nTHE SUN\nCV' nmbla Avenue and\nUke Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nPRE-EMPTION8\n\"-\"Vacant unreserved, stirveycd'Orowa landa\nmaybepra-eoipted by Br Iti.h tubjeoti over\nIS yean of age, and by aliens on declaring\nintention to beeotne UrllUb subjeots, ootid! -\ntional upon resliennc. occupation and im.\nproveuteut forairrioullaral purpose..\nFull information concerning regulation!\nrtgarding pre emnlious is given In Bulletin\nNo. 1, Lan i Serleti, \"How to Pre-empt lsand,\"\ncopieeofwl.ton can be obtained freo of chnrge\nby addressing tbe Department of {.audi,\nVictoria, B.C., or wuy Uoveruincnt Agent.\n\".Reoords will be made covering ouly land\nsuitable for agricultural purposes, and which\nI, not timberland. i.e., carrying over 5.000\ntoard feet per acre went of tue Coast Range\nand 8 000 foet per aore cast of that range.\n.Applications for pre-einptloni .are to be\naddrencd to the Land Commissioner of the\nLand Recording Division, In wbich the land\napplied for la altuated.autl are made on\nprinted forms, ooplci ol cau ;bc obtained\ntrom the Laud Coinmliiioiier.\n.-.Pre-emptions must be oocuplcd for five\nyeariaud Improvement! made to value ot 110\npor aore, inclu'inir clearing and cultivating\nat leaat five acre*, before a Crown Grant ean\nbe received.\nFor more detailed inrormniiou me the Bulletin \"Uo* to Pre-empt Land.\" -\nPURCHASE\nApplications arc reoelved for purehaae of\nvaoant and uureierved Crowu Landa, not being timberland, for agricultural purposes:\nminimum prloe of llrst-clata (arable) laud Is\nft per acre, and aeooud-claas (graalug) laud\nf *.W per aore. Further Information regarding purchaae or lease of Crown landa le given\nIn Hulle'in No. 10, Land Series. \"Purchase aud\nLease ol Crown Lands.\"\n\u2022fill, factory, or industrial sites on timber\nland, not exoeediug tu aores, may be pur.\nchased or leased, on oondltions Including\npayment of stumpage.\nHOMESITE LEASES:\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 20 acrea,\nmay be leased as homesites, conditional upon\na dwelling being e eoted in the first year,\ntitle being obtainable after realdenee and\nimprovement conditions are fulfilled and land\nhaa been surveyed.;\nLEA8E8\nFor graaing and Induatrial purposes areaa\nnot exoeedlng (M0 aorea may be leaaed by ona\nperson or \u2022oompany.\n,_  GRAZING.\n1'ndct the Graaing Aot the Province le\ndivided Into graaing diatrlcta and the range\naditiinlatered under a Graxlng Commissioner. - Annual graaing permits are\nIaaued bated on numbera ranged, priority being given tb establiahotl ownera. Stock-\nownera may form esaooiatlone for range\nmanagement. Free, or partially free, perm Ita\nare available* lor aettler\u00ab, -tempera and\ntravellers ap to ten bead.","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_1926_08_13","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\/1.0341288","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":"1926-08-13 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":"1926-08-13 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":""}]}