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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","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":"FullText","value":" GRAND FORKS 1ft\nthe center of Qrand Forks valley, the\npremier fruit growing district of\n8outh\u00ab*rn P.i-itish C ilum'iia. Mining\nand lumbering are also important\nindustries in districts contiguous to\nthe city.\n11\nKettle Valloy Orchardist\nTHP ^I\"T1V '9 t-le favor'te news-\nlllli kjVUJ.1 paper of the citizens\nof the district. It is read by more\npeople in the city and valley than any\nother paper because it is fearless, reliable, clean, bright and entertaining.\nIt is always independent but never\nneutral.\nTWENTY-SECOND YEAR\u2014No 50\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1923\n\"Tell me what yoa Know is tni*\nI t:an guess as well as yoo.\nSI.OO PER YEAR\nOP CITI COUNCIL\nMayor Hull and all the aldermen\nwith the exception of Aid. Love\nwere present at the regular meeting\nofthe city council on Monday evening.\nA letter frnm W. H. Sutherland,\nminwler of public works, acknowledged receipt cf tbe council's resolution in favor of the Hope-Princeton route for tbe transpsoviocial\nhighway, and stated tbat the same\nwould be given due consideration.\nA deputation oi North Fork cat..\ntlemen appeared before the council\naDd protested against the issuance\nof licenses to meat peddlers. Tbe\nmatter was left over to be dealt with\nby a full council.\nThe Grand Forks hospital reported the admission of J. M. Campbell\naa a postiblecity charge. The council decided in future tn publish all\neuch notifications, as the total\namount of su b accounts when\npaid.\nW. W. Lameff, of Trail, forwarded a cheque for $25 on account of tbe Pacific hotel building.\nTbe cheque was accepted and Mr.\nLazaret! will be notified that possession will be given on payment of\nthe remaining $200 and' tbal tbe\nbui ding must be removed within\nsixty days.\nThe city clerk was instructed to\ncomplete tbe water license on Mil'\ncreek independent of the Sand creek\napplication.\nThe chairman of the water and\nlight committee reported l{ inches\nod 12-inch weir in Mill creek; that\ngood progress was being made on\ntbe tlume, and that a timber dam\ncould be installed on Mill creek for\napproximately 165. Authority was\ngiven to have tbe dam installed.\nTbe city collector submitted a list\nof ligbt and water arrears. He was\ninstructed to take immediate action\non tbe list as presented, and in fu\u00ab\nture to cut off any service 60 days in\narrears.\nTbe city olerk was instructed to\nnotify Inspector Dunnett of the rex\nmoval of tbe old Cosmos botel building and to ask for a corresponding\nreduction on the insurance rate on\nthe city ball.\nCity Auditor Hunter will be requested to check up tbe city books\n' io the end of October as in previous\nyears.\nIt was decided to store tbe hose\nremaining at tbe Granby site in the\nwarehouse and tbe ohief of police\nwill be instructed to inspect the\nGranby premises at least once\nweek.\nTbe oity clerk was instructed to\nsecure the necessary coal for tbe city\nhall in conjunction witb the school\nsupply.\nThe usual number of monthly\naccounts were ordered to be paid.\nPRUNE SITUATION\nFOR PRESENT YEAR\natelytheBig Y people of Yakima\nstarted a special advertising campaign and succeeded in gettin-; a\nconsiderable quantity of their prunes\non tbe market ahead of ours, and\nmuch of these Amerita prunes\nwere still od the market wheu we\ncommenced shipping. The quantity\nwe had to market overrunning tbe\nestimate supplied our sales staff by\nsome eighteen cars, also added to\nthe difficulties if securing profitable\nprices from an already overloaded\nmarket.\nDuring August eighteen cars of\nAmerican prunes were sold in wests*\nern Canada\u2014four cars in Alberts,\neight cars in Saskatchewan, four\ncare in Manitoba and two cars in\nBritish Columbia. Part of these\nsbipmonte, along witb our heavy\nmovement and tbe effort of the\nAmericans to retain the markets for\ntheir prunes and our independent\nshippers in the Okanagan selling a\nlittle lower tbau the Associated,\nbrought about the reduction of\nprices to the point where they became unprofitable to thn grower.\nWith tbe belp of the anti-dumping act and the holding back of our\nprunes until tbe market cleaned up,\nenabled us to sell the remainder of\nthe crop at better prices.\nIn September two cars of prunes\nwere imported into Manitoba, tbree\ninto Saskatchewan, two into Alberta and four into British Column\nbia. If we could only have had this\nbusiness it would not likely bave\nbeen necessary to slow up our shipments, but to obtain it we would\nhave bad to reduce our prices earlier\nthan we did and the general average prices would have been further\nreduced.\nThe working out of this prune\ndeal offers further evidence of tbe\nvalue of hvving cold storage facilities sufficient to take care of a portion of the crop wben it becomes\nnecessary to bold back shipments\nrather tban force them on the markets with the inevitable lowering of\nprices.\nThis by way of encouragement,\nnotwithstanding the unfortunate\nconditions confronting us tbis year\nand tbe special effort made by the\nYakima Fruit Growers' association\nto unload a large part of tbeir crop\non our markets, we will likely find\ntbat when tbe pools are closed tbat\ntbe Associated Growers bave sold\nthe orop to better advantage tban it\nwas sold last year, and if we are\nsu cessful fn obtaining cold storage\nfacilities for tbe coming year.fnrther\nimprovements can be expeoted in\nspite of he fact that we are now\nproducing tbe total requirem nts of\nour markets during our shipping\nseason.\n*tf$%.\u00a59*\nGreat Britain Prepares for the\nOlympic Games\nJohn Bull\u2014\"Righto, Father. We sball not disappoint you when\nthe bell rings!\"\nNation Thrillad by Deeds of Valor\nPerformed by Canadians Daring\nGreat War, Says Lloyd George\nMontreal, Oct. 8.\u2014Gratitude for the -part played so\nresolutely arid unhesitatingly by the Dominion of Canada\nin the Great War was voiced here today by Lloyd George,\nwho for most of the period of that strnggle wasprime minis\nter of Great Britain, in the first formal public address of his\ntour of Canada and the United States.\nSpeaking to an audience which crowded the Mount\nRoyal Arena, with its seating capacity of 10,000, to the\ndoors, the man who occupied so outstanding a place during\nthe great war declared with ringing eloquence that Canada\nin that struggle was ''tried practically for the first time on a\ngreat scale, in that burning, scorching crucible, and she came\nout pure and refined gold.\nMINING INSTITUTE\nWILL CONVENE IN\nTRAIL NEYT WEEK\nUnfortuuately owing to the prunes\neoming in at a greater rate than\ncould be readily sold aod tbe markets having to be foiced id order to\nmove tbem says Circular No. 76 of\nthe Associated Growers of British\nColumbia, the prices were in couse\u00bb\nquence depressed to a point unprofitable to the growers aad it became necessary to slaw up shipping\nor it would have resulted in a consignment market witb red ink lo tbe\ngrowers.\nWholesalers on lbe prairies aud\nelsewhere were advised that our\nprunes would sommence moving\nabout August 28 and there would\nbe about 120 cars to sell. Unfortun-\nHow the Disaster\nOccurred\nA gentleman in Cincinnati etn\u00bb\nptoys two negroes to work on bis\nratber extensive gardens, which he\npersonally oversees. One morning\nSam did not appear.\n\"Where is Sam, George?\" he\nasked,\n\"In de hospital,, sah,\".\n\"In tbe hospital? Wby, how in\nthe world did that happen?\"\n\"Well, Sam he been a-telling me\nev'y mo'oin' fob ten yeans he gwine\nlick his wife 'cause o' her naggin'.\"\n, Well?\"\n\"Well, yestiddy sbe done oveba\nheah him.\"\nHeretofore the annual general\nmeetings of the British Columbia din.\nvision of the Canadian Institute of\nMining and Metallurgy have been\nheld in Vancouver, as being, on the\nwhole, the most convenient center for\ngatherings of this kind. A departure\nis beiug made thia year, however, in\nlhe decision to hold a general meet\u2022\ning in Trail, with the dual purpose of\nenabling coast members to acquaint\nthemselves with the important mining and metallnr-rical developments\ntaking place in the Kootenays, and of\nindicating to Koulonay members and\nmining men the interest of the institute in their concerns and problems.\nThis meeting will be held on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, ,October\n17, 18 and 19, and a cordial invitation is extended to all mining men,\nwhether they are members or not. to\nattend.\nThe program arrangements are in\ncharge of a comniilt.ee under the ca.\npable ahairmanshi'i of M E. Pureell,\nof Rossland, who now announce that\na number of papers covering a wide\nrange of subjects of timely interest\nill be presented for discussion, in-,\neluding, \"A Symposium on the Min\ning and Treatment of Sullivan Ores,\"\nby S. G. Biaylock, W. M. Archibald,\nE.G. Montgomery, II, W. Diamond,\nE. M. Styles, J. Buchanan, Geo. J.\nMurray, B. A. Stimmel and J. G.\nFingland; \"Mining and Smelting\nOperations at Anyox,\" by L It Clapp;\n\"Recent Mining and Metallurgical\nDevelopments at Britannia,\" by W\nM Brewer; \"The History and Progress of Mining in the Kootenays\nby S. 8 Fowler; \"The General Geology and Ore Deposits of the Grand\nForks, Greenwood, Osoyoos and\nSimilkameen Mining Divisions,\" by\nP. B. Freeland; \"Undiscovered Mines\nof British Columbia,\" by Dr. L. W.\nUglow; \"Small Scale Mining Operations and Their Problems,\" by A, E.\nLangley; \"The Sulphur Industry,\"\nby F. W. Guernsey, and \"Publicity\nand the Mining Industry,\" by C. M.\nCampbell.\nIn addition, visits will be made to\nthe Trail works and possibly also to\nthe Rossland mines Nor has the\ncommittee forgotten to provide for\nentertainment of a lighter sort, and\nit may be affirmed that the provisions\nin this respect will prove by no means\nthe least attractive features of the\nprogram.\nGATHERING NUTS\nInventory\n-How mucb liquid assets\nAbout a\nBanker-\nhave you?\nCustomer (cautiously)\ncase and a half.\nMaple Leaf Mine in Franklin\nCamp Was Sold This Week\nThe Maple Leaf mine in Franklin camp was sold at\nprivata sale in the law office of J. F. Crowe in this city on\nWednesday to Thomas Dunlap, of Chesaw, Wash., for\n$4000. Another bid for $4000, made by John Miller, of\nWalla Walla, Wash., could not be considered, as the full\namonnt of the bid did not accompany the tender.\nThe old Maple Leaf company made an assignment a\nfew weeks to Dennis St. Dennis, of Nelson, and arrange\nments were made for the disposal of the property at private\nsale. This sale has been adjourned from time to time until\nlast Wednesday, when the mine was finally sold.\nAt the request ofthe Walla Walla shareholders ofthe\nproperty, Mr. Dnnlap and H. W. Young motored to that\ncity last week, and a satisfactory agreement was reached\nbetween the interested parties.\nThe Maple Leaf has been developed to the shipping\nstage and is considered one of the most valuable mines in\nI the camp. It is announced that work will soon be resumed\nTen Commandments\nFor the Motorist\nThe ten commandments of good\ndriving are as follows:\n1. Drive on the right side of the\nroad; it is just ae good as the left.\n2. Slow down when approaching\na crossroad; it is nearly as dangerous as a railroad crossing.\n3 Look out for children, You\ncan never tell wbat tliey will do.and\nyou are always in tiie wrong if you\nhit one.\n4. Try to help instead of hinder\nthe traffic officer; be is there lor\nIf you wish to accomplish great\nthings, busy yourself with what the\t\nmediocre refer to as \"mere details.\" Ion the property under the new management.\nyour gooc1, and bsV goi i (ough job.\n5. Be sure that your \"dimmers\"\nreilly dim; it'- no joke driving into\na blinding glare, as you probably\nknow.\n6. Read and obey the warning\nsigns; they are not put up as orna\nments.\n7. If you feel you've got to speed\n--doit where it won't kill anybody\nbut yourself.\n8. When nuking minor repairs\nstop where your car may* beseen\nfrom both directions; otherwise you\nmay stop longer than vou anticipate.\n9. Speeding around corners is a\nstraight route to the hos* ital. Don't\nrace past a stopped street car. Some\nday the jury will call it manslaughter.\n10. Use discretion. The fact tnat\nyou had the rigln of way won't\nbring anybody bark to life, least of\nall yourself.\nSpecial Oorrapoivlence of Tlie Sun.\nVictoria, October 10.\u2014An announcement made hy Hon. J. D\nMacLean, provincial secretary, is to\ntbe effect that following lhe conference of deputy miuisiers of education of the four western province;-,\ntbe curricula of public schools wil!\nbe revised. Otber important changes\ncalculated to improve the school\nsystem, including longer training\nperiods for teachers, \u00bb't-o nre ex\npected to result from the conference.\nTbe text books of geography,\ngrammar, arithmetic and spelling\nwill be revised, and it is expected\nthat each province may mauufuo\nture its own text books\nTaken ail in all, tbe revisions in\nthe school eystem are tbs- retult ot a\nloug period of iuvesligplioti and \u2022\nmaterial improvement in general\neducatiouui methods is anticipated.\nThe people ol Brilhit'1 Columbia\nthrough the. government have sent\nthe stricken citizens of Japan a gilt\nof $45,000 worth ot shingles aud\nIUUsher. A special warrant was\npassed I,t ihib am\u25a0juni.\nDenial is given the statement\nmade in Lethbridge rec nll> by Pref i\ndent E. W. Bean*,, of ibt Canadian\nPacific railway, to the effect that\nthe public debt ot British Columbia\nhas increased 239 per cent siuce\n1918. Hou. J. D. MacLean, pros.\nviocial secretary aud acting premier,\nshows tbat tbe increase was ouly 113\nper cent, uud the increase was\ncaused largely hscause tne govern\nment bad to rai.-e huge turns ol\nmoney to pay iuterest and Josses iu\noperation ou debts inherited from\ntbe Conservative administration.\nFor iostance, S^OOO.-JuO is ren\nquired annually for interest and\noperating deficit on the Pacific Great\nEastern railway, an expenditure tor\nwbicb the minister claims the prts\nent government is in no way respon\nsible.\n\"Mr. Beatty talks of business ad\u00bb\nadministration and compares govn\n\u2022{rmneuts witb private enterprises,\"\nadded Dr. MacLean. ''That is exactly the way this government conducts tbe affairs of the province. No\nmoney has been speut excepting\nupon productive enterpriser,and the\nproof of our government's businesslike methods is si.own when I state\nthat up to the eud of 1922 British\nColumbia had a larger total iu sinking funds than all the rest of the\nprovinces of Canada combined,\nSinking funds provide for the taking\ncare of obligations, and surely that\nstatement shows tbat uo stone has\nbeen left unturned to protect the\npublic.\"\nThe miuister maintained thut tbe\nfinal test ui the stability ol a province or of a business was the financial .-lauding ol either, lu this ie-\ngard. he pointed out, British Col-\numbia bonds sold for a higher price\nin the world markets than that oh-\ntaiued by any other province.\nHou. K. D. Barrow, miuister of\nagriculture, alter au inspection ot thu\n.Sumas reclamation project, claim-\nthat the venture promised to prove\noue of tbe most important of lis\nkiud in America. By wint\u00abr the big\nlake will have betn pumped dry am'\nnext spring nearly 30,000 acres of\nsplendid farm lands will be available for cultivation.\nThe British Columbia government\nis pushing forward the work of creating forest reserves, says Hon, T.\nD. Pattullo minister of lands, and\nevery effort is being made Vi ensure\ntht reforestation of lodged oil laud*,\naud the conservation of the immense timber wealth of the province. f*t\nTHB SUN: GBAND FORKS, BEITISH COLUMBIA\nUfa (Srattb iffnrka \u00a7\u00abn\nAN IXOmPmHm.rrr N & N > f> 1 P i. 1\nQ. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\n318UBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year (in Canada and Great Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States) 1.50\nAddresr \u2022\u2022'\u2022 ******** 'cations to\niTnu Grand Fork.1) Sun\nPhone 101R Grand Forks, B. CJ\nOFFICE: COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1923\nNotes, Notions and Notables\nEnglish street railway cars, or trams they\ncall them, are double-deckers, with seats on\nthe roof, in most towns. Now they are being\nfitted with a new type of shafcless periscope\nfor \"searching\" top decks. Experiments made\nrecently have been successful, and there is\nlittle doubt about the device co ning into jjen -\neral use. It is a mirror tixel at etch end of\na car, and, viewed from the stairway, it enables the conductor to see what is happening\non deck witnout having to go upstairs. From\nthe footboard the conductor can always note if\nthere is any movement on the high level gangway as halting points are approached, and\nthus time is saved and scrambling avoided.\nLord Strathnairn, bagged large numbers of\nprisoners. Atone place the authorities were in\na quandary.as they had a great number of prisoners and could only spare a very few soldiers\nas escorts. They were afraid that some migh t\nescape on the journey to Dnblin. So they appealed to Lord Strathnairn for advice. \"Take\naway their braces and cut off the buttons\nfrom the trousers,\" was the reply. This practice was often resorted to by the British Tom\nmies during the Great War, when they had\nto deal with large numbers of German captives.\nThe California Fruit Growers' exchange\nsalvages its by prodncts. Last year its plant\nat Corona worked up 650 carloads of cull\nlemons into citric acid and lemon oil. Another\nplant handles 80 carloads of cull oranges a\nmonth, converting them into orange oil, concentrated orange juice for beverages, orange\nvinegar, marmalade and orange peel. The\nrefuse furnishes pectin, which is the substance\nthat causes fruit juices to jelly.\nLate one Saturday night a clergyman received a wire from his bishop ordering him to\npreach the next morning at a certain church.\nThe parson knew nothing about this particular\nplace, but he prepared his sermon and arrived\njust as the service had started. When he gave\nout his text, \"Without money and witnout\nprice,\" there was a titter among the congregation and the whojeof his sermon was received\nwith smiles. After the service was over he\nasked one of the churchwardens what was the\nmeaning of the laughter. He was told that the\nparson whose place he had taken was named\nPrice and that he had absconded the day before with a large sum of money.\nThe Earl of Meath, in his new book,\"Memories ofthe Nineteenth Century,\" tells the following among other good stories: Public\nschools in the old days were much harder\ntraining ground for boys than they are today.\nOne of the old class rooms at Eton had only\none small window, and the door\u2014-which led\nstraight into the grounds\u2014had to be kept\nopen iu all weathers, in order that theVe\nshould be sufficient light in the room. One\nday, when it was snowing hard, the snow was\ndriven into the room, settling on the forms,\nthe desks and the boys. Some of the boys\nbegan to brush it off their clothes, when the\nmaster spotted them and shouted angrily:\n\"You young worms! Do you call yourselves\nBritish boys, and you can't stand a little snow\non your knees? Shame on you! your fathers\nare the rulers of Englaud, and your forefathers\nhave made England what she is now. Do you\nimagine if they had minded a little snow that\nCanada would ever have been added to the\nempire, or if they had minded heat we should\npossess India or tropical Africa? Nevor let\nme see you shrink from either heat or cold.\nYou will have to maintain the empire which\nthey made.\"\nRecently, a newspaper dispatch from Chicago declared that a highly edncated man,\nwhose uame it gave, a civil engiueer by pro-\nfess:on, and a holder of several academic degrees, had decliued the offer of a professorship\nin a college unspecified in order to become a\nplasterer at $104 a week in Chicago. We do\nuot know whether the dispatch is authentic or\nnot; but it is completely plausible. At present\npay a young man who wants money will do\nbetter at plasteriug than at professional work\nof any sort. Whether he will be better off\ntwenty years from now is another matter.\nCaptain E. T. Pollock,governor of American\nSamoa, reports the finding of a turtle tbat\nhad been left on the Tonga islands by Captain\nJames in 1773. According to Captain Pollock's report, the turtle exhibited signs of extreme age; it was blind and when walking\ncreaked like an oxcart.\nE.C, Henniger Go.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\n. Lime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nS. T. HULL\n.-Established 1910\nIleal Estate and Insurance\n.Realdent. Agent Oriind Porks Townalte\n^ .Company, Limited\nFarms Orchards City Property\nZtxaents at Nelaon, Calgrary, Wlhnlpcii aud\nother Prairie polnta. Vancouver Agents:\nPBNDBH IN VESTMENTS\nllATTENBUKY LANDS LTD.\nBatabllshed ln 1910. wo are lis a pistil Ion to\nfurnish Tollable inforinatlou couoernlusj this\ndistrict.\nWrite tor freo I Itoratu re\nGRAND FORKS\nTransfer Company j\nDAVIS 8 HANSBN, Prop.\nAt the Institute of Politics at Williams -\ntown, Mass, Mr. Bakhmeteff, formej Russian\nambassador to the United States, predicted\nthe ultimate fall of the soviet government.\nHe based his prediction on the fact that the\ncommunists are waging a losing fight against\nthe growing demand of the peasants for individualism and ownership of their lands. He\nlooked forward toa new Russia in which individualism and equality of opportunity, operating as tbey do in the United States, would\nbring prosperity and happiness. Social revenge has run its course, he thinks; aad the\npeasant is becoming an independent farmer.\nIn China more new roads have been built\nin the past\"five years than in any previous five\ndecades. Over the new roadsAmericBn moto r\nbusses are running. Fares are cheap, and the\nChinese people after their first alarm are en -\nthosiastic customers When the cost of building dirt roads and of transportation is as low\nas it is in China a new industrial order for a\nquarter of the human race may come quickly\nOf the one hundred and seventy thousand\nactive clergymen in the United States, only\nsixteen hundred and seventy-one paid an income tax last year on incomes of more than\n$3000.\nA certain bishop, whose Christian name\nwas Anthony, regularly entertained the divinity students in his diocese. He pointed out on\none oecasion that it was very necessary tha t\na clergyman should know how to adrainiste r\nto the sick and dying. He proposed therefor e\nto go into his study and lie down on the sofa,\nwith his face turned.to the wall, as if*he were\ndying. The students were to come in, one by\none, and administer to him. Afterwards he\nwould tell them what he thought of their\nmethods. After much argument, it was decided that a young Irishman should be thc\nfirst student to go.in and administer to the\npatient. He went into the study and found\nthe bishop on the sofa, covered with a rug.\nThe student raised his hands in horror and\ncried: \"Oh! Anthony, Anthony! Is it the\ndrink again?\"\nDuring the Fenian rising in Ireland in 1867\nthe British troops, who were commanded by\nThe great blessings of mankind are with in\nus, and within our reach, but we shut our\neyes and, like people in the dark, we fall foul\nupou the very thing we reach for, without\nfinding it.\u2014Seneca.\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal, Wood and Ice\n(or Sale\nOffice at R. F. Petrie'* Store\nPhone 64\nC.V. Meggitt\n\u2022_2JBeal Estate and Insurance\nOHCHAHDS, FABM LANDS ANO CITY\nPROPEUTY\nExcellent lacllltlea for -telling your farina\nWe hare agenta at all Ooaat and Prairie\nPolnta\nWS CABBY AUTOMOBILE; INSURANCE.\nDBALBB IN POLES. POSTS AND TIES,\nAND FABM PBODUCB\nReliable Information regarding thia dlatrot\nobeerfully furnished. We solicit your inquiries.\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\n^\"TOBACCONIST\nDealer inj\nHavana Cigars, Pipe*\n:!) Confectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nPICTURES\no4ncient History\nItems Taken Prom The Qrand Ptxtb Sun for the Corresponding\n'Week Twenty Yean Ago\nVV. H, Covert, the well known fruit grower, has aent\nan exhibit of fruit to the Nelson fair.\nJ. A. McCallum, city treasurer, and family returned\nfrom Toronto on Wednesday.\nThe bridge at the Yale hotel has been raised three feet\nand ls again open for traffic.\nContractor Wilson has moved the Addison building\nfrom Riverside' avenue to First street.\nDennis Peon had the misfortune to lose most of this\nseason's crop by fire this week.\nArchie Connors was accidentally killed at the Emma\nmine this week.\nCity Real Estate For\nSale\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPrices:\u2014>From $35.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms j\u2014\u25a0 Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may bc seen at the\nCity Oflice.\nJOHN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nAMMUNITION\nWe have a complete line of shot shells and\nrifle ammunition. 16, 20, 12 and 10 ga. shot\nshells. All sizes rifle ammunition. Let us\nfill your requirements for the hunting season.\nFor the dark evening try an EVER-READY\nFLASHLIGHT. A full stock of batteries.\nFRUIT LADDERS at reduced prices.\n8 ft. $4.80 10 ft. $6.00 12 ft. $7.20\nMILLER & GARDNER\nHardware and Furniture\n\"The living voice affects men more\nthmi whit th-iy reid \"\u2014Pliny, the Younger.\nYour voice conducts your business.\nDirections that you give personally are\nquickly and accurately executed, because\nyour associates cannot fail to understand.\nEach inflection has a meaning of its own.\nRemember the telephone when you\nwould confer with those interested with\nyou in business. Do not trust the cold\nwritten word\u2014send your voice, yourself\nby long distance telephone.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nAND PICTURE FRAMIN6\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly Don\nR. G. McCOTCHBON\nWINNING AVBHCI\nIt's lhe worst wheel that\nmakes the most noise in the\nworld.\nIf ydu greatly admire a\nquality you have at least a\na trace of it yourself.\nCanadian Blind Babies' Home\nINanery, Hospital and Kindergarten\nDominion Charter, Without Stock Subscription.\nDIRECTORS\u2014Hon. Martin Burrell, Hon. President; Hon. J. O. Turriff,\nPresident; A. H. Fitzsimmoui, Vice-Pra-ideat; Blvrard Grand, Seoretary,\nC. Blaokett Robinson, Cor. Secretary; J. V. McKinley, Treasurer; Lt.\u00bb0ol.\nWhlton, M.D., R. H. Campbell, Thomas Mulvey, K.C, A.. E. Provost, W.\nLyle Reid, A. J. Preimaa, Charles H. Pinhey, CE, W. J. Cairns, and Tom\nMoore.\nTRUSTEES\u2014C. H. Pinhey, O.E, Thomas Mulvey. K.C, A. J. Preidma n\nLegal Adviser Bankers Auditor\nJohn I. MaoCraoken, K.C Royal Bank of Caaada. A. A. Crawley, C. A.\nThe Objects of this Institution, for which Incorporation was recently obtained, are: \"To provide a Home and Refuge for Baby and Infant Blind; to\nprovide free Scientific Care, Training and Maintenance; to Save the Lives of\neven a few of the many of sush unfortunates, who, for the lack of suoh ser\u00ab\nvice, perish every year; and to return these little ones to their parents, at\nsohool age with normal, healthy bodies and sound minds.\"\nThis is a large and graatly needed Child Welfare Service. Careful enquiry\nat the Government offices in the verious provinces reveals the fact that there\nare at the presant time nearly 250 Infant Blind in the Dominion. Nothing\nhas yet been done for those helpless little ones. In the United States, 16\nyears ago, the Brst home was opened in New York City; they have now homes\nin 13 States, all doing excellent work. In England, some time ago, Sir Arthur Pearson organized \"Sunshine House,\" Chorley Wood, for Blind Babies,\nand he claims that it is the only one iu the British Empire. Let us have the\nSECOND in Canada. To reach this worthy end money is urgently required.\nFifty Thousand Dollars is the present objective of the Boa-id. While the\nHome is to be looated in Ottawa it will take in the Baby Blind from every\nprovince, so that this APPEAL for funds will be Dominion wide, and an\nearly and generous response is confidently expected. Cheques should be made\npayable to the Canadian Blind Babies Home Association. All remittances\nwill be promptly acknowledged.\nTell The People\nWhat You Hare\nto Sell THE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSun's Page\/People and Events of Passing News Interest\n:;'^ :: *av^.:v;v>;;y:-o.-:.:. i --c:-;--\".: ;>^;<;fg'gw;\nIhowinc tka atai-t .f tha (Issala In tha\nBclUah-Amarlasui Co, aaaa. 1st Br*, lak\nett WtokL\n^|1\nn > \"\"*,!\u00bb'..*\" \u25a0; S.y... \u25a0: \u25a0\nmSms*:\nPREPARING THE\nBEES FOR WINTER\nAll work in the apiary has for its\nultimate object the securing of a\nfcood crop.and hence the preparation\not bees for winter means more than\nthe safe wintering ovei of tbe colony.\nThe first step in preparing bees for\nthe winter is also the first of the\nbeekeeper's year as well as his first\nstep towards securing next season's\ncrop. About the middle of July\npreparations are commenced by seeing that each colony is headed by a\nvigorous queen in order that the\nmaximum number of young bees\nmay be reared to carry the colony\nthrough the winter. Sbould the fall\nflow be insufficient to cause a large\namount of brood to be reared, stim\nUNLESS you see the name \"Bayer\" on tablets, you\nare not getting Aspirin at all\nAccept only an \"unbroken package\" of \"Bayer Tablets of\nAspirin,\" which contains directions and dose worked out by\nphysicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for\nColds Headache Rheumatism\nToothache ^Neuralgia Neuritis\nEarache Lumbago Pain, Pain\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tablets\u2014Also bottles of 24 and 100\u2014Druggists.\nAapirln la thc trade mark (registered In Canada) ot Bayer Manufacture of Hono-\nacetlcacldester of Sallcyllcactd. While lt la well known that Aapirln means Bayer\nmanufacture, to aaalat the public againat Imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company\nwill ba auunpad with their (antral trade mark, the \"Bayer Croaa.\"\nulative feeding will have to be re\nsorted to; that is, 1 part of sugar to\n1 part of water, or dilute honey mix\nture must be fed. Colonies that are\nweak, those covering less than six\nframes, should be united. This may\nbe done by the newspaper method;\nor two weak colonies may be\nbrought together and wintered in\none hive if itis divided by a close\nfitting division board. This latter\nmethod provides tbe beekeeper with\nsurplus queene early the following\nseason.\nHaving secured a large force of\nyoung bees, the next step is lo see\nthat each colony has sufficient\nstores to not only carry it through\nthe winter but also through the\nearly spring till pollen and nectar\nare coming in, thus enabling it to\nbuild up rapidly. The Btores provided should be of the best; no unwholesome honey containing a high\npercentage of solid matter should\nbe given. If natural stores are deficient, a syrup of two parts of the\nbest granulated sugar to one part\nwater should be fed. Tbis being last\nstored will be the first consumed\naod, as it breaks down into gas aod\nwater, will defer solid matter accumulating in the intestines. Colonies\nin ten-frame LangBtroth hives to be\ncellar wintered should weigh at least\nsixty pounds without their covers,\nwhile those wintered outside seventy\npounds.\nProtection from the cold is very\nnecessary, as it not only retards tht\nconsumption of Btores but also conserves tbe energy of tbe bees.\nColonies wintered outside should\nhave at least three inches of pack-\ning underneath them and about\ntheir sides with six to eight inches\nof packing on top. The most econo\nmical case is the quadruple, as each\ncolony has the warmth from its\ntwo neighbors. Colonies Bhould be\nplaced iu their cases and packed\nunderneata and about sides before\nfeeding. For feeding, ten-pound\nhoney pails, in the cover of which\nfine boles have been made, are considered very satisfactory.\nColonies to be placed in the cellar\nare usually left on their summer\nstands till tbey have had their last\ncleansing flight; that is usually in\nthe second or third week in November.\nIn all preparations the beekeeper\nshould keep the ultimate object in\nview\u2014strong colonies in spring.\u2014\nA. H. W. Birch, Apiarist.\nSOME PROVIDER\n\"Is your husband much of\"\na provider, Milandy?\"\n\"He jes' ain't nothin' else,\nma'am. Hegwine to git some\nnew furniture providin' he git\nde money; he gwine to git de\nmoney providin' he go to\nwork; he go to work providin' dejob suits him. I never\nsee such a providin' man in\nall niah days.\"\nSelect Your Color\nA littie girl timidly 'isked the\ndrug clerk for a package of pink\ndye.\n\"\\Vh\u00bbt do you want it for?\" re\u00bb\nsponded the clerk. \"Wollen or cotton goods?\"\n\"Neiirier,\" said thr child. \"It's\nfor ma't stomach. The doctor said\nshe'd Imve to diet, and she wauts it\na pretty color.'' ..\nMahomet could\nhave sold your\nmerchandise\nYou know the old story of\nMahomet and the Mountain\n\u2014when the Mountain wouldn't come to him he like a\nsensible man, grabbed his\nPanama off the hall rack and\nwent to the Mountain\u2014he\nwanted it badly enough io go\nafter it\nThat is precisely the situation today\u2014the Mountain\u2014\nBUSINESS-will not come to\nyou\u2014you will have to go after\nit and go after it hard. You\nhave one big advantage over\nthe Prophet\u2014he had to take\nthe going as he found it\u2014you\ncan pave the way with advertising >*\nTHE BUN: GRAND FOEKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101 Rl\nFORFINE PRINTING I\nIi\nere an\ndTl\niere\nThe total quantity of sea fish\nlanded on both tha Atlantic and\nPacific coasts during the month of\nJuly was 822,043 cwts., valued at\n$2,771,440 to tha fishermen, compared wilh a catch of 873,382 cwts.\nvalued at $2,596,730 in July, 1922.\nCattls in north Alberta's livestock\nherds now number more than 2,000,-\n000. This industry and also the\nswine industry have increased amazingly in the northern part of Um\nProvince in thc last few yeavn.\nNews of the Gity\nJohn A. Manly returned to his\nhome in Ocala, Florida, on Wednes\nday morning, after a short visit\nhere at the home of his brother,\nJoseph L. Manly. Mr. Manly was\nooe of the historic figures of pioneer\nlife in Grand Forks. He was chief\nengineer of the Spokane & British\nColumbia railway when it was conn\nBtructed between this city and Republic, and built and for several\nyears conducted the Yale hotel,\nwbich up to the time wben it was\ndestroyed by the big fire that wiped\nout over oue half of the city was con\nsidered to be the best hotel in south\nern British Columbia. Besides tbese\ninterests, Mr, Manly was also n\nlarge landowner, and be acquired\nconsiderable publicity when he sold\nhis ranch east of the city to the\nGreat Northern railway for $20,000\nin order that the road might secure\na right of way through the the land\nMr. Manly is now a big landowner\nin Florida. It is said that his visit\nto this city was for the purpose of\nlooking in the validity of tbe Gran\nby company's title to some of its\nlands here. He donated these lands,\nhe says, to the company under certain conditions as an inducementfor\nit to locate its smelter bere, and he\nclaims tbat the removal of the smel\nter violatesjthese conditions and that\ncertain portions of the lands should\nrevert to him. It is hinted that the\nmatter may be tested in the conrts.\nMayor Hull states tbat the Mr.\nManly's claim does uot affect the\nland upon which the Mill creek\nwater right aud the flume now being constructed are located, recently\npurchhsed by the city from the\nGranby. In any event the city can\nlose nothing\u2014it has paid $1000 on\nthe purchase price aud sold $1500\nworth of steel from the smeller\nbuildings. This explanation is made\nbecause many unfounded rumors\nbave been in rirculation during the\npast few days,\nCarrying large cOBsignmemts froa\nthe Dominion Government and th*\nJiriUsh Columbia branch of tbo\nCanadiaa Red Cross, tks Csnaonaa\nPacific S.S. Empress of Russia was)\nthe first ship from th* Aoitrieaa\ncontinent to arriv* with rsticf for\nthe earthquake and famine strioksa\npeople of Japan.\nThe is stKl considerable road\nwork being done in tbis district.\nGeneral Foreman F. H. Donald-\neon's crew iB putting in the\nconcrete culverts on the transprovincial highway between Cascade\naud Sheep creek. The culverts were\nmade at the c ncrete works iu this\ncity. W. fcj. Phillips has a crew repairing the roads uear Cascade, and\nJohn Feek haB gang at work east of\nthiB city.\nNearly $10,000 in fur\nwas collected in Ths Pas, Maa., by\nth* chief game warden last wtiirUf.\nThis does not includ* th* roysHaos\ncollected from the Hudson Bay Oo-aa-\npany and Revillon Frer**, which will\nmore than double this amount. Thi*\ndoes not include moneys s-Ktired\nthrough taxes, licenses aad\nsources of revenue.\nGROCERIES\nOur Groceries are constantly moving,\nand they are therefore always fresh and\nin prime condition. We make a specialty\nhigh grade Teas and Coffees.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25 H. H. Henderson, Prop.\nOttawa, Oct. 2.\u2014Official\nannouncement was made to-\nday of the passage of an order\nin council fixing the date for\nThanksgiving day as Monday, November 12, the date\nalso set for the observance of\nArmistice day.\nDEAFNESS CAN BE\nCUBED\nDEAFNKSS, NOISKS IN TUB HEAD AND\nNASAL CATAHBH\nCreamery butter made ia Alberta\ntook a total of 149 prizes out sf 236\nprizes offered, or 63 per cent., at exhibitions at Edmonton, Cal-rary, R\u00ab-\ngina, Brandon, Saskatoon and Vancouver this year. Out of 11 opes\nchampionships offered, Alberta batter took 8. In the Calgary exhibition\nsix provinces competed, in three\nothers four provinces competed, and\nin two other* three province* competed.\nBritish Columbia has reached th*\npeak of the biggest tourist season\nin her history, and it is estimated\nthat as a result of the enormous\ntravel and the expenditure of transients while in the province thi*\nsummer, will be worth at least $30.-\n000,000. The opening of the Banftf-\nWindermere motor highway through\nCanada's rook garden was largely\nresponsible for this increase ia tourist traffic through th* Pacific prer-\niace.\nGold producers in the Province of\nOntario during th* first six month*\nof 1023 report production of 3*4,-\n444 ounces gold and 65,444 ounce*\nsilver, of a total value of \u00bb7,244,081\nshipped by the Porcupine producer*,\nand from the Kirktand Lake producers 69,691 ounces gold and t,ilS\nounces silver, of a total value st\n$1,402,873, or from the two camp*\n\u2022 total value of IR64\u00ab,9'64.\nTh* Canadian Pacific Sail-way will\ncontribute 325,000 fer th* relief of\nthe sufferers ia Japan and hav* also\ndecided that supplies of Canadian\nfood-stuffs and clothing donated, or\npurchased with money donated for\nrelief work, will be transported fro*\nover the Company's rail and steamship line*. President B. W. Beatty\nmada this announcement while making a tour over the Company's lines\nin the West with a party of directors.\"\nHe added that this action had been\ntaken because of the reports of the\nintense hardships du* to the disaster,\nand notwithstanding the fact that\nth* Company had lost heavily by ths\ncatastrophe,\nIf you greatly admire a\nquality you have at least a\na trace of it yourself.\nThe new Continental remedy called\n\"LAKMALENK\" (Beid.)\nis a simple hurinleaa home-treatment whioh\nabsolutely curea deafness, noises ln the head,\netc. NO KXPliNSlVKJAPI'LIANCKS NBBDKD\nfor this uew ointment, matantly operates\nupon the titfected parts with complete and\neermanentsucoess. SCORES OF WONDER.\nUL CHUBS UBPOltED.\nBBLIABLB TESTIMONY.\nGovernment House.\nViotorla, B. 0.,\nSept. Uth, 1923\nPresent!\nIlia Honour the Lieut enaiit-Uovc\nernor in Council.\n-UTHBUBAS by \"Au Act respecting Pound\n\u2022v Dletrlota,\" I is enacted that the Lieutenant-Governor in Council may. by Order iu\nCouneil made publio by notioe in the British\nColumbia Gazette, constitute auy part uf the\nProvince of Hritish Columbia uot within the\nlimits of a municipality luto a pound district:\nAM) WHERKAS uuder thc provisions of\nthis Aat application has been made by\nproprietors of laud situate ut Grand Forka\nin the Slmilitaineen Dlvlalonof Tale District,\nund comprising the following landa. namely:\nDistrict Lots 362, 363, 1SW\"; Blooka 1 to\nU, inclusive, Blook 19, Lot 1 of Block\n11, and Blocks 19 to 31, inclusive,\nRegistered Plan No, 38, Kamloops Registry\noffice: BlooksSU to34, inclusive, and Blook37,\nRegistered Plan No. 213, Kamloops Registry\nOffice: Blocks 2 to 5, inclusive, Kcgistcred\nPlan .No.523, Kamloops Registry Office; District Lots 1494, 1361: District Lot im, except\nBlocks 6 to 13, Inclusive, Registered Plan No.\n1339, Kamloops Registry Office, aud that portion sho wu ou Registered Plan So. 83, Kamloops Registry Office; District Lot 380, exoept\nthose portions shown on Registered Plans\nNo. 35 and No. 83,Kamloops Kegiatry Office;\nDistrict Lot 633, except that portion shown\non Registered Plau No. 69, Kamloopa ltegistry\nOffice; District Lot SOO: the Weat Half *t District Lot 030. except that portion described\nas follows: Commencing at the north-weal\noorner of said District Lot; thenoe eastorly\nalong the north boundary thereof tweuty\nchains aud teu links; thenoe south one minute\nweat three ehaina ninety-live and one-half\nlinks; theuce west ninety links; theuce south\noue minute west thirty-six ciiuins and\nseventy-one links to the south boundary ol\nsaid District Lot 580; thenoo west nineteen\nohains twenty-six and one-hall linka along\nsaid south boundary to the south-west oorner\nof said Dietriot Lot 530: thenoe northerly along\nthe the west boundary of said dietriot lot nlue\nchains thirty-five aud fifteen hundredths\nlinks; thenoe east six ohalna eighty-one aud\neighty-two hundredths links; thence north\nthirty ohains eighty-four and eighty-five\nhundredths liuks: thenoe weat alx ehaina\neighty-one aud eighty-two hundredths links\nto a polut ou the west boundary of said Distrlot Lot 530; thenoe uorth fifty links to the\npoint of commencement: District Lots 535, 519,\n382; Dlatriet Lot 534, except that portion\nshown on Registered Plan No. 36, Kamloops\nRegistry Office; Distrlot Lota 586, 152: that\nportion of District Lot 828 lying south ol the\nKettle River; District Lota 153,861 and 184; uud\nthat portion of District Lot 1475 lying uorth\nof the Kettle River, being Lots 1 to Its, inclusive, of Registered Plan No. 817, Kamloops\nRegiatry Office, \u2014\nto constitute thc suid distrlot a pound dlatriet.\nAND WHKEEAS notlee of the Intention to\nconstitute such distrlot a pound district waa\ngiven in accordance with the requirements ot\nthe Aot, and no obieotion hae been mode by\nany proprietor within the proposed pound\ndistrlot:\nOn the recommendation of the Honourable\nthe Mlniater of Agriculture and under the\nSrovlsions of the \"Pound Dlatriet Aot,\" Ilia\nonour the Llutenant-Uovernor of British\nColumbia, by und with the advice of hla Executive Council, haa been pleased to order and\nlt la hereby ordered, that the above detoribed\narea be constituted a pound dlatriet.\nJ. It. MACLEAN,\nClerk of the Executive Counoil.\nMra. K. Wilkinaon, of Slad Road, Stroud,\nwrites:\u2014\"Pleasecould trouble you to aend\nme another box of the Ointment. It ia uot for\nmyse.f, but for a friend of mine who la aa bad\nas I was.and cannot get any reat for the noises\ntn the head. 1 feel a new woman, aud oan go\nto bed now and get a good night's reat. which\n1 had not been able to do ior many months.\nit is a wonderful remedy and I am moat delighted to reoommeud it.\" : . .\nBIM* THEBE ON CLEVELAND\nIT brings the whole country for miles around within easy reach.\nHave you seen the new models? They're as graceful as swallows! As\nbright as new coin! As weatherproof as ad ucid Automobile Steel\nBearings. Frame of English Seamless Steel Tubing. Hard Maple\nRims. Hercules Brake. Everything complete. Beal Quality. Real\nValue. Easy Terms. We are tbe peoplejto mount you right.\nJ. R. MOOYBOER %^*%\u00a7$*Z&\nOpen Saturday Evenings Till 10 o'Cloek\nTbe only trouble witb \"the\nheight of fashion\" is having to wear\nit long time after tbe \"height\" bus\nchanged.\nIf you wa t to have a friend, be\none.\n\"POUND DISTRICT ACT\"\nPennoyer Bros, and A. R. Mudie\nhave been oppointed pound keepers\nof the newly formed Grand Forks\npound districts by the provincial\ngovernment. The pound premises\nare located on their respective\nranches.\nFrank J. Miller wiih taken to the\nQrand Forks hospitol this week for\nan operation far lUtuiu. lie is improving rapidly.\nMr. and Mre. Noel Kelsey and\nfamily have returned to the city\nfrom UouDingtoD Fulls.\nThomas Dnnlap, of Uheeaw, was\nin the city yesterday. He is con.\nnected with tbe Maple Leaf mine.\nThe Yale General Electric company this week installed a radio re*\noeiving outfit for The Sun.\nGrapes\u2014Le ve your order with\nA. D. Morrison for jellying and\neating grapes, ic per lb., bulk.\nDon't ref-rot too mu ih your up*\nand downs; nftei nil the only man\nwho has none is in the cemetery.\nHansen Has Thrown\nHis Crutches Away I\n\"Tanlac is the only thing I oan\ngive any credit for helping me,\"\nis tbe preceise statement made, re\u00bb\ncently, by C. B. Hansen, a well\nknown carpenter, 12835 121st St.,\nWest Edmonton, Alberta.\n\"For three years I had rheumaa\ntism so bad in my right hip and\nfoot that I could a't hit a lick of\nwork. In fact, I couldn't get aronnd\nat all without my cane or crutches.\nMy pain was almo-t unbearable, I\ncoufdn't sleep and got dowd to a\nmere shadow of my old self.\n'My case was i*o stubborn that\nit took a long, hard pull, but Tanlac\nfinally brought me around in fine\nshape. It gave me a fine appetite\nand such complete relief from the\nrheumatism tbat I put my crutches\naside and went back to work, It\nincieased my weight twenty-five\npounds and left me feeling like a.\nnew man.\"\nTanlac is for sale by all good\ndruggists. Accept no substitute.\nOver 37 million bottles sold.\nTake Tanlac Vegetable Fills.\nThe Ultimate in Radio\nReception\nEVERY ADVANCE of civilization has depended\nupon the progress of communication. From the\nAthenian runner to the instantaneous transmission\nof intelligence by Radio is a triumph of science. As\none Athenian runner was preferred over another for\nspeed and accuracy, so today Yelco Radiophones\nare chosen for the most perfect reception of Radio\nBroadcasting.\nA Yelco Receiver will give you hundreds of dollars of value in joy for every dollar it costs you. ^It\nwill never disappoint you or your friends.\nLet us arrange a demonstration for you.\nYALE GENERAL ELECTHIC\nWINNIPEG AVENUE\n=\"-***==>****\nMrs. B. Crowe, of Whlteborae Road, Croydon, writea:\u2014\"I am pleaaedto tell you that\nthe small tin ot ointment you sent to me at\nVentnor, haa proved a complete suoeeaa, ray\nbearing is now quite normal, and tbe horrible head noises have ceased. The action oi\nthis new remedy must be very rcinarkiible,\nfor I have been troubled with theae oom-\nplaint* lor nearly ten yeara, and have had\nsome ol the very best medioal advice togcthor\nwith other expensive Instruments all to no\npurpose. I need hardly aay how very grateful I am, for my life has undergone an entire\nchange.' \t\nTry one box to-day. which ean be forwarded\nto any address on receipt, of money order for\nfl.00. THRKRISNOTHIU UETTBrl AT ANY\nFRIGE.\nAddress orders to:\u2014\nTHB \"IAKMALBNB\" CO.,\n10, South View, WatUng St., Dartlord,\nKent, England.\nDUBSDANT to the provisions of Section 11 of\n17 thia Act, notice la hereby given ol the appointment of the following peraona aa pouud-\nkeepera of the pound established at Orand\nPorks in the Similkameen Division of Tale\nDistrict:\nPennoyer Bros., Qrand Forka, B. C.,1 with\npound paemiaea located on part of Lot 519,\nPlan B. 899,\nand\nA. R. Mudie, Qrand Forka, B. C\u201e with pound\npremises located on Lot t, Block 1, part of Lot\n184, Map HI.\nE. D. BARROW,\nMinister of Agriculture.\nDepartment of Agriculture,\nVictoria, B.C.,\nOct. 6th, 1928.\nTHE HUB\u2014Bring your boot\nand shoe repairs to my\nshop for neat and prompt\nwork. Look for the big\nboot.\u2014GEO. ARMSON\nYale Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\n$4.95\nMEN'S WORK SHOES\n$4.95\nCall at Donaldson's and\nsee the best buy in men's\nwork shoes on the market today.\nAlso don't forget to look\nat the new line of\nCHILDREN'S\nELK SHOES\nThese are real bargains.\nDonaldson's\nPhone 30\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\n'CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nJAftent\nDominion Monumental Works\n. Asbestos Products Co. Roofing\nESTIMATES FURNISNED\nBOX 332 I6RAND FORKS, B. C.\nJjCounter\nCheck Books\nWe have secured the\nagency] for Grand\nForks; of a large\nWestern Publishing\nHouse which manufactures a superior\ngrade of Counter\nCheck Books\u2014carbon back and carbon\nleaf styles.\nPrices Are Right\nEncourage Western\nenterprises and keep\nWestern money in\nthe West.\nAny Quantity\nfrom 100 up to 2500\nbooks.\nThe Sun\nJob Department\nNOTICE OF CANCELLATION OF\nBESBBVB.\nNOTICK IS HEREBY GIVEN that the reacrve\ncovering Lota XKMa, 2907a and WOSa, Similkameen Dlvlaion ol Yale DUtrlot, ia cancelled.\nG.B. NADBN.\nDeputy Mlniater of Landa\nDepartment of Lands,\nVictoria, B.C..\nSeptember M, 1921.\nOur\nHobby\nis\n\u2022Good\nPrinting\nrpHE value ol well-\nprinted., neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBall programs\nBusiness cards\nVisiting cards\nSh'pping tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nJt Posters\nMenus\nNew Type\n^Latest Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColombia Avenue and\nLake Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYalb Hotkl, First Stbbbt\nt\ni Synopsis of\nand Act Amendments\nOMIulmum prloe of iiret-claae land reduced\nto $6 an aore; second-elass to M.50 au acre.\nPreemption now couilued to (surveyed\nlanda only.\nKecorda will be granted covering only land\nauitable for agricultural purpoaea aud whioh\nia nou-timber land.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolfahed, bat\npartiea of uot more thau four may arrange\ntor adjacent pre-emptions with Joiut realdence, but eaeh milking ueceaeary improvementa on reapeotlve claims.\nFre-emptore muat occupy clalma for five\nyeara aud make improvementa to value ol fig\nPer aore, including objuring aud cultivation\nof at leaat 5 ucre\u00ab. beiore receiving Crowu\n(scant.\nWhere pre-emptor'lu ocoupation uot lata\nthau 1 yeara, aud haa mude proportionate\nimprovements, he may, because of Ill-health,\nor other eauae, bc grauted intermediate oer-\ntilioiite of lmprovemeut aud transfer hla\nolaim.\nRecords without permaneut realdeuee may\nbe iaaued, provided applioaut makes im-\nproveuieutatoexteut of *3u-iper auuumaud\nrecords same eaeh year. Failure to make improvements or reoord aame will operate aa\nforfeiture. Title oaunot be obtulued iu less\nthau 5 yeurs, uud improvements ol IIU.IHJ per\naore, iueludlng ti aerea o'earedaudoultlvated,\naud residenoe of at le.nl two years are res\nquired.\nl're-omptor holding Urowo grant may reoord auother pre-eiuptiou, if he requires laud\niuooisjuuotiou with hla farm without actual\noccupation, provided atututory improvements\naud residence muiutaiued ou Crown grauted\nlaud.\nUuaurveyedareas, uot exoeediug UU aorea,\nmay be leased as homesltea; title to be ob-\ntaiued after IulUlliug residential aud im \u2022\nprovemeut conditions.\nFur graaing uud industrial purposes areaa\nexceeding tilu aeres may be issued by oue per-\nsou or oompany.\nMill, factory or Industrial sites ou Umber\nlaud exoeediug U acres may be Purchased:\nconditions include paymuut of stumpage.\nNatural hay meadows luaoeeaaible by existing roads may be purohuaed conditional upou\nconslructiou of a roud to tbem. Rebate of\none-hall of coat of road, uot exceeding half\nof purohase prloe is made.\nPRS-BMPTORS' FREE GRANTS AOT.\nThe soope of this Aot is enlarged to include\n\"JI peraoua joining or serviug with Uie\nMa|\u00abaty'a iforcea. The time within whioh the\nheir* or deviaeea ol a deoeaeed pre-emptor\nmay apply for title uuder thia Aot la exteuded\nfrom oue year from the death of such\nperson, as formerly, uutil oue vear alter the\nconclusion of the present war. Thia privilege\nla also made retroactive.\nsJilhlSlC-fettW\"\u00b0 Pfo-omPtloua are du* or\npayable by aoldlera onprs-etnutlons recorded\nu\u00a3y.ur.Ue \"* m V*\u2122 ***^SwSSTS\n.Ifu'1*1****'*'. te*****t at moneys acer u*t, das\nand beeu paid aluoe August i, 1 \u00bbU, on ae-\noountof payments, fees or taxea on aoldlera'\npre eruptions.\nmSAKW \u00b0? \"gfoonouts to puroliaae town or\noity lota held isy member* of Allied Korssjs.\nor dependents, acquired direct or Indirect,\nremlttea.from cnlletmeut to Maroh 11,ltto.\nSUB-PUROHASERS OF OROWN\n.LANDS.\nProvision made for issuance of Crown\ngrants to sub-purohaaera of Crowu Landa,\nwho failed to complete purohase. Involving\nforfeiture, on fulfillment of conditions of\npurchaae, Interest and taxes. When sub-\npurohaaea do not olaim whole of orlgnal par-\nool. purchaae prloe due and taxea may bo distributed proportionately .over whole area.\nApportions must be made by May 1,11120.\nGRAZING.\nGraslng Aot, 1919. for ayatematlc development of livestock Industry provides for graaing diatrlcta and range administration under\nCommissioner. Annual graslng permits\nissued bated on numbers ranged; priority for\nestabllehed owners, Stook-owuera may form\nAeaootationa tor range management. Frees\nor partially free.permlta for aettlera, oampert\nor travellers, up to ten head.\nNEW HARNESS SHOP\nI have opened a new harness shop and am prepared\nto make harness to order\nand do all kinds of repair\nwork. Shop equipped with\nmodern machinery. All work\nguaranteed:\nC. A. Crawford\nM-MtTilighiaiOfflss","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":"GeographicLocation","value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1923_10_12","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":"IsShownAt","value":"10.14288\/1.0341340","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
Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13
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":"SortDate","value":"1923-10-12 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1923-10-12 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":""}]}