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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":" \u2022 l& .^>v n9\nZhc\n19q3 \u00a3 \\ ,mm,\nThird Year,--No.tl*\\^\nGrand Forks, B. C, Friday, February 19, 1904\nTWICE-A-WEEK\nGossip of the -City\nTwo Successful Dances Were Held\n*>\n! During the Past Week\nThe Dogs on the School Premises Are More Plentiful Than\nthe Dogs of War in the East\u2014Strange Actions\nof an Old Bachelor.\nTt.e Ladies' Aid of the R. C.\nchurch held their annual ball in\nthe Biden opera house last Monday v night. About seventy-five\ncouples were in attendance. The\n' hall wns beautifully decorated for the\noccasion, and the music furnished\n' by Miss M. Eyre and : Mr. LeBarr\nwas all that could be desired. Supper was served in the lower room of\nthe building by the ladies of the\nchurch in a manner reflecting great\ncredit on their ability to do so in\nfirst-class style. The dance was one\nof the most successful they have\never given in the city, which was\nmainly due to the untiring energy\nof the committee in charge* The\ngowns worn by the ladies were\nespcially attractive.\nsausage makers of the Jap and Russian armies.\nAn elderly bachelor living in the\nWest end of thc city was busily engaged iu looking for a baby carriage\nyesterday. What for? We do not\nknow. Later\u2014He won't need the\ncarriage. \"Zip\" has shuffled off\nthis mortal coil and gone to dog\nheaven. '\nday morning and evening. He will\nalso address the Sabbath school in\nthe afternoon, and will lecture in\nthe church on Monday evening at 8\no'clock, appearing in the costume of\nan Indian chief of our nothern tribes.\nThe public is cordially invited to attend any or all the above gatherings.\nA successful meeting of the Kootenay Presbytery was held in Nelson\nthis week. Revs. J. R. Robertson\nand W. R. Ross attended from this\ncity. The work of the past year was\nreviewed, and the work for the coming year was planned.\nValue of Ore Milled Averages $20 on the Plates, the Cont\ncentrates Averaging $100 to the Ton\u2014Crude\nGive Returns of $20 Per Ton. '\nC. A. Stoess, C.E., left yesterday\nvia the C. P. R. for Vancouver,,\nwhere he will reside for an indefinite\ntime.\nThe third annual ball given under\nthe auspieces of Grand Forks Lodge\nNo. 30, K. of P., at the opera house\nlast Friday night, parsed off very\nsuccessfully. About fifty couples\nwere in attendance. An orchestra\nof three pieces furnished excellent\nmusic. The different committees\nspared no pains in making the\nevent thoroughly enjoyable to everyone present. There was quite a\nlengthy program of dances, and for\nthose who did not care to trip the\nlight fantastic, card tables were provided . on the stage. At midnight\nthe Ruthbone Sisters Bcrved a sumptuous luncheon in the vacant rooms\ndownstaira. Tho dresses worn by\nthe ladies were very artistic nnd lie-\ncoming. It was one of the most\nsuccessful dances ever given by the\nlodge, which speaks well for the\nmembers who had it in charge.\nNumerous complaints have reached\nThe Sun during the past few days\nnncnt the great number of dogs that\nfollow the children to school\u2014like\nMary's little lamb. It is said that\nsome days it is impossible to sec\nthc snow on the school grounds for\ndogs\u2014and there's never a dog gone\nuntil the children take them home.\nThe canines are not content to play\nwith the scholars, but they run\nafter and frighten teams and this\nis what the people are kicking about\n\u2014that have, occasion to pass _up or\ndown Winnipeg avenue. Two or\nthree runaways have narrowly heen\naverted during the pas^few days by\nthe varied and unmusical barks from\nthese animals whose sole ambition in\nlife is tomakc a noise and wag their\ntales artistically. The city jiound-\nmastcr authorizes this great family\njournal to state that if the children\npersist hi fringing their pcta to school\nhe will swoop down on the aforesaid\npets some of these fine days with a\ndouble-barrel shotgun\u2014and he will\nlie accompanied by the official\n. ThoBe of our theatre-goers who\nrecently laughed heavily over \"What\nHappened to Jones\" are now to be\ngiven an opportunity of hearing\n\"Why Smith Left Home,\" the tale\nwhich, as related hy the same author, Mr. Broadhurst, is equally\nhumorous. The company returning\nwith the \"Smith\" comedy is the\nsame high grade organization managed by Mr. C. P. Walker which\ngave us the \"Jones\" production.\nCritics of both London and New-\nYork hive unhesitatingly declared\nthat of all the American farces,' 'Why\nSmith Left Home\" is the best.\nThat the public seem to agree in\nthis verdict is evidenced hy the fact\nthat on both sides of the water, in\nthe chief theatres, it enjoys an almost unprecedented run. The company comes to us on Tuesday,\nMarch 1st.\nW. K. Q, Manly last week purchased, at Curlew, Wash., three\nhorses, which will he used in his\ndelivery service. Hereafter he will\nrun one single and one double rig.\nThe business in his grocery department has increased bo much si nee he\nfirst opened up in this line that this\nstep has been made necessary. Anticipations have been more than\n\u25a0realized in his new venture.\nThe case of Shet Wong vs. Win.\nCarter, which was up in the county\ncourt here at the last session, ami\nin which judgment was reserved,\nhas been decided. The Chinaman\nsued Carter for $157 for work done,\nagainst which Carter put in a defense. Judge Leamy gave judgment\nin favor of Shet Wong for the full\namount nnd costs. J. 1). Spence appeared for plaintiff, and I). Whiteside for defendant.\nRev. J. R. Rolicrtson will occupy\nthc pulpit- of Knox church next\nSunday, morning and evening.\nMorning Bubject, \"Son of Man, I\/ml\nof the Sabbathr\" evening, \"Prepare to-Meet Thy God,\" being the\nfourth sermon of a scries on the Prophecy of A mos.\nRev. W. R. Ross, of this city, has\nbeen engaged to supply the pulpit\nof the Presbyterian church in Nel\nson for the next two months, or until the arrival of their Jiew pastor\nfrom Scotland.\nRov. Thomas Crosby, for forty\nyears a leading missionary of the\nMethods church of Canada, whose\nsuccessful work among thc Tsim-\ncheau Indians at Port Simpson, B.\nC, has been the admiration of the\nChristian churches of tho continent,\nwill preach missionary sermons in\nthe Methodist church here on Sun-\nGoo. A. Fraser, M.L.A., returned\nyesterday from Victoria, after being\nreleased froiij, legislative duties until the next session. Mr. Fraser docs\nnot appear to have lost any flesh\nduring the strenuous session just\nclosed.\nJ. C. Hamilton, who has been\nlaid up for over twenty weeks with\ntynhoid fever, is again able Ut I e\naround. Mr. Hamilton came here\nsome five months ago from Walla\nWalla, Wash., to take charge of the\nthe C. P. R. Granby station, and a\nday or after his arrival was stricken\nwith thc malady.\nH. N. Storey, the telegraph operator who is charged by thc Dominion Express com pally with roHnng\nthem of seven suits of clothes and\na quantity of cigars while employed\nat the C P. R. station in this city\nwas up before Police Magistrate\nCochrane Tuesday afternoon. On\nrequest of thc crown the case was\nremanded until next Wednesday,\nthc 24th inst.\nA Splendid Record\nThe Year's Work at the Waterloo,\nCamp McKinney\nMartin Burrell, Conservative can\ndidato for Yale-Cariboo, returned\nyesterday from a trip to Phoenix\nand Greenwood, where he did a little preliminary campaign work.\nLast Friday P. T. McCallum, local\nagent lor the Canadian Casualty and\nBoiler Insurance company of To-\nrsnto, received a cheque in full for\nthe entire amount of the claim of\nPrank Nibbling, who was injured at\nthe smelter on December INth 'last\naud laid up (or about six weeks.\nP. T. says he believes in representing a company that pays all claims\npromptly.\nIi. Lequime, of the Kettle River\nLumber company, returned Inst\nMonday from Kelowna, B.C., where\nhe had been on a business trip. He\nreports everything booming in that\ndistrict. Land values have gone\naway up; in fact, large tracts are\nselling as high as 8200 an acre. Mr.\nLequime recently bonded his large\nranch there to an Knglish capitalist.\nThe bond expires on the loth of\nMarch. '\nHenry Nicholson, of Camp Mc- ]\nKinney, in'the February issue of the\nB. C. Mining Record, gives particulars of work done in that camp.\nHe says, in part: i\nThe Waterloo mine, owned by the\nWaterloo Consolidated Mining and\nMilling company, of Spokane, Dennis Clark, managing director, and\nJohn Harvey, superintendent, has\nmade a splendid record during the\npast year. In the earlier part of\nthe year the mine was in the assessment state, but since July, when the\nfive stamp mill commenced running,\nthe bullion has been rolling off thc\nplates at thc rate of $5000 a month,\narid it is already rumored that a\ndividend is in sight. When it is\nconsidered that so much has been\naccomplished in such a short time\nand with such limited milling\npower, it speaks volumes for the\nvalue of the property and the ability\nof the management.\nI am indebted to the courtesy of\nthe supe.intendent Tor the following\nparticulars of work done, etc. Thc\nfirst development commenced in\nJanuary, with the deepening of the\n150 foot working shaft to 220 feet,\nwhen from the bottom a drift (117\nfeet) was run and an upraise made\nto connect with the 150-foot level,\nwhile on the 150-foot level a crosscut (70 feet) was run west of the\nshaft, where a winze in the ore was\nsunk to connect with the upraise\nfrom the 250-foot level, the vein\naveraging three feet and the ore\ncarrying high values. Prom the\nbottom of this winze stuping has\nbeen carried on for 100 feet in length\nand 50 feel in bight, for supplying\ntho mill, the richer crude ore being\nshipped. On the east of thc shaft\nat the i.lll foot level a dirift about\n75 feet was run on the vein, rich ore\nbeing obtained. What is known as\nthe free gold stopc on the 100-foot\nlevel has been opened up some 40\n\u2022 eel in leugtli,i the vein averaging\nthree feel. This slope extends up\nto the 00-loot level, where the vein\nwidens considerably.\nThe recent addition of five stamps\nand another concentrating table will\nnecessitate extra men in thc slopes\nof the shaft, where there is a large\nbody of ore, the coin) any's ground\nextending in that direction 1000\nfeet. At the same time development\nwork is being carried on east of tho\nshaft, in the direction of the Fonte-\nnoy claim, both on the 150-foot and\n250-foot levels.\nThe general value of thc ore milled\ngives about $20 ou thc plates, the\nconcentrates averaging $100 to the\nton and the crude sorted ore which,\nhas been aliippeil giving a return of\n*20 to thc ton.\n* * *\nChris Tolrbiason, who is working\non the Senatoi claim, in Summit\ncamp, which was recently bonded by\nthe Granby Smelter company, was a\nisitor in the city this week. He\nsays the ore body of the Senator is\nimproving all the time. They are\nshipping at the rate of a carload a\nday, sending the ore out by teams\nto the Ruthniullen spur. There arc\nfourteen men employed on the\nSenator at present.\nJay P, Graves, general manager\nof the Granby Consolidated, arrived\nin this city from Spokane on Wednesday. He left yesterday on a\ntour of inspection of the company's\nmines at Phoenix.\n'\"''' John Dotfaklson and John Gruu-\nwall returned home last Monday\nfrom a business trip to Spokane and\npoints south.\nJ. R. Ross, brother 6f W. R. Ross,\nthe druggist, bas been visiting in (he\ncity for the past week. Mr. Roes is\nin the employ of thc Great Northern\nut Kalispcll, Monday.\nW. H. Itter returned home last\nMonday from a business trip to\nRossland and Nelson.\nThos. Gray, a well, known traveling man from the coast, was in thc\ncity last Tuesday.\nThe smoke from thc Trail smelter\nhas destroyed 70 miles of C. P. It.\ntelegraph wires in that vicinity,\nwhich will have U> be replaced by\nnew copper wire.\nDr. Averill is having his store on\nthe corner of Bridge and Second\nstreets thoroughly renovated and remodeled. Thc ceiling has Ircon re-\npapcrcd ami the walls kalsnmiued.\nW. R. Ross, thc druggists, has\nlented the premises and will open\nup iu the drug business early next\nmonth.\nR. Galusha, general superintendent of thc Jumbo mine at Rossland,\nis in the city Ibis week ou business\nconuccCetl with thc ore shipments\nnow being made from that mine to\n.the smelter in this citv. ' \u2022\nMr. J. Ogle left for Greenwood\nyesterday for a short visit.\nG. C. Hodge, of the Vernon &\nNelson Telephone company, is a\nguest at the Vale.\nRev. J. R. Robertson attoiidedthe\nmeeting of Kootenay Presbytery,\nheld in Nelson on Wednesday and\nThursday of this week. \u00aeljp {totting &nn\n\t\nP0ULIS1IKD EVERY TUESDAY AND FU1DAY\n1 KVKNINU8 AT011AN1) P0IIKS, B.C., BY\nO. A. EVANS.\nSUDSCHIPTION RATES:\nOne year....$2.00 I Thrcemimths, .60\nSix months, 1.00 \\ One month 20\nAdvertising rules furnished on application.\nIxgal notices, 10 and ft Cts. per line.\nAddress all communications to\nTiik EveniSO Sun,\nplio.ve 55. c1iand p011ks, ii. c.\nFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9 1901\nTiik weather is so cold in eastern\nCanada that a few days ago in Toronto an engine attached to a passenger train became frozen up, and had\nto be thawed out before it could\nproceed. It is quite evident that\nthe eastern people are entitled to a\nlegitimate kick against their weather\nclerk. *\nA Letter received in Ottawa a\nfew days ago from a Grand Trunk\nengineer says that the Baldwin Locomotive company is authorized to\noiler men as high as $10 a day a\nwork for the Russian government on\nthe Trans-Siberian railway. Here is\na splendid chance for the \"high\npriced\" element of Grand Forks.\nLATEST METAL PRICES\nNew Youk, Feb. 18.\u2014popper,\nelectrolytic, $12.371@12.02|; lake,\n$12,624\u00ae 13.\nBar sirver, 50\"*.\nLead, $4.50@4.GO. .\nTHE RECORDS\nFollowing are tho locations, certificates of work, bills of sale, etc.,\nrecorded at the office^)' the G rand\nPorks, February 11th to 18th inclusive: '\nLetters of administration 6f estate\nof Archibald M. Conner to Isaac II.\nHallett, attorney for John B. Conner.\nHECORD PF LOCATIONS.\nLust Chance, Hardy mountain,\nMrs. K. Johnson.\nCarson, Fisherman creek, Julius\nCarson.\nBeaver, relocation of Alice, Summit camp, John A. McMaster and\nA Reid.\nNo. 7, near Granby smelter, relocation of No. 7, H. B. Cannon.\nNo. 8, near Granby smelter, relocation of No. 8, H. B. Cannon.\nNo. 9, near Granby smelter, relocation of No. 9, H. B. Cannon.\nCEKTHCATES OF WORK.\nMonitor, Frand Forks, Richard\nTherien.\nCKHTIEICATES OF IMI'KOTVEMEXT.\nCity of Vancouver Fraction, Central camp, Andre F. Giro 4-5, Hugh\nS. Caley 1-5.\nC. M. Henderson, of Greenwood,\nwas a visitor in the city this week.\nD, J. Darrapgh, of Kholt, arrived\nin the city yesterday.\nGREENWOOD GLEANINGS\nFrom the limes.\nGreenwoodis to have an abundant\nifupply of pure water before the end\nof 1904 if the present plans can be\ncarried out. The council is arranging for another supply. A dam will\nbe built and about 7000 feet of pipe\nrun to connect with the present system. The water from thc new sou:\nwill he absolutely pure, and there is\nlittle danger of contamination in the\nfuture. In case of fire the Twin\ncreek supply-will also be available.\nWith the purer supply of water it is\nexpected that the revenue from the\nwaterworks, which is already considerable, will be largely increased.\nAlbert 1. Goodell, formerly superintendent of the Sunset smelter\nat Bounday Falls, is building n\nsmelter at Grant's Puss, Ore., for a\nColorado Springs syndicate. He has\nsent for a number of the men who\nwere employed under him tit Boundary Falls.\" J. I!. Gaffey left last\nweek, and W. S. Keith leaves in a\nfew days to take his old position as\nMr. Goodcll's assistant. H. Mc-\nCurdy, bujlder; Dan Guy, blacksmith, and Mr. Goodell Sr. will also\njoin Mr. Goodcll's staff. Grant's\nPass, is near the California boundary\nline, just across from Siskiyou\ncounty.\nDuncan Ross, the Liberal candidate intends leaving next week for\nCariboo-\nMark P. Madden, president of tbe\nProvidence Mining company, is expected from Chicago in a few days.\nD. W. Graham, the son of A. D.\nGraham, a rancher on Boundary\ncreek above Greenwood, died Thursday afternoon of inflammation of\nthe bowels The funeral took place\nSaturday afternoon.\nHOTEL ARRIVALS .\nYAI.E. . \"\nJ. G. Billings, Nelson.\nThos. C. Gray, Vancouver. '\nMl R. Galusha, Spokane.\nII. G. Little, Vancouver.\nW. B. Holmes, Seattle.\nC. M. Henderson, Greenwood.\nJay P. Graves, Spokane.\n\u00a3. L. Stecves, Nelson.\nJ. M. Fahey, Toronto.\nC. A. Godfrev, Vancouver.\nD. J. Darraugh, Eholt.\nG. C. Hodge, Nelson.\nC. H. Breed, Spokane.\nLENTEN SERVICES\nThe following week-day services\nwill be held during Lent in Holy\nTrinity church:\nAsh Wednesday, Feb. 17\u2014Ser-\nvice, with sermon, 11 a.m. and 4:80\np.m.\nEvery Wc&nescla y\u2014Service nt\n4:30 p.m.\nEvery Friday\u2014Services at 7:30\np. m.\nHoly Week\u2014Monday, Tuesday\nand Wednesday, March 28th, 29th\nand 30th, service at 4:30 p.m.\nMaundy-Thursday, March 31st\u2014-\nHoly communion, 7:30 a. m.; service at 4:30 p.m.\nGood Friday, April 1st\u2014Service\nwith sermon, 11 a. m.; service with\nAnthem, 7:30 p. in.\nThe Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1904 Almanac\nThe Rev. Irl R. Hicks. Almnnae\nfor 1904 ia now ready. It will be\nmailed to nny address for 30 cents.\nIt is surprising how such an elegant,\ncostly hook ean be sent .prepaid Bo\ncheaply. No family or person is\nprepared to study the heavens, or\nthc BtorniB nnd weather in 1904,\nwithout this wonderful Hicks Almanac and Prof, Hicks' splendid paper,\nWord ami Works. Iloth are sent\nfor only $1 a year. Word aud Works\n] s among the best American magazines. Like the Hicks Almanac, it\nis too well known to need further\ncommendation. Few m-fii have labored more faithfully for the public\ngood or found a wanner place in the\nhearts of the people. Send orders to\nWord and Works Publishing Co.,\n2201 Locust St., St. Louis, Mo.\nAlleged Canadian Jests.\nA WRITER in the \"Pall Mall Gazette,\" who claims (o have hai]\nmuch to do with colonial new-s-\n. papers and colonial letters, has\nollected therefrom a number of what\n:$ chooses to call \"Sea-borne -Tests,''\nCanada seems to supply him with the\n:iost inaterlal. but , either he has\nvolved most of his Canadian jokes out\nC his own Inner consciousness or else\nhey have been curiously refracted In\njasslng through the prism of an Bng-\ni*h mind. In any ,event some of them\n--nutd never be looked upon as jokes In\n:ftls country. For example: \"Why doo\u00bb\n.Mcky Ducky want to be M. P.?\" askt\nthe jester of a far Western paper. \"Because-he now has one P too many,\" Is\nihe answer, which, aa the \"Pall Mall\"\nwriter says, It Is tolerably certain made\nlozens of big men In miners* boots\nlaugh till they bent like Jack-knives\nwhen that Inscrutable conundrum was\nfirst let loose In British Columbia. Here\na-e dome better attempts\u2014the alleged\n-wylngs of a ten-year-old boy, who Is\ncredited to Toronto:\nI.\u2014Teacher's question: \"What li\nmiss?\" Boy'B answer; \"Wfiat you\nreep off.\"\nII.\u2014Question: \"Who was the flrst\nman?\" Answer: \"WoHe!\" Reply:\n'Great Sakes! It was Adam!\" Repartee: \"Oh, well, If you count In foreigners!\" V\nIII.\u2014Question: \"Wh'-t were the Greek\nmarriage customs?\" Answer: Ev'ry\nman had one wife, wMch they called\nmonotony!\"\nAnother story told by the \"Pall Mall\"\nwriter Is that of a little doctor's from\na reserve In the North-West Territories. The doctor In question was a\nmoonlas * (Angllce, \"green\") g- aduate\nfrom the East, nnd hnd Just been appointed to look after the health of the\nIndians dwelling there or thereabouts.\nDn his first visit to the reserve he found\nthat everybody was suffering from a\nmysterious 'disease, the symptoms of\nwhich were very obseure. All the pa\ntients got a box of bread pills or a\nfcottle of colored water\u2014it Is best to Ik\nso the safe side, and faith has cured\n.Many a mysterious epidemic among\nIndians\u2014with the exception of the last\njomer. \"This Indian,\"- said he. laying\nBis hand on his stomach, which was a\n?hlef*s, \"when he drink cold water feel\n^old pain here.\" Then the agent remembered that the doctor's predecessor\nhad prescribed a bottle of good port tn\nthe hard case of an old squaw suffering\nfrom \"the grippe,\" complicated with\nno-flour-for-slx-months, We confess\nwe fail to see much of a joke lurking In\nthis story.\nToo Had.\nii\\f\u00aeS, I have watched her care\u00ab\"r?\nV' with a great deal of Interest.**\n* \"She is a. brilliant woman.\nl\u00bbn't she?\"\n\"She haB been. I cn't say that she\nla. As a girl she developed remarkable\nprecocity. It was not so much In her\nliterary proficiency that she display---]\nher qualities, as in that wide sense of\nher ultimate mission, In the broad --on*\nccptions she so early entertained of thi\ntrying needs of our social system.\nWhen only eleven, she had written a\nttrlklng paper on sex relationships. At\nfftlrteen, her monograph of \"The True\nPrerogatives of Woman\" had attracted\nwide attention -Vt fifteen, her essay\non \"The Silent Vote\" marked an epoch,\nand when, at uventy-two, Jhe delivered\nher \"Motherhood of Man\/ it became\no\"ident that a new force hud risen.\nWhat a pity that now, after all, her life\niho-ild be a failure.\"\n\"But how can It be a failure? What\nnny. she done?\"\n' Why, the mlreraltlt thing ha* gone\nrtf and jot maj*-***v\u20148f!vt York\n|)PERA HOUSE\nTUESDAY,\nMARCH 1ST\nJUST ONE JOYFUL NIGHT\nTHE \u2022\u2022CHEERFULl^LENTITUDE.'\nFor a nice hair-cut or slmve go to\nthe City Barher Slurp on Riverside\navenue. Haths 25e\nBaths 25 conts at the. Yule Barber\nShop. .\nIf you want to buy Halcyon Mineral Water call at the Grand Forks\nhotel. '\n\"You're next\" at the Yale Barber\nShop.\nBy Geo. H. Broadhurst, Author of\n\"What Happened to Jones,\"\n\"The Wrong Mr. Wright,\" etc.\nFour months at the Strand theatre,\nLondon.\nFour months at Madison'Square\ntheatre, New York.\nInterpreted by a company of Metropolitan players, under the management of Mr. C. P. Walker, of\nthe Winnipeg aud allied theatres,\nPRICES, $1.00 AND 75c\nHoward's\nCod Liver Oil\nEmulsion\nfor\nSevere Colds and\nCoughs\n1 For Sale at\nWOODLAND'S\nDrug: Store\nOPF-OSITE POSTOFFICE\nH*;\nThe Province Cafe\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nMEALS SERVED IN ANY STYLE.\nFRENCH, ITALIAN, AMERICAN OR ON EUROPEAN PLAN.\nCHICKEN TOMALES ALWAYS ON HAND.\nSMALL BANQUETS SOLICITED.\nTony De Pasquale, Prop.\nP. BURNS & CO.\nDealers in\nAll Lindaof\nFresh and Cured\nMEATS\nFish and Game in Season\nGRAND FORKS\nDONALDSON'S ClGAR STORE\nIs the Spot to Buy\nPIPES, TOBACCOS AND CIGARS\nAll Leading Brands in Stock.\nPHONE 64\nTRY A LORD ROBERTS\nBest in the Market for the MoneyJ\nCORNER BRIDGE AND FIRST STREETS\nWANTED-FAITHlrUL PERSON TO CALL\non retail trade urn! no-entrr for manufacturlng\nIronrre Inrvillji well OHtabllnhed lirislnerjs; local\nterritory; ntratght salary $20 paid weekly\nand expense money advanced; previous experience nnneootnry: roiitlon permanent;\nIjiiMiru-HH \u25a0ucee-rtful. unclose self-addressed\nenvelope. Sirperinteudent Trnvelers, 605\nMorron Bldg., Chicago. \t\nGRAND FORKS FEDERAL LA-\nbor Union No. 231, A.L.U.\u2014\nMeets every ' Wednesday evening\nat 8 o'clock in Federal Union hall.\nDan Kelly, Pres.\n- Jab. A. Harris, Sec.\nR. C. McCUTGHEON\nCABINETMAKER\nTurning, Scroll Work, Saw\nFiling, Gumming and Skate\nSharpening.\nRiverside Avenue,\nOpposite J. W. .Tones' Furniture Store.\nni.\nJ 0\nHERE TO STAY\nIF YOU WANT A CHOICE CUT IN BEEF, PORK, MUTTOt\nORJVJEAL, OR A NICE TENDER CHICKEN, CALL ON'US.\nA FRESH SUPPLY ALWAYS ON HAND.'\nCITY MEAT MARKET\nHAROLD JACKSON, Proprietor\nBRIDGE ST,\n(IONIC ON TIMB, ' . .\nIimur Jewelry \u00bbtore we have a special de-\npiipttiipnt \"fenced off,\" io tu speak, from the\nmain flhoW room. In oharfre of tli It- lu an ex-\nperl workman\u2014a mechanic, a genlui. You\nnIioiiIi! call at thit*ilepartineiit quite often, as\nyour watch Hhould be examined nt leant\noneea year, or theolawH of your diamond\nring may be worn off and you run the rlak\nof loaiiu*- the Htoue. We never charge tor ex-\namluatfonH- and all work left In our shop\nwill bu llxed lu a thorough, workmanlike\nmanner, will be IHJNU ON TIMB tt Is prom\nIned, and the price will be reasonable, satis-\nfactory. It your watch or diamond ring\ndoes not need repairing, you may have\nclock to ttx. A. b. MORRISON,\nJeweler and Optician, Orand Forks.\nHEADQUARTERS\nFOR\nSMOKERS'\nSUPPLIES\nCIGAR STORE,\nFOR A GOOD FIT\nA Stylish Finish and\nLasting Satisfaction\nGet Vour Clothes -\nMade by\nW. H. DINSMORE,\nMBUCHANTTAILOR,\nORAND FpRKS, B. C.\nDR. MACDONALD\nDENTIST\nGraduate Pennsylvania College of\nDental Surgery, Philadelphia.\nOffice in Megftw Block.\nPhone 138. Grand Forks, Ii. C.\nFROM. .\nthe london mutual,\n' Ottawa, ;anglo-american\nand equity\nFIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES\nYou can get\nthe best rates.\nW. L. WELLS,\nAOEN-.\ntlH'ND FORKS, B. C.\nGEO. \"CHAPPLE\nPRACTICAL PLUMBER\nI Carry a Complete Line\nof Plumbing Specialties.\nUP-TO-DATE PLUMBING.\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nDr. Follick,\nDENTIST\nGraduate of Philadelphia Dental\nCollege.\nPhone 27.\nOffice over Hunter-\nKendrick Co, 'a Store.\nW. H. P. CLKMKNT\nJohn d. bpencb\nBarrlnlertr SoltoltorH,\nNotaries, Ktc.\nHlileir Slook, Corner Winnipeg .AviMirro rrrnl\nFirst Street, )' ,\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nL. P, ECKSTEIN\nBARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.\nMOHHISON Block, GRAND FOHKS, H. CI.\nPacific Hotel\nJ.J. McINTOSH\nOpiiuulte C.P. K. Station,\nPhone59. Columbia B.C.\nCHURCH DIRECTORY.\nKNOX PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Grand\nForks\u2014J. R. Robertson, B.A., pastor.\nServioes evory Sunday at 11 a.m. ard 7:30 p,\nin.; Sunday sohool nhil Bible class, 3 a.m.;\nWestminster Guild of C. E., Tuesday* 8\nfi'.m.\nRSTMKTHODOTCHUKCH Ci-rner Main\nand Filth sts. J, F. Betts,pastor. Service*\nevery Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7.3U p.m.:\noliiss iiH**'tiiifj nt cliisc of morning- service:\nSuiiday sohool and Bible clam*at 8 i*. m.;\nprayer meeting every Thursday evening\nut 8 o'clock. The public Is cordially Invitec!.\nHOLY TRINITY CHUltfH (Churoh of Biir-\nland), Grand Forks, Henry Steele, vicar-\nHoly Communion, B a. m.; nioruin*-; prayet\nand sermon, II a. m.; Sunday sohool, 3 p.m.:\neveiisous; and sermon, 7l8u p, m. All nn-\ncordially invited.\nWHY GO EAST\nOver the sun-burned, sage brush\nand alkali plains, when you may\njuBt as ,well take a delightful, cool\nand comfortable ride through the\nheart of die Rocky Mountains in\nview of the grandest scenery on the\nAmerican continent? '\nThis you can do by traveling on,\nthe Rio Grande system, the far-\nfamed \"Scenic Line of the World,\"\nthe only transcontinental line passing through Salt Lake City, Glen-\nwood Springs, Leadville, Colorado\nSprings apd Denver enroute to eastern points.\nThree daily express trains make\nclose connections with all train's cast\nand west, and afford a choice of five\ndistinct routes of travel. The equipment of these trains is the best, including free reclining chair ears,\nstandard and tourist sleepers, a perfect dining car, service, and also\npersonally conducted excursion cars,\neach in charge of a competent guide,\nwhose business is to look after thc\ncomfort of his guests. No more\npleasant and inexpensive means ol\ncrossing the continent can be found\nthan i8 provided by these excursions.\nFor additional details address J.\nD., Mansfield, Gen. Agt., Rio Grande\nLjnes, No. 124 Third Street, Portland., Ore.\nTHE MILWAUKEE\nA familiar name for the Chicago,\nMilwaukee it St. Paul Railwuy, known\nall over the Union an the great , rail\nway running the \"Pioneer Limited'\ntrains every day and night betweenSt.\nPanl and Chicago, and Omaha an.\nChcago. \"The only perfect, trains in\nthe world.\" Understand: Conncc;\ntions are made with All Tr-anscrrnti\nru-rital Lines, assuring to passengers\nthe best service known. Luxurious\ncoaches, electric lights, steam heat, of\na verity equaled hy no other line.\nSee that your ticket reads via \"Tho\nMilwaukee\" when going to any point\nin tho United States or Canada. All\nticket agents sell them.\nFor rates, |ramphlets or other information, address\nR. L. Foiin, H. S. Mown,\nTrav. Pass. Agt., Gen. Agent,\nSpokane, Wash. Portland, Ore.\nH'tNTED-FAITHfUL PERSON TO CAM.\non retail triiile nml rtu-frnts trir- iinilrirfnotlli-Inn\nbouse lmvlnjrwellriNhililiNlii.il Ihi.Iiii>sn: luPitl\nterritory; straltrlrt sulnry tut imlrl wrreltly\numl exiieiibii imjney ailvniiireil; previous ex-\nper enoe nrrireeesNary; fosltiori Mrmonentl\nbusiness sileuessfril. Knolose sel'.urlilro.'eil\nenvelope. Mmrerinteiirleiit Tnivelel-s, thrTi\nMillion Hlilir., Clrtimiro.\nGRAND FORKS FEDKKAL LA-\nbor Union No. 281, A.L.U.\u2014\nMeets every Wednesday evening\nat 8 o'clock in Federal Union hall.\nDan Kelly, Pros.\nJas. A. Harkih, Sec.\nHeavy teaming of all kinds done\nby J. W. Jones.\nIf you want to buy Halcyon Mineral Water call at tho Grand Fork*\nhotel.\n\"You're'next\" at theJYale'Hurbor\nS\u00bb\u00b0P- & . z>J\nAnecdotal.\nu Is related that once, when a \u25a0\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0..\ntain in th* army was cornered by the\nenemy, he addressed hie men aa follows: \"My men, fight like demons until |\nyour powder gives out, then run. I'm\n& little lame, I'll start now.\"\nAn English rector on coming Into a\nnew parish, asked the clerk If there\nwere any Puseyltes (followers ol Dr.\nPusey, a high churchman) la the community. \"No, sir,\" replied the clerk;\n\"there used >to be some, but tor the lust\ntwo years the boys have took all their\neggs.\"\nMark Twain wat recently chaffing Sir\nWemyss Reid on the vagaries of English pronunciation. \"You spell a name\nB-e-a-u-c-h-a-m-p, and pionounce It\nMarch banks,\" he said. \"And you do\nprecisely the same thing,\" replied Sir\nWemyss. \"Wihat do you mean?\" a-ked\nMark Twain. \"Well, you spell your\nname CM e-m-e-n-s, and you p.oncunce\ntt Twain.\" * }\nAn eiTor of a new clerk In the mailing department of aa English publishing house was responsible' the other\nday for the maNir.g of a prospectus to\na world-famous statesman, who had\nbeen dead for some years. The letter\nwaa returned a few days later, with the\nfollowing endorsement: \"In Heaven,\n , 1901. Gentlemen: As your publications are not permitted to circulate\nhere, I believe It would be useless for\nme to subscribe for them. Yours respectfully,\" and here followed the name\nof the famous statesman.\nWhen asked what ihe thought of a\ncertain captain who frequented the Essex links, a Scotch cad-He said) \"Weel,\nair, he's a verra nice gentleman an'ii\ngood gaufer, but he's awfu' nerra\u2014aw-\nfu' nerra.\" \"Nariuwl What do you\nmean, Donald?\" \"Weei, sir, It wis this\nway. Et'ter the game was ower, and I\nhad carried his clubs up tae the house,\nlie says: 'Donald, will ye hae a draw?'\nand I said: 'I do be verra pleased,' so\nhe gets the botue, an' he'pouiin' awa'\nIntae a glass, an' I wan tin' tae be,genteel, says: 'S-.op. \u00bb-.op\u2014an'he stopped.*'\nWhat to do with Jefterson Davis\nshoujd he be captured, was a problem\nthat puzzled Lincoln's Cabinet not a little, lu speaking of it to General Grant\none. day. the President remarked:\n\"There was once an Jn-wiman wno had\nsigned the Father Mathew temperance\npledge. Going into a saloon to get a\nglass of lemonade to que.ich hla thirst,\nhe leaned ov-jr and wai->pered to the\nbarkeeper: 'And couldn't you put a little brandy in It unbeknownst to me-\nsllf?' ..So,\" continued Air. Lincoln, \"let\nDavis escape all ui.hekuowri lo yourself\nIf you can.\"\nL. it. Stock well, the popular actor.\nsaya that some years ago iu tian Francisco, when Peter. JackaOn, the colored\npugilist, was a tea.LU.re in a revival of\n\"Uncle Tom's Cabin,\" \"Hill\" Nye was\nto have lectured ai the Baldwin Theater, but was greeted by so small an\naudience that he excused himself and\nwent over to hear JucKtun talking of\nthe pearly gated to Little Eva. After\nthe performance Stockwell met Nye in\nthe lobby of the theater, and he exclaimed* \"Hello, Nye! What did you\nthink of Peter?\" \"Well,\" responded tho\nhumorist, dryly, \"anatomically he was\ngreat, but Uncle Tomically he is the\nworst I ever saw.\"\nDr. Varnadoe, a noted professor of\n3reek, is very fond of Uowen\u00bb, and\nsome days ago, on returning from his\ncollege duties, he found lu his front\nyard a pestiferous calf belonging to a\nneighbor. The doctor gave cnase, and\nthe animal plunged toward the ilower-\nplt, and In anotner Instant crashed\nthrough the glass cover and mixed'at\nranaom with the puts and plants below. When anouher professor passed a\n'few minutes later, he said, gravely: \"I\ndo not understand, Dr. varnadoe, why\nyou should object so seriously to. hav- j\ning a modest cou-i.p uuded to your\nline collection of pia.ua.\" Tne doctor's\nfrowning face relaxed. \"Ah, Sanuurn,\"\nho retorted, \"you see, this waa only a\nworthless bulrush.\"\nNot long ago a tourist in New Orleans went to see the statife of Andrew\nJackson in thai city, on the pedestal of\n.\u2022ui-,u 10 in**..**j>.u, w.'veu .\u2022<-* c--.ui.id;\nDivided We Fail.\" fcjjeiug an old colored man standing by, he asked, \"Uncle, did that Inscription stay there, all\ndunlng the Civil War?\" \"No, suh,\" responded the old uncle, \"hit didn't stay\ndar endurln' de wan. In de fust place,\ndem letters was standin' out loik dey\nwas plastered on. Den de wan bust\nloose, and de Coufed'rate gln'ral down\nyere, he tuk a chisel and cut dem letters off smooth. Den ol' Gln'ral Butler, he come erlong wld his Union so-\njers, an' he tuk a chisel an' cut dem\nIn deep, laik dey Is now. An', Lordy,\nhow de folks down yere did sw'ar when\nol' Gln'ral Butler brush de dus' oit'n\nhis clothes an' git up frum his wu'k an*\nsay, 'I'se a-gwlne to hang de fus' Johnny Iteb what cuts dem letters off\nag'In.' \"\nWhen the late President of the United\nStates and party went west not many\nmonths before he was shot, Mrs. McKinley, it will be remembered, went\ntoo. While talking one day wUh Mr.\nScott, the man who built the battleship \"Oregon,\" relates a writer in the\nBoston \"Journal,\" Mrs. McKinley said:\n\"Oh, do you,play crlbbage, Mr. Scott?\"\n\"Yes,\" was the great shipbuilder's answer. \"Well,, so do I,\" said Mrs. McKinley. \"1 wish you would play a gams\nwith me.\" \"I should be delighleu to\ndo so,\" was the reply. Later, as Pr-j-ji-\ndent McKinley and Mr. Scott were\nlooking over the latter's big plant. Mrs.\nMcKinley not being present) the President said: \"Oh, by the way, Mr. Scott,\ndidn't I hear you and Mrs. McKinley\narranging to play crlbb ige some time?\"\n\"Yea,\" eald Mr. Bcotl, \"we are going to\nplay.\" \"Well, what kind of a plty\u00abar\nare you?\" asked the President. \"Oh,\npretty fair, 1 gue.-i.-j; I play a pretty\ngood game.\" \"Well, so du 1,\" salu Mr.\nMcKinley. \"But, do you know, It may\naeem strange, but It is a Tact, that I\noave never been able to play well e ough\nto beat Mrs. McKinley.\" As he .-.-id\nthis he looked at Mr. Seott with a significant emlle. Their eyes met. It was\nenough. Mr. Scott understood, and H\nwas saft- to say that he did not beii\nMr\u00ab. McKinley.\nJust what you want\nJust when you want it ]\nGOOD SERVICE is composed of two elements\n\u2014excellence of the work and promptness in\nthe execution. Bad work executed promptly is not good service\u2014good work delivered behind\ntime is not good service; but the two combine to\nmake one of the most necessary, but hardest to obtain and often most expensive, requirements of the\ntwentieth century business man. That we have\nlearned the lesson in theory we have shown. Our\ncustomers will testify that we have also learned it\nin practice.\nWE PRINT:\nPrice Lists\nPamphlets\nLetterheads\nBillheads\nStatements\nInvitations\nBall Programme\nBusiness Cards\nVisitingJCards\nShippinggTags\nDodgers\nEnvelopes\nEtc., Etc., Etc.\n4*\nWe Carry a Complete Line of Stationery in Stock.\n40\nOur Jobbing Plant is new, and consists of the\nlatest and most popular faces of type anil the\nmost up-to-date machinery. All work guaranteed\nto give satisfaction.\nTheEveiiingSun\nJpb Department. \u00ab\">\u00bb-\u25a0\u00bb p\nW. K. C. Manly\nShelf and Heavy \u2022\nHARDWARE\nAlso a Large Stock of\nFRESH GROCERIES\nJust Opened Up.\nThe iBest on\nthe market.\nTryour UPTON'S TEA\nr'hojae 6 Bridge Street\nTHE TORONTO\nDAILY NEWS\ni AN D THE\nTWICE-A-WEEK\n.\u25a0Eor only.\n$2.25 PER YEAR\nA radical change from old methods and prices has been made by\nthe Toronto Daily News. The eyes\nof the newspvper world have\nbeen upon The News for the past few\nmonths, during which time several\ndepartures have been made which\nhave given that paper a widespread\nreputation for enterprise and originality. This latest move is to place\nThe News at the price of $1.00 a\nyear by mail. Only a deep-founded\nbelief in the future success of The\nNews could lead the publishers to\nmake such a reduction in price.\nBut just as thc dollar magazine has\ntaken hold of thc people, so, we venture to predict, The News will secure a vast and ever-increasing circulation, based not only on the popular price at which it is sold, but\nmainly upon the intrinsic merits of\nhe paper.\nWe have arrangements concluded\nwhich enables us to club the Toronto\nNews with our own paper at $2.25 a\nyear in advance. Such a combination presents many Unique features\n\u2014our semi-weekly giving you all\n' thc homo and district news, and\nthe big 12-page daily keeping you in\ntouch with events all over the world.\nSend us your subscription to The\nNews, or if you would like to see\ntho paper first, write fa and wu will\nsecure a sample copy.\nSubscribe\nNow.\nkc\n^A\nBOUNDARY ORE SHIPMENTS\nThe following table gives the ore shipments of Boundary\nfor the past week:\nmines (for 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, and\n* i1 1900\nGranby Mines,Phoenix '. 64,583\nSnowshoe, Phoenix ;.... \u25a0 297\nBrooklyn, Phoenix 150\nMother Lode, Deadwood 5,340\nSunset, Deadwood '\t\nMorrison, Deadwood \t\nB. C. Mine, Summit 19,494\nR. Bell, Summit ' \t\nEmma, Summit ' \t\nSenator, oummit Camp .....\nOro Denoro., \t\nWinnipeg, Wellington 1,070\nGoldenOown,Wellington >. 2,250\nAthelstan, Wellington 1,200\nKingSolomon,W. Copper \t\ni\\To. 7 Mine, Central\t\nCity of Paris, Central 2,000\nJewel, Long Lake 160\nCarnii, West Fork .....\nProvidence, Providence .'....\nElkhorn, (greenwood\t\nE. P. U. and Goldfinch\t\nRuby, Boundary Falls , \t\nMiscellaneous TT. 3,230\nTotal, tons 99,730\n'trrinby Smelter treated 62,387\n1901. 1902.\n231,762 309,858\n1,721 20,800\n1003. 1904. Past Week\n393,718 67,650 10,500\n74,212 \t\n99,034 141,326\n804 7,455\n150\n.47,405\n560\n650\n14,811\n8,53b\n130,492\n15,731\n3,339\n19,365\n19,154 3,040\n1,040\n785\n625\n22,937\n363\n15,537\n2,435\n4,495\n844\n5,299\n550\n875\n665-\n5,646 2,47?\n495\n264\n870\n625\n350\n890\n80\n3,456\n482\n2,175\n219\n910\n400\n167\n50\n50\n50\n325\n390,000 507,515 ' 684,426 100,480\n230,828 312,340 374,203 77,088\n15,884\n13,540\nMax O'Re!! on \"Discontent.\"\nMAX O'REIiL, never neglects to\nsay a. good word for the ladlei\nwhenever opportunity serves.\nAt the same time, he does not\nshut. his eyes to their fault!,\nbut Is only \"a, little blind,\" as wltnea,\nwhat he says about \"The Discontented\nWoman\": \/ .\n\"We all know trhst woman, no^ unkind, not exactly sour, but sad, depressed and depressing, who Is welt\noff and might enjoy life, but who look*\nas If there was not one pleasure left in\nthe world to make It worth living In.\n\"She may feel ever so well, she will\nrever confess It. She hates to be told\nthat she looks well. She thinks you are\nwanting in sympathy. She loves to be\npitied, and has no objection to being\ncalled 'Poor Mrs. A.!* Yet she ts very\nsusceptible, and resents any attentions\nthat are paid to other people In her\npresence. She was Jealous of her sisters when a girl; now she is jealous of\nher children, jealous of the laaies who\ncall. Jealous of her husband's secretary\nor typewriter. She hns no reason for\nbeing Jealous, she knows it, but It Is a\nhabit, and she likes to keep her hand at\nIt.\n\"She Is fond of calling on sick people,\nand, as she has had every mortal disease or Indisposition you care to name,\nshe gives the people whom she visits\nher own experience of their disease,\nand they have to listen to all the minute details of the sufferings she had lo\ngo through. She hopes that you wltt\nget better.\n\"Meanwhile she tells you of all the\npeople she knows who have died of the\ndisease with which you are afflicted,\nbut reassures you by stating that some\npeople have been known to recover.\n\"She is the town-crler of bad news.\nIf there Is a sad event of which she\nhears early, she Immediately orders a\ncarriage and goes on a round of visits\nto announce It. When her friends see\nher arrive unexpectedly they look at\neactr other and say, 'We shall hear\nsome bad news.'\n\"She Is a prophet of Ill-omen. She\nloves the sad, and revels In It. It is her\nlife. She has not a cheerful feature\nabout her. She Is a hair in your soup,\na crumb in your bed. an unmitigated\nbore.\n\"She never enjoys what she has, but\nSends her life r rgrett ns y hat lie doei\nnot or cannot have, if she lose a \u00a34\nbill and her husband r-ays to her, 'Nev-\n\u00bbr mind; here's another,' she goes on\nilghlng and whining, for she thinks\nthat if she had not lost that \u00a34 she\nwould now have \u00a38.\n\"There Is no cheering her up. and\nwhen a real misfortune befnlls her you\nfeel inclined to exclaim: 'Good, serves\nher right, now she has something\nworth crying over.' But this seldom\nhappens, If ever, for It Is a remarkable\nfact that this kind of woman is the\nvery one who never has real troubles -\nexcept those of her own manufacture.\"\nUnion Heat CoriPANY\nWholesale and Retail\nMeat flerchants\nI\nHkad Owice at :\nGreenwood, B. C. \u2022\nMAHKUT8 at:\nGreenwood, B, C.\nPhoenix, B. C.\nG hand Fours, B. C.\nMcLeod, Ai.ta.\nFresh and Cured Meats\nFresh Fish, Game and Poultry\nWe Supply Only the Best\nYour Trade Solicited\nPHONE 14\nThe \"Club\"\nopposite postoffice,\nFirst Street.\nHighest Grade Imported\nPorts, Cherries, Burgundies, Etc.\nJOE THATCHER\nPROPRIETOR\nJ. W.Jones\nFurniture Dealer\nA large consignment of Lounges, Dining-room Chairs,\nTables and Sofas just arrived. Call and inspect them.\nAlsq a stock of Blankets, Quilts, Pillows., etc., to be sold (\nat greatly reduced pricea, See our display of Pictures \u25a0\nfor Christmas.\nRiverside Avenue\nGrand Forks\nN. D. McINTOSH\nBE-ON'* STUB-IT, ORAND PORKS\nA Complete Line of Furniture, Hardware and Cutlery Always\nQirricd in Stock and Sold Bed-Rock Prices. Largest Variety of\nGoods in thc Citv.\nNEW AND SECOND-HAND GOODS\nBought and Sold. Call and Inspect My Goods,\nof New Articles Suitable for Christinas Gifts.\nA Great Variety\nSTOVES A SPECIALTY,\nSEE MAC FOR BARGAINS\nCau e For Madness\n\"By George,\" s id a man who wa*\nriding to the city In an early train, \"I\nfie test people who are so positive about\neverything.\"\n\"It la a disagreeable habit,\" the pas*\n\u25a0Verger who sat next to him admitted,\n'and It always pleases me to see such\npeop'e confronted with proofs that they\nire in the wrong.\"\n\"Yes, It dues me, too. My wife's\ncousin has been visiting us for several\ndays,' and he's one of those know-lt-all\nfelloi *'. You can't tell him anything.\nYesteiday morning he was reading, and\nI gave him a hint on how to pronounce a French word that he used.\nBut do you suppose he was witling to\nadmit that I knew more about It than\nha did?\"\n\"I suppose not\"\n\"No; he sat thert, right at my own\ntable, and argued with me for twenty\nminutes trying to show that I didn't\nknow what I was talking about. Such\npeople mnke me weaiy.\"\n\"Why didn't you fet a French dictionary and prove to him that he waa\nwrong?\"\n\"Oh, 1 looked it 19 yesterday and\nfound that I -was mistaken myself; but\nwhat makes me mad is the fain it\nhe was bo positive about It.\"\nNow Is the Time\nTo Make Your Hens Lay-\nEggs Are Away Up.\nCome and buy Food that will make them lay\u2014such as Ground\nBones, Bones, Beef Scraps, Oyster Shells and Pratt's Poultry\nFood.\nAlso a\nFull Line of\nFLOUR AND FEED\nAlways on\nHand.\nN. McLELLAN & CO.\n\u00bb!*\u00ab\u00ab***\u00ab\u00ab*\u00bb\u00bb**]\u00ab\nI White Bros, 5-E-\nThe dinner partr eomlitod of four.\nteen stomachs and two very Interfiling\nbrain-,-N. Y. \"IAU\u00bb\nCareful attention given to ,\nWatch Repairing.\nEngraving a Specialty.\n2 BRIDGE STREET\nGRAND FORKS, B. C. g\ne\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab**<\u00ab0\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bbl\u00bb\u00ab->\u00abitm\u00bb\u00bb","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":"Evening_Sun_1904-02-19","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\/1.0341473","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":"1904-02-19 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":"1904-02-19 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 Evening Sun","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":""}]}