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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" TWELFTH YEAR-No. 42\nA MET NlttLl\nDoukhobor Body Interned at\nNisht, Is Subsequently\n,..    Exhumed\nbelow normal. Hence, there hat-\nbeen crowded in tbe July buying\nmovement orders tbat would have\nbeen spread under ordinary circumstances over a tbree months' period.\nAfter many years of patient waiting, tbe citizens of Grand Forka are\nrzjoicing over the fapt that the provincial government has at last made\nan attempt to enforce the laws of\ntbe lsnd against a colony of alien!\nin this district. Tbe outcome will\nbe awaited with keen interest.\nIt is well known here that tbe\nDoukhobors bury their dead at\nnight, and without securing the\nnecessary permission. Early in tbe\nweek it became known that a member of tbe colony died, aod tbe members of a committee of Orand Forks\ncitizens made up tbeir minds to attend the funeral. To carry out tbis\nprogram sentinels were placed at tbe\nhouse where tbe death had occurred,\nand a party was sent out to lind the\nsecret graveyard. Tbe latter were\nfinally successful in discovering a\nnewly made grave about a mile\nfrom Mr. Tweddle's former residence, wbere the body of tbe dead\nperson was kept. The members\nof the committee kept their vigils\ntbe greater part of Wednesday\nnight.\nAbout 4:40 in the morning, just\nbefore daybreak, the funeral pro\nce. sion reached the grave. Tbe body\nwas borne in a blaok casket, witb\nwhite trimmings. From ils size, it\ntyas evident that the deceased was\na cbild. After the body had been interred the work of the watchers waa\nended, and they returned to the\ncity and notified the authorities.\nDuring their night watch some of\ntbem felt decided uncomfortable,\nand if some one started a ghost\nstory there is no telling what would\nhave happened.\nActing on instructions from tbe\nattorney-general's department in Victoria, Provincial Constable Stans-\nfield, of Phoenix, and Chief Savage\nwent out to the burial grounds yesterday afternoon aod disinterred tbe\ncasket and brought it to this city.\nThe body is said to to be in ao advanced state of decomposition.\nCoroner Black, of Greenwood, arrived in the'sity today for tbe purpose of holding an inquest. After\nselecting a jury and administering\nthe oath, be adjourned tbe case until Monday, and ordered a postmortem examination of tbe body to\nbe made.\nTbe next move of the government\nis eagerly awaited here.\nDewdney-Ferguson\nWalter R. Dewdney, government\nageut at Greenwood, and Miss Kathleen Ferguson, of Midway, were\nunited in marriage at the home of\ntbe bride's parents at the latter place\non Wednesday morning, August IS,\nRev. J, R. Munro performing the\nceremony. Mr. Dewdney, who is a\nnephew, of Hon. Edgar Dewdney,\nformerly lieutenant-governor of\nBritish I'olumbia, was employed as\nclerk ia the government offloe in\nthis city for a decade, and has a\nlarge number friends bere wbo will\nwish him and bis bride joy and\nprosperity. After the ceremony\nbreakfast was served, and tbe happy\ncouple left for Victoria and Vancouver, where tbey will spend their\nhoneymoon.\nCITV COUNCIL MEETING\nHeavy Sales of Copper\nExcepting only the extraordinary\nsales of 1007, there bas been in full\nawing during the pact three weeks\na record-breaking copper buying\nmovement, in wbich between\none hundred and two hundred\nmillion pounds of the metal\nbave been contracted for at\nprioes ranging from 14 to 15} cents\na pound. No signs of a let-up bave\nyet appeared, and producers predict\nthat even higher prices will follow\nfurther buying. During June there\nwas practically no copper buying by\neither foreign or domestic coneuni-\ners, while dnring the preceding\nmonth pf May the bookings were far\nSale of City Property for\nDelinquent Taxes Next\nMonth\n.Mayor Fripp and Aid. Manly,\nMiller, Smith, Taylor, Woodland\nand Wright were present at the\nmeeting el the oity council on Mon\nday night.\nA communication was read from\nthe Grand Forks Transfer company\nin reference to tbe city's coal supply\nfor tbe coming winter, aod it was\nreferred to the finance committee.\nWm. Bonthron petitioned tbe\ncouncil for permission to construct a\nseptic tank under the sidewalk at\nbis new block on First street. Tba\nrequest was granted on condition\nthat he complied with the health\nregulations of tbe city.\nA resolution was adopted asking\ntbe publio works department at Ottawa to deed to thepity a portion of\nthe upper end of tne lot on wbich\ntbe post office is Ioc Hed in order to\nimprove tbe curvature of Bridge\nstreet.\nTbe water and ligbt committee\nwas authorized to purchase water\nmeters.\nA   resolution   was  adopted con\ngratulating lbe boy  cadets  of  the\npublio school on tbe creditable   record   they   made wbile in camp at\nNelson.\nA resolution was adopted authorizing the olerk to hold a sale of city\nproperty for delinquent taxes on\nSeptember 12.\nBoard of Trade Invites Associated Boards to Meet\nHere Next Tear\nAt the meeting of the board of\ntrade Wednesday nigbt a resolution\nwaa adopted inviting tbe associated\nboards of trade to hold its session\nin this city next next. A resolution\nwaa adopted asking tbe associated\nboards to urge the attorney-general\nto enforce the laws against aliens in\nthis province. The feasibility of\nestablishing a creamery bere was\ndiscussed at length. Complaint was\nmade tbat the North Fork road waa\nin bad condition for tymvy traffic,\nand a resolution was adopted asking\nthe superintendent of roads to inspect tbe same and to have it repaired. The board petitioned the\nDominion Express company to\neliminate the twelve hours' lay over\nin Nelson of express shipments.\nThe associated boards wae asked to\nurge tbe forestry department (6 establish a telephone system and\nleokout stations in this provinee.\nA sbort meeting-of the police\ncommissioners was beld in tbe city\nhall on Wednesday evening, Mayor\nFripp and Commissioners Norris\nand Taylor being present. Abe\nWright was summoned before the\nboard to answer a charge of having\ncirculated certain slanderous stories\ncalculated to injure the good name\nand reputation of tbe mayor. Mr.\nWrigbt, under oath, emphatically\ndenied having given currency to\nthese reports, and was unable to\nsay where they originated. Tbe\nchief of police was instructed to\nmake an attempt to trace the stories\nto their original source. This was\nall tbe business transacted.\n\"The A-nbush of Ai\" and \"The\nVictorious Wrestler\" are the subjects\nof Rev. Charles W. King's Snndsy\nservice addresses in tbe Baptist\nchurch. Tbe morning subject is of\nspecial interest to parents and all\ndevoted to tbe boys aod girls; tbe\nevening of special interest to men.\nSunday school and pastor's Bible\nclass, 2:30 p.m.; subjeet for study,\n\"A Nation Crossiog the Red  Sea.\"\n81.00 PER YEAR\nW. A. Williams, manager of the\nGranby smelter, returned on Saturday from Hidden Creek. Mrs.\nWilliams accompanied htm bome.\nTbe union picnic of the  Presby\nterian and Baptist  Sunday schools\nwill be held on   the  afternoon   of\nWednesday, August  20,   beginning'\nat 1 o'clock, on tbe river bank opposite Mr. Mtchener's home.   All   the'\nscholars of the schools, tbeir parents\nand friends are cordially invited to\nbe present and spend a jolly after\nnoon    Bring well filled baskets.\nDr. Barrett, Dominion inspector\nof breweries, and i. A. Miller, inspector of inland revenue, visited\ntbe local customs office on Wednesday.\nThe city of Greenwood will hold\ntax sale on September 13,\nThe Bee and the Apple Tree\nWben a thoughful man Nets teetb\ninto s juicy apple he owes thanks\nnot to ths apple tree alone nor to the\ngrower. Recent experiments bave\nplainly borne out what apiarists already had plausibly conjectured. It\nappears that in the marriage of the\nblossoms, or, ss a botanist would\nsay, in their pollination by one another\u2014that mysterious intermingling without which no apple blossoms can develop into seeds and\ncore and fine-grained flesh\u2014there is\na matchmaker and literal go between\n\u2014the familiar honey bee.\nProfessor Wangb, a national _ authority on orcharding, but himself.\nno prepossessed lover or keeper of\nbees, haa exposed among apple trees\nthrough the time of blossoming\nplates of glass coated witb   vaseline.'\nHe found that tbese traps caught no\npollen, no matter how tbe wind blew\nupon them from tbe flower-crowded\ntrees. He drew the unavoidable\nconclusion tbat tbe pollen of apple\nblossoms, unlike the -pollen of Indian corn, is not carried by the air,\nbut must be borne, like the pollen\nof orchids, by the visiting insects.\nAnd in the days of blossom time,\nearly and cool as they usually are,\nthe hot-footed honey bee is aimoat\nthe only Johnny, or Jenny rather,\non the spot.\nMost people know that the cucumber vines trellised under glass will\nnnt set their fruit unless a oniony of\nbees has heen brought in to fertilize\none yellow blossom from another.\nFew of ua, however, have supposed\nthat ordinary apple - trees, growing\nin sun and wind beneath tbe open\nsky, would also be cheated of their\nfruit were they not helped by the\ngolden-dusted bees..\nPublic School Cadets Made\nRecord in Field Sports\nat Nelson    .\nThe boy cadets retnrned bome on\nSaturday, after a week's encampment at Nelson. In the field sports\non Friday the members of tbe Grand\nForks contingent won many band-\nsome prizes, all of wbich are now ou\nexhibition in McKim & Leroy's\nshow window. The following were\nthe prize winners:\n100-Yard Race\u2014First, A. Munro,\ncamera; second, C. McCallum, stick\npin.\n220-Yard Race\u2014First, A. Munro,\nrifle; third, C. McCallum, baseball\nmitt.\nRelay Race, 440 Yards\u2014First,\nGrand Forks, four pennants.\n440-Yard Rage\u2014Third, R. Newbauer, scout knife.\nPick-a Back\u2014Third, A. Munro\nand W. Wade, stick pin.\nTug-of-War\u2014First, Grand Forks\nteam, silver cup, not to be competed again, and eight pennants.\nTent Race\u2014First, Grand Forks\nteam, by R Newbauer, eight pennants.   Time, 1 min., 30 sec.\nBest Drilled Company\u2014Grand\nForks, Uoion Jack.\nTo Instructor of Best Drilled\nCompany\u2014H.GIaBpell,Grand Forka,\nfishing rod. *\nRifle Shooting\u2014 First, Glenn Lemaster, rifle; second, Harry Bowen,\nrange score book.\nThe Granby Consolidated company baa taken an option on the\nLame Foot group of mines, near\nCurlew lake, eight miles north of\nRepublic, for 1150,000,from \"Dutch\nJake\" Goetz and Harry Baer, proprietors of the Ctuur d'Alene hotel\nat Spokane, and tbe deeds to the\nproperty are in escrow in the Trad\ner's National bank, awaiting tne result of diamond drill exploration.\nTbe group comprises fifteen claims\nand tbe Granby company already\nhas a diamond drill at work. Tbe\ncontract stipulates that no less than\n$28,000 shall be expended in ex\nploring the deposits, principally an\niron fluxing ore, within eighteen\nmonths from May 1, 1913, and at\nthe expiration of tbe period tbe option will have ro be exercised or will\nlapse automatically.\nHope Mountain Link of K.V.\nR. and G.N*R. Will Cost\n$30,000,000\nOne of the most important railway\ncontracts as affecting the future of\nGrand Forks and tbe the southern\nportion of tbe province was signed\nin Vancouver last Friday. The\nKettle Valley Railway company,\nafter several days of consideration,\nby the president, J. J. Warren, decided to let the contract for the construction of tbe company's line from\nColdwater Junction east of tbe Hope\nmountains down tbe valley of the\nCoquehalla river to the town of\nHope. The firm of McArthur Bros.,\nof New York, proved to be the lowest out of maoy tenderers.\nThis link is really tbe most important in the solution of the transportation problem of British Columbia. It will bring this city into\neasy access with tbe coast cities and\nmake accessible localities which now\ncannot be reached within two or\nthree days. Wben completed, Grand\nForks will be a divisional point on\nthe main line of tbe Canadian Pacific railway, and the distance between Winnipeg and Vancouver will\nbe shortened by nearly three hundred miles.\nThis section of the Kettle Valley\nrailway will be used in joint by tbe\nCanadian Pacific railway and tbe\nGreat Northern, each road bavin g\nequal running rights thereon.\nTbe contract exceeds $3,000,000\nfor thirty-eight miles of track. It\nwill involve very heavy rock work\nand some. engineering difficulties,\nbut it bas been agreed upon, after\nconsultation witb the most expert\nengineers of tbe Pacilic coast, as tbe\nonly route possible and as tbe cheapest in the long run.\nTbe McArthur company, wbicb\nwas represented io Vancouver by F.\nC. Hitchcock, will begin- work as\nsoon as it can get its plant together,\nand promises to have tbe work finished by November 1 of next year.\nThe Coquehalla section, considering its sbort length, will probably\nbe tbe heaviest railway work ever\nundertaken in British Columbia.\nTbe thirty-eight miles will cost, it\nis estimated, about $3,000,000. For\na considerable distance tbe expenditure will exceed $100,000 a mile. In\ntbat short distance no less than\ntwelve tunnels will have to be\ndriven.\nMETEOROLOGICAL\nThe following is the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\nday during tbe past week, as re\ncorded by tbe government thermometer on K. F..Laws' ranch:\nMin.     Max.\nAug.   9\u2014Friday 60 82\n10\u2014Saturday .... 48 87\n11\u2014Snndty  50 93\n12\u2014Monday, 58 78\n13\u2014Tuesday.  49 69\n14\u2014Wednesday.. 48 64\n15-Thursday  44 68\nInches\nRainfall......... 0.39\nBob Lamond and Neil McCallum\nleft for Nelson on Moday to participate in tbe annual shoot ol tbe Interior of British Columbia Rifle association. THE SUN. GRAND FORKS. BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n$10.00 MUStart YoitooWealth,$10.00\nKINLOCK PLACE-WINNIPEG\nImngtne Choice high Lots close to Main Street of Winnipeg, a City which\n\u25a0runnut but have a population of 1,000,003 people within the next quarter of a\nCentury i **\u2022\nKlnlock Place has an c.ectilc car lino .n front of property running direct\nfi centra or city. Close to the splendid new Exhibition Grounds In which\n$100,000 will be expended, which with Kiidonan Park which It adjoins, will\nIti;iIte  the  most deslrab . district to llv.   In.\n.Unlock Place Lots, $175 tip. $10 cash ari $10 per month. This week we\nsr ., a die - .'a lot for $900 cash, that wo old him some years ago at only i-25.\ntttnli.. ; Placo Lots will make you a similar pro it. If at the Exhibition let\nstow you thia pr-ic-'-.\nPierre send me nn II\nName\t\nMall Thlt Coupon To-day\nl.-at.d booklet, etc.,   re  Kinlock  Place.\nSCOTT,   HILL   &   CO.,\n22 Canada Llfa  Building, Winnipeg,  Manitoba.\nEXPLORING THE PALATINE HILL\nProf.\nBoni Describes Temples Discovered Under Rome\nThe 2066th anniversary of the foundation of Rome was celebrated this\nyear by Prof. Boni who lectured on\nnm recent excavations on the Palatine-.\nThe objects of these excavations,\nwhich were started a year ago, Is\ntwofold, the exploration of the original structure of the historical hill on\nwhich Rome was built and the discovery of traces left by its earliest inhabitants. ..\nThe results so far obtained may be\nbriefly explained as follows. By\nrontons of deep borings reaching down\nto the original rock of the hill three\nseparate series of pita or cellars of unknown ancient temples were discovered and the development of the dwell-\nlut;.-. In different periods could bo followed from the rough huts ot the\nflrst inhabitants to tho humble bouses\not the early republic, which were\ngradually transformed and enlarged\nuntil they were changed to the palatial mansions of the empire. Practically every building on the Palatine\nwas erected over edificeB of earlier\nperiods. In the basilica of t.ie Pal-\nact- of Domltian traces of an exedra\nbuilt by Nero were found, and underneath were the piscina or water tanks\ndivided into Ave compartmenta, which\ncut through the walls of a republican\nhouse with frescoed walls.\nIn the vestibule the- foundations of\nthe Imperial throne were discovered\ncutting through the walls of three\npalaces built '.n different perlods'over\na republican house richly decorated\nwith rare marbles. Still deeper\ndown the favlasae or pita ot ancient\ntemples were found, with traces of\nhroken pottery Identified aa dating\nfrom the fifth century, B.C. The explorations carried on in the house\nof the Flavil are of the utmost lm-\npnrmni\". for tho topographical study\nof the Palatine IUU, and although no\ngreat discovery of statue and works of\nart has been made, since everything\nwas plundered during the sixteenth\nnnd seventeenth centuries, when extensive digging for treasure waa undertaken, historical buildings have\nheen Identified. The house of Tiber-\nins, for instance, haa been identified,\nand underneath it ia tbe pit used i.s\na prison where Drusus was starved to\ndeath.\nHe Knew Her\nYou seem Inclined to encourage\nyour wife to become a Suffragette.\nYes, replied Mr. Meekln, if I can\nthoroughly convince her that I deaire\nher to march and make speeches maybe she'll get resentful and refuse to\ndo ao.\nTO   MAKE   SHIPS   ROLL\nGyroscopes on Lake Boata Might Prevent Their Freezing\nMost novel ot all the applications\nof the gyroscope that have boen proposed In tbe last few years Is the\nuse of a pair o: mighty gyroscopes to\nmake a ship roll, so that In passing\nthrough icefields it will not freeze\ntight. The possibility that this will\nmake traffic possible on the Great\nLakes -during the winter has been\nsuggested among ship engineers,\nthough there, are other difficulties to\nwinter lake traffic besides lake freezing.\nOn the car ferry Ashtabula, which\noperates on the lakes such a pair of\ngyroscopes have been Installed by Elmer A. Sperry, the leading authority\nln America on this peculiar force, aud\nthe Inventor of the gyroscope compasses that are being supplied to\nmany ships of the navy. The apparatus on the Ashtabula serves the\ndouble purpose of restricting or diminishing the rolling of the vessel\nwhen the water is rough, and of causing rolling when water is quiet and\nth.re Is danger that the vessel may\nbe caught ln the Ice,\nThe big gyroscopes are placed low-\nIn the vessel, and with their attachments, weigh fifty-one tons. Not much\npower is required to keep the heavy\nwheels revolving at high speed; and\nbo long as they are revolving the rolling of the vessel Is controlled. A\nvery sensitive pendulum automatically manages the big wheels. As the\npendulum swings lt causes the big\ngyroscopic wheels to turn slightly In\nsuch a way as to diminish the ship's\nrolling; or lf lt Ib desired to make the\nship roll the pendulum can be made\nto awing\u2014and, ln turn, tbla will move\nthe gyroscopes and make the vessel\nroll.\nMr. Sperry believes the method of\ncontrolling the rolling ot a ship by\ngreat tanks of water on the deck bo\nconnected tbat the water flows from\nono to another at the desired moment\nla not a satisfactory solution, for he\nhaa discovered that the rolling of a\nship In a heavy sea Ib not regular\nIt will start at a slight degree and\nthen work up to a heavy roll, reaching the climax in perhaps a dozen\nswings, then diminish again to tbe\nslight rolling. By the use of the pendulum, however, each rolling motion\nia met with just the right amount of\ngyroscopic action needed for that one\nroll. \u25a0\nScratched So Made Red Sore.\nTrouble Grew Worse All the Time.\nA Cake of Cuticura Soap and a\nBox of Cuticura Ointment Completely Cured,\n\u25a0\nVille Juliet!p. Que.\u2014\"My little dirt, aged\nfour years, had bo many pimpled on her\n'aee. arms and legs tbat I did not know\nwbat to do. They lasted\nfor a year, (.he commenced to _cr\u00bbti.h and\nthis made pimples, cloar,\nnot red. She scratched bo\nmuch tbat tho blood ran\n.and It made a red sore,\nvriio sores were worse on\nher arms and legs and on\ntier face, and they were ugly looking with\ntbe blood. I was told what to do to stop\nber Buffering, and I used the treatment but\nother pimples came out all the time. I tried\nell sorts of remedies but the trouble grew\nworse all tbe time. It waa always the same\natory, until I used Cuticura Boap and Ointment. I began to apply tbe Outtcura Ointment on her, also hot water and Cuticura\nSoap, Immediately I began to see that\nthey were curing her, and after having\nused a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of\nCuticura Ointment sho -was completely\ncured. She nas Just as fine a skin as beforo.\n.\"My busband also used Cuticura Ointment for cracks la bis hands. After three\napplications of tha Cuticura Ointment ha\nwascompletelycured.\" (Signed) Mrs. ALLed\nCorrler, Jan. 10,1012.\nCuticura Soap ud Cuticura ointment ara\nBold by druggists and dealers everywhere.\ntot a liberal free sample of each, with 32-p.\nbook, aaad post card to Potter Drug A Cheat.\nCoy* Kept. 330, Beaton, U. S. iu\n(toting Shoes\nFar\nEverybody\nTHE PERFECT SHOE\nFOR SUMMER SPORTS\nASK YOUR DEALER.\nIn Suffragette Daya\nDr. Lyman Abbott told at a recent\nluncheon tn New York, an anti-suffrage anecdote.\nTwo suffragettes, he said, were\ntalking ono evening at the club over\na game of billiards'\nHow is your husband ? the flrst asked.\nSlowly mending, thank you, the\nother answered.\nSlowly mending? I didn't know he\nwas 111.\nHe Isn't 111, the other suffragist explained, laughing heartily. He ls\nslowly, mending ray khaki riding-\nbreeches.\nA portable searchlight, supplied with\ngas from jr. tank carried on a man's\nback, has been Invented to enable\nlinesmen to see to the tops ot poles\nat night without having to climb them.\nWhen the young husband reached\nhome from the office he found his\nwife In tears.\nOb, John, she sobbed on his shoulder. I had baked a lovely cake and\nput It out on the back porch for the\nfrosting to diy and tbe dog ate It!\nWell, don't cry about It, sweetheart,\nhe consoled, patting the pretty flushed\ncheek. I know\u00bba man wha will give\nus another dog.\nThe Egyptian irrigation de. u-tment\nIs planning to use some of the 15C.000\nhorsepower available at the Assuan\ndam for the production of atmospheric\nnitrogen for -Vet-'city.\nI am sure that girl has a kind heart\nand a considerable disposition, said\nthe young man.\n. Why?\nBecause, when I asked what her favorite flower was she took care to name\nsomething that doer n't cost more than\n50 cents a bunch.\nAs a vermicide there ia no preparation that equals Mother Graves'\nWorm Exterminator. It haa saved\nthe lives ot countless children.\nOpen Season for Cupid\nThe summer girl la planning now\nHer subtle summer arts,\nAnd Cupld'a working overtime\nAt sharpening his darts.\nAnd by and by at each resort\nAccording to her plan,\nThere'll be a Johnnie slain each day,\nMistaken for a man.\nMlnard'a Liniment Curea Colda, Etc.\nLondon'a Champion Timekeeper\nWhile the British Postmaster-General ts worrying about a scheme for\nsynchronizing clocks from Greenwich,\n'London's Champion Timekeeper,' a\ntitle which might -well be bestowed upon Mies Belleville, afill continues to\nact, as she has done for many years,\naa purveyor of the correct time In the\nMetropolis. Every week she calls at\ntho Greenwich Observatory with a\nchronometer which surely muat be the\nroost perfect specimen ot watchmaker's art in the world. This Is checked according to the official time, after\nwhich Miss Belleville carries the\nwatch round to her clients that they\nmay ac. their clocks by lt.\nMlsa Belleville, with her wonderful\nchronometer cuts time down to finer\ndistinctions than any synchronized\nclock cun aspire to. When taken to\nthe Observatory a few days ago It waa\nfound to have varied during tbe week\nby only 010 ot a second, nn Inappreciable difference in time to the ordinary citizen, but quite enough to make\na variation of value to her clock-making clientele, to whom ahe communl-\nc-tiiPB the fractions of a second by\nwhich the nautical and other highly-\nlisted time registers they may have\nunder observation have varied in a\nweek. *\nMiss Belevlllo's chronometer haa\nnever been known to deviate more\nthan fifteen seconds from Greenwich\ntime ln a week, and thia after being\ncarried all over London In train, 'bus,\nand electric tram.\nHer unique occupation has an interesting family hlBtory. It appears\nthat Mlsa Belleville's father, about\nhalt a century ago, obtained permission from the then Aatronomer Boyal\nto hurry from the Observatory, where\nhe was employed to chronometer-makers to give them the minute to a tenth\nof a aecond. Her mother took up the\ncurious occupation on Mr. Belleville's\ndeath, and now their daughter carries\non the business.       H-_^-_HHh\nA little four-year old girl whose\nparents had been discussing an approaching meeting in connection with\nthe Society for the Prevention of\nCruelty toNChildren begged to bo taken. Her mother explained that th-\nmeetlng would not amuse her, but sbe\npersisted In her demand, and finally\nher mother agreed -to take ber it she\npromised to be very quiet.\nShe was very good throughout, the\ngreater part of the proceedings, but\nafter listening patiently to the speech\nes for some time she whispered to\nber mother:\nMummy, this ls dull. When Is the\ncruelty going to begin. ,\nBANISHED\nTea and Coffee Finally Had to Go\nThe way Eome persons cling to tea\nnnd coffee, even after ihey know they\nare doing them harm, Is a puzzler.\n(Tea la just aa harmful because It contains caffeine, the same drug found\nln coffee), But lt ln an easy matter\nto give lt up for good, when Postum\nIs properly made and used Instead. A\ngirl writes: ^T~\n\"Mother had been suffering wlih\nnervous headaches for seven weary\nyears, but kept on ilrlnklnr. coffee.\nA Scientific Co.igreaa\nSpecial interest attache., to next\nyear's meeting of the Assoc!:'.Ion\nFrancalse pour l'Advancement des\nSciences which Is to be held at\nHavre, probably Septerhber 4th, to\n12th. A large number of British societies are to take part in tbe meeting.\nThere are 160 British societies affiiat-\ned with the British Association for\nthe Advaucemen of Science, and lt\nhas been the custom for these societies to hold a conference ln London\nwhenever the ,-ssoclation Itself met in\naome far distant city\u2014aB In the case\nof the meetings at Winnipeg and ln\nSouth Africa. (Strange ts \"Say the\nBritish Assocatlon has nev - met ln\nLondon). Now il happens tbat In\n1914 ttae British Association meets In\nAustralia, and comparatively few\nmembers will be able to make tbe\nlong and expensive Journey, aside,\nfrom those whose expenses are to be\npaid out ot funds raised for this purpose in Australia. Accordingly, ts\nHavre la comparatively near England,\nIt has been decided to hold the conterence ot delegates from the affiliated\nsocieties at that place, In conjunction\nwith the meeting of the French association. It is hoped that American\nscientific .oclttl'es will also be represented at this joint meeting.\nNo matter how deep-rooted the corn\nor wart may be, lt must yield to Hollow-ay's Corn Cure lf used as d. .cted.\nMilking Machines\nThe milking machine is becoming\na recognized part of the equipment of\nlarge dairies. It has already reached the point where lt compares favorably with ordinary hand milking In\nthe item of germ content of the milk\nahd in its effect upon the flow. There\nis still much room for Improvement\nfrom the mechanical viewpoint especially in the matter of simplicity and\nexpense of lnati.ll_.tlon.\nThe success of tbe milking machine\nIs closely associated with the personality of the operator. Unquestionably it takea a higher grade man to\noperate a milklnr. machine successfully than to hand-i. Ilk a cow equally\nwell. There ls every reaaon to think\nthat In the hands of careless operators the machinery will work injury\nto the cows, but the samo result ia to -\noften obtained from inefficient (iand-\nmilking.\n$100 Reward, $10u.\nTlte readers o! ttila pnper will be ril-xxetl to team\ntliat tliere to st least one dretulf-l disense tbst seleacs\nfcss been able to care tn nil Its Biases, snd tbst Is\nCatarrh. Hsll's Catarrh (-urn Is the uiilr positive\ncure now known to the medical fraternity, catarrh\ntwins a .onstllutlo;;-! disease, rwnil.es a constitutional treatment. Hill's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, set nt directly upon the blood and mucoua\niiurfacca of the system, thereby ilestroylns tbs\nfoundation of tho disease. , id sivins tbe patient\nstrength by bulldlns up the constitution and assisting nature In doing ll. work. Tho proprietors havo\nso much faith In Its curative powers tbat tbey offer\nOne Hundred Hollars for any case tbat It falls te\n\u2022are.  Hettn for list of testimonials\nAnCtee, f. 3. CHENEY k CO . Toledo. O.\n8o.it by all Druggists.. _e.\nlets nulls Family -tli- for .-n-stlpauc*.\nIar* Era.    \u00abs_obJ .\nYou wm find relief In t__bii-Buk 1\nII Mtet the burning, \u2022tinging\npain, stops bleeding ahd brings\n\u2022aee. Perseverance,'with Zam.\nBilk, means cure; Why not prove\nIM* tsM \u2022*n*-^\u00ab5\u00ab*\u00bba-w\u00ab\u00ab Oetsee-.\n7anrBuK\nInsure Your Horse For\nFifty Gents\nSilver Pun Healing OO\nHetli Barb Wire Gft-\nCures Kick* **m& Spraint\n9vir2,m,INMllttMl<\nwitbHl l sinfls cimpliint\nNo matter how badly cot\na horse or cow may be,\n\"SILVER PINE\" wU\neuro It. There hae ne-rer\nbeen a .failure, in all tha\nyean tbla wonderfol healing oil has been need by\nfarmers and stockmen. It\nsoothes the pain-prevents\ninflammation, prood flash\nand- Mood poisoning-and\ncauses tha cats to heal\ncleanly and rapidly. Cares\nOld  Sores,   Bruises,\nStrains. Swellings, Sweeny.\nEqually  Good  for   Muscular  Rheumatism,\nBums, Scalds,  Sprains,   Sore Tbroat,   any\nUlcerated Surface.\nHOC a bottlr\u2014and sold by dealers every*\nwhere on a spot cash guarantee to cure.\nitttentitienir Stock Feed Ce., Limited\nlaraata      \u2022      \u2022      Oattrie \u00bb,\nWANTED at ence\nPci-f-ons to work for ua\nI spare .lime at home. No experience\nrequired with our NEW ART COLOR-\nIN i PROCEioS. Easy and fatclnntlug\n-..orl.. Good pay. No canvassing. Write\nfor Instructloi.-j I free).\nCOMMERCIAL ART STUDIO,\nS'.j Coli.ge Street. Toronto, Canada.\nWorth Knowing\nCluetera of cloves hung up ln the\nrooms and allowed to dry will eradi\u00ab\ncate flies quicker than fly paper.\nA package or envelope sealed, with\ntin white of an egg can not be steamed opei..\nWash silver ornaments in borax and\nwater.\nIf you varnish the soles of yonr\nboots it will render them impervious\nto damp and will make them last\nlonger.\nMh.r.rd's  Liniment  Curea  Diphtheria\nThere was once a chap who .went\nskating too early, and all of a sudden\nthat afternoon loud cries for help began to echo among the bleak hills that\nsurrounded the skating pond.\nA farmer, obbling hla boota before\nhla kitchen fire, heard tho ahouts and\nyells and ran to the pond at. breakneck speed. He saw a large black\nhole In the Ice and a pale young fellow stood with chattering teeth shoulder deep In the cold water.\nThe farmer laid a board on the thin\nice, and crawled out on it to the edge\nof the hole. Then extending his hand\nhe said:\nHere, come over this way, and I'll\nlift you out.\nNo, 1 can't swim, was the Impatient\nreply. Throw a rope to me. Hurry\nup.     It's cold hi here.\nI ain't got no rope, said the farmer,\naud he added angrily: What If you\ncan't swim\u2014you can wade, I. gties;,.\nThe water's only up to your slioyl-\nders.\nUp to my shoulders? said the\nyoung fellow. It's eight feet If It's\nan Inch. I'm standing on the blasted fat m n who broke the ice.\nHarry Lauder tells a story of an\nEnglish nobleman. Ills lordship wns\nIntroduced to me at the end of the\nTlvell one night, so the story begins. He asked mc *.o dlno with\nhim. 1 nccepted, and then he hesitated and na Id:\nI don't moan dine at my home, you\nknow,    liy  wife doesn't approve of\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^    \u2014c\u2014r\u2014music hall people yor. know\nOno day I asked her why sbe did JI mean dine at my club.\nW.N.U. \u00bb57\nAn Italian woman, accompanied by\nher little boy, waa travelling on a\ntrain which was making very poor\ntime. The conductor aaid to her:\nMadam, your boy can't pass on halt\nfare; he la too large.\nWella. he may be too largea nowa,\nhtitta when de tralaa start fer f-aaaa\nsmall enougha.\nnot give up coffer, oa a cousin of mine\nhad done who had taken te Postum.\nBut Mother was such a slave to coffee\nsho thought It would be terrible to\ngive It up.\n\"Finally, one dny. sho made the\ncbange to Postum, and quickly her\nheadachea disappeared. One morning while ahe- was drinking Postum\nso freely and with such relish, I asked\nfor a taste.\n\"That atarted mc on Postum and I\nnow drink it more freely than I did\ncoffee, which never cornea Into our\nhouae now.\"\nName given by Canadian Postum\nCo., Windsor, Ont. Write for booklet, \"The Road to Wellvllle.\"\nPostum cornea ln two forma.\nRegular Poatum (must be boiled).\nInatant Poatum doean't require boiling, but la prepared Instantly by atlr-\nring a level teaapoonful In an ordinary cup of hot water, which makes It\nright for' most persons.\nA big cup requires more and some\npeople wha like etrong things put ln\na heaping spoonful and tamper It with\na large aupply ot cream.\nExperiment until you know the\namount that, ploaaea your palate and\nhave lt aerved that way ln tha future.\n\"There'e a Reason\" for Poatum.\nAt yeur club? sald.I with horrified\nlook. Oh, no! No, thank you, my\nluifl; I'm Berry to have to decline,\nhut tiie fact la, you know, uy wife\ndoesn't\u2014er\u2014approve of clubmen.\nPork or Mutton\nA Britisher visiting thia country\navers that Le can never \u2022accustom\nIil.iit.e1f to the free and easy manners\nof the waiters he haa encountered In\nAmerican hotels.\nIn Chicago, says he^-i met the most\nextraordinary types,     I said to one:\nWalter, ls this a pork chop or a\nmutton chop.\nCan't ytu tell by the taste? asked\nthe wait-'r.\nNo, said I.\nThen, said the waiter, what difference doea It make which It la?\nPure Apple Jelly\nadded to Pure Jam\nmakes  a   delicious  conserve\nAsk  for   Upton's\n'.ho fool man who goes out on toots\nWe  .11 holL up to scorn;\nYet he Ignores our slur:   and boota\nAnd starts to blow his horn .\nA young gentleman of the colored\npersu-ttion hnd promised hla girl a-\npalr ot white gloves for a Christ-nun\nglfe. Entering a large department\nstore, he nt last found the counter\nwhere theso gooda were' displayed,\nand approaching rather hesitatingly,\nremarked: Ah wn t -., pair ob gloves.\nHow long i'o you want them? Inquired the businesslike clerk.\nAh doesn't want fo' to rent 'em;\nAh wants to' io buy 'em, replied tha\nnlier, lndlfcoantly.\nHer Cousin\u2014Maud la alwaya very\npositive ln her .insertions.\nRcjeetcil Suitor\u2014Yes, Rhe was\neven positive in her negative.\nMAD is WeD That Ends WeT\nAlong with dyspepsia comes nervousness, sleeplessness and general Ul hulth. Why? license a disordered Btonueh does not permit\nthe food to ba aaaimllated aad carried to the blood. On tha other hand,\nthe blood la charged with poisons whieh come from this disordered\ndigestion. In tarn, the nerves ara not fad en good, red blood aad we\nsee those symptoms of nervous breakdown. It la not head work that\ndoes It, but poor stomach work. With poor thin blood tba body la aat\nprotected against the attack of germs of grip-teoaehlW\"\u2014*-*****-**.\nUoa.   Fortify the body now with \" .'\nDB. PIKHCE'S\nGolden Medical Discovery\na* altetothra extract tram native medfelaal pilots, areealbat k both t*nSi\naedUUstf ens br Dr. H.V.PIerea, sorer Musaissvo. \u25a0 \u2022 \u00ab\n_  Mm than 40 nan st Mptr-anee has erovan Its superior worth aaaa In-\n,Tltomttrustwiash tenlo and Wood purt-W. It tntrlforaM aadxegnmss\nt-wsMMth. tins Hd biweii, and ih'rourtI'them Unvrfcole'sTsISnl jt aus\nid UUetfsra et most dsalars ta l   ''-*--\nHotU*_jdgi_r_^l-^wWB\u00ab-t*i!-?fi.Y.\nnew aieo be had\" to etwrnsated\" UMaTfim ef asset dseijes ta medMaa.\n\u00abt\u00bb^ ssjcl\u00bbi\u00ab\u00absUie\u00bb<ent stan_gs_ ftr trial bu to Br. Hsnsss IatsJM.*\n.The Common Sense Medical Atfruer. THE StTS, GRAND FORKS. BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n\/\u00a5\nMMMMMMMMI\nMake the liver\nDo its Duty\nNine times in ten when the liver is right tba\nstomach and bowels are right.\nCARTER'S LITTLE\nLIVER PILLS\ngeallybutdmlyc\npel a lazy liver to\ndoits duly\nCures Coa-\n(\u25a0atioa.\nlion;\nSick      .^^^^^^^^^\nHeadache, and Distress aftar Eating.\nSmall Pill, Small Dose, Small Price,\nGenuine mint hear Signature\nIfMVIVfVltWMfftVVMeWflPS\nARLINGTON\nWATERPROOF  COLLARS ANO CUFFS\nSomelhliiK better than linen and no\nlaundry bills. Wash it with soap and\n-Water. All stores oV direct. State style\nand size. For 26c. we will mail you.\nTHE ARLINGTON CO. OF CANADA,\nLimited\n88 Fraser Avenue, Toronto, Ontario\ni K8T AHD HEALTH TO MOTHER AND 6HIIB.\nI If as. Winslow's Soothinc. Svrup has been\nBed for over SIXTY VICARS liy MILLIONS of\nOTHEItS for their CHILDREN WHIL8\nTMSTH1NG, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It\naOOTHBS the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS,\nALLAYS allPAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and\nla the beat remedy for DIARRHOEA. It is absolutely harmless. Be sure and ask fot \" Mrs.\n\u25a0Winslow's Soothing Syrup,\" aad take ao otber\nM-uV Twenty-five cents a bottle. _ __.\nIdeal - Sliver\nCream Is a scientific preparation\nspecially adapted\nfor cleaning all\nkinds of SILVER\n& GOLD PLATE,\nMIRRORS, CUT\nGLASS, or WINDOWS. It, ts a\npurely 'vegetable\ncompound and\ndoes not contain\nany Injurious substances. Any article polished with\nIDEAL will acquire a beautiful\nlustre that will not\ntarnish.\nFor sale by all\nDealers.\nSTRUGGLE WITH HIVE LEOPARDS\nOfficers of   Storm-Toaaed    Freighter\nLasaoo Animate Releaaed by\nLightning\nWhile a terrific storm raged ..bout\nthem, tossing their big freighter about\nlike a cork ln the ocean, six officers\nof the GertULii steamship Rhelnfels,\n[which, arrived recently In Philadelphia\nfrom Calcutta, battled fo. five hours\nbefore they succeeded in aubdutng five\nfrenzied leopards whioh had escaped\nfrom their cages.\nDuring the storm all, hands had been\nordered on deck by Capt. Albert kuc-\nkens, and when lightning struck the\npoop deck lt knocked the leopard\ncages down ln the midst ot the 48\nmen.\n* With a scream of fright the men\ntook to the rigging, kicking, cursing\nahd fighting ln an effort to climb to\na place of safety. In an Instant only\nthe six officers were left on deck. One\nstoker, seized by fear when he saw the\nloose leopards, leaped Into the aea\nand was drowned.\nAround and around the battered\ndeck the quintet of leopards rated,\npaying little attention to the group of\nsix men crouched ln one corner. All\nthe deck load had been washed into\nthc sea, giving the beast sample room\nto romp and run. After an bour the\nleopards slgLtcd the men and stationed themselves ln front of them,\nevidently Intending to wait until the\nstorm abated to advance on them.\nBut the officers thought otherwise.\nOne crawled from, the. group on his\nhands and knees to hla room, procured a rope and returned. Sudden-\nly he threw the rope aeroso the leopards, seated on the'.- haunches a few\nfeet away. Unprepared for the movement, two ot the beasts were caught\nand made fast. Other ropes were\nsecured, but it was not tntll three\nhours later that the last of the leopards waa captured and placed In another cage.\nIn the same cargo ot wild beasts\nwere two giraffes and two antelopes.\nTheir cag.s were shattered, but they\nremained quLtly on the poop deck\nand watched the fight.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Distemper\nThe Heait of a Piano is the\nAction.   Insist on the\n\"Otto Higel\nPiano Action\nii\nDo you peed Money ?\nSend foisour application forms.\nDo you need Land?\nSend fot our list and terms.\nDo you fieed an Executor 7\nSend foi*. our Will forms supplied free.\nDo you iieed an Administrator?\nConfer -^.th us if deceased left\nnoW^l.\nDo you heed an Assignee ?\nConfidential interview invited\nadd bijst advice given without feje.\nAgents Wanted In all Unr-preaent-\n'j    ed District*\nApply ;to\u2014\nThe Standard Trusts Company,\ndirecting your letter almply to Ita\n.,*..   oftlcea la\nWinnipeg,   Saakatoon,   Edmonton,\n! or Vancouver\nAccording to locality la which yon\nlive\nWheels Within Wheeta\nMra;- Crawford\u2014I    waa   ao   glad\nto find her out-when I called.\nMra. Crabshaw\u2014I knew you didn't\nlike each other, ao I told her when\nyou were going to call.\nA man who trlca lo run au automobile on a wheelbarrow Income de-\nje-ves a Jolt.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n7   PI US,-;\nVokidneV \" ,\nP'AUETCS   **__.,;.'\u25a0\nttyo. a box or alx Uxae tor 12.SO,\n)|l all Oealere, or Tha Dodda Madl.\ndine Company, Limited, Toronto,\n(janadaj\nW.N.U. 187\nWhat do you want? demanded Mr.\nNewlywed, a. he confronted tho\ntramp at the door ot the bungalow,\nbreakfast or work.'\nBoth, sir, replied the wayfarer, timidly.\nWell eat that, returned the other\nsavagely, banding out a biscuit and a\npiece of steak, and you'll have both.\nWhereupon Mrs. Newlywed glanced\nreproachfully at her husband, for he\nwas giving away' the -first fruits of\nher culinary studies at the cooking\nschool.\nIt Is Wlaa to Prevent Disorder.\u2014\n-Many causes lead to disorders of the\nstomach and few are free trom them.\nAt the flrst manifestation tbat the\natomach and liver are no: performing\ntheir functions, a course of Parmelee's Vegetable Fills ahoald be tried,\nand It.will be found that the digestive\norgans will speedily resume healthy\naction. Laxatives and sedatives are\nso blended ln these pills that no other\npreparation could be so effective as\nt'-ey.\nFIRE IN STOVE 70 YEARS\nPrimitive Cooking Apparatus in Cornwall, England\nIncredible cs lt may seem to us\nwho have at cur command every sort\nof labor saving machine and device\nthat It ls possible to conceive, there\nare some parts ot the world\u2014and not\nthc most remote, either\u2014wh9re many\nof the ordinary tasks ot lite are accomplished In almost Identically the\nsame way that they were centuries\nago, says a wilier in Gas Logic. Travellers ln foreign countries bave frequently told f surprising Instances\nof this kind which they have met with\nIn their wanderings-hi out-of-the-way\nlocalities.\nA striking Illustration ot the way\nIn which people who come little Into\ncontact with modern methods oftentimes cling to ancient and cumbersome ways ot doing things ts afforded\nby tho case of a farmer In Cornwall,\nEngland, whose primitive and picturesque cooking apparatus has attracted\nattention.\nTho fuel used tn the atovo Is neither coal nor wood, but | jat. No other\nfuel has been burned ia it. The\nCornish farmer declares that to his\nk-owledge the fire ln It has not been\nout ln seventy yeara.\nWhen the farmer's family have any\ncooking to do, the ombera are first\nraked flat, and an Iron plate I.i placed\nover them. The dough Is then put\nInto a tin, which Is placed upon the\niron plate, the tin being covered over\nwith a big Iron pot. The whole ts\ncovered with embers and In eighty\nminutes' time, It Is said, the bread\nIs perfectly baked.\n.-'!- I \u2014\u2014 \u25a0\nAn Irish number ot parliament Is\ntelling a story of a man who complained to three friends\u2014an Englishman, a Scotchman, and ah Irishman\u2014\nthat his servant wan constantly breaking china.\nWhat do yeu think I ought to do\nwith her? he asked plaintively.\nThe pras.lcal Englishman said: Dis-\nmiss her! B,it as she was otherwise\nan excellent servant her master waa\nunwilling to do that.\nThen take lt out of her wages, aug-\ngestet. the thrifty Scot.\nThat wouldn't do much good was\nthe reply, tor her wagea are bss tban\nthe amount ot damage she does.\nThen raise her wag***! said tha\nIrishman promptly.\nTOLD BY HIS TEETH\nTeethma.ks More Reliable In Crime\nDetectloiy-fhan Flngtr Prlnta\nThe case of the burglar who was\nrecently identified ln Paris by the\nmarks of his teeth ln some fruit he\nhad bitten and left behind, led a London dentist to comment on the value\nof the teeth and palate tor purposes'\nof Identification. It recalls, too, the\nresearches of Dr, Paul Prague, of\nVienna, who more than five years ago\ndeclared that a long series ot experiments demonstrated that the palate\nnever changes trom childhood to old\nage, and that Identification by this\nmeans ls even more certain than by\nmeans of finger-prints.\nThe gums and palate, said the dentist referred to, are an infallible test of\nidentity. No matt.-r how a person\nchanges ln facial expression and In\ngeneral appearance, the gums and\npalate remain to assure him and others that his identity Is the same. The\nsooner this fact is realized the better\ntor one can state no limit to its usefulness. Here is a case that came\ndirectly under my own notice.\nA man of considerable wealth and\not high social standing went on a tour\nto Africa. He disappeared,.- and\nthough every effort was maCe to trace\nhim he could not be found. Meanwhile difficulties arose concerning the\ndisposition of his property. There\nwas no evidence of his death, and presumption ot death waa retuaed by the\ncourt. Reports arrived later to the\neffect that he had been murdered by\nnative's and It was stated tt... his body\nhad been burled in an African village.\nAe It happened, I had made the man\na set Of teeth and still retained the\ncast ot the mouth. The man's brother went out, returned with the skull\nand I found that the cast I had taken\nfitted thc mouth of the dead man.\nThat waa sufficient. The death was\npresumed, and the estate duly administered.\nThe palate test Is Infallible, and\nahould be used by our detectives. A\ncast of the mouth of every criminal\ncould easily be taken, and would\nprove more effective und reliable than\nthe much-vaunted finger-print tystem.\nCHILDHOOD DANGERS\nNo symptoms that Indicate any of\nthe ailments ot childhood should be\nallowed to pass .without prompt attention. Tho little ailment may soon\nbecome a serious ono and perbapa a\nlittle life passes out. lt Baby's Own\nTablets are kept ln the house minor\ntroubles can be promptly cured and\nserious ones averted. The Tablets\nare guaranteed absolutely rate and\ncan be given to the newborn babe as\nwell as the growing child. Thousands of mothers use no other medicine tor their little ones. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or\nby mail at 25 cents a box from The\nDr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.\nHogan's Clock\nThe frequent and unsuccessful candidacy of certain men for public office reminded Oeorge Dore ot a atory\not his old friend Hogan.\nHo\u201ean waa raffling a clock, said\nMr. Dore. He was fairly successful\nIn disposing ot tickets In the shop\nwhere he worked, but he ran up\nagainst trouble when he canvassed the\nneighbors.\nDropping ln at a neighbor's home\nhe tried to aell a ticket on tho clock.\nIt'a a folne timepiece -nd It'll look\nfolne on yer whatnot or mantel, say.\nHogan, cajollngly'\n'Owan, the old clock doesn't run, replied the neighbor, -\nWell, drawled Hogan, changing front\ncompletely, well, perhaps yez won't\nwin lt, and then ye'U have the laugh\non the fellow who does.\nMlnard'a Liniment  Cures Garget  In\n.. Cow_\nAt a dinner given by the prime\nminister of a little kingdom en the\nBalkan Peninsular a diploma; complained to his host that the minister\nof justice, who had been sitting on\nhia left, had stole* his watch.\nAh, he ahouldn't have done that,\nsaid the prime minister, In tones ot\nannoyance. I will get it back for\nyou. Sure enough, toward the end\nof the evening the watch wat. returned\nto Its owner.\nAnd what did he say? asked the\ndiplomat.\nSh-h! cautioned the host, glancing\nanxiously about him. He doesn't\nknow that' have got lt back.\nIt'a really a pleasure to , bserve how\nwillingly your I'.'.le boy runs your errands.\nOh, he's the boy that lives text\ndoor. I get him to do my errands\nbecause my own boy won't.\nWell, what Is your boy doing now?\nHe's running an errand for the lady\nnext door,\nDr. \u00a3<__ arse's\nIndian Root Pillt\nare jutt the right medicine for th*\nchildren. When they arc constipated\n\u2014whA their kidney* arc out ol order\n\u2014when over-indulgence in aom*\nfavorite food give* them indinstioa\n\u2014Dr. Morae'a Indian Root rills wilt\nquickly and surely put them right.\nPurely vegetable, they neither sicken,\nweaken or gri pe.lik* harsh pit rcativea\nGuard your children'* health by\nalway* keeping a box of Dr. Mora* a\nIndian Root Pills la tbe boun, Tbty\nX3C\nREAD  THE   LABEL\nCOR THE PROTECTION OF THE CON-\nr SUMER THE INGREDIENTS ARE\nPLAINLY PRINTED ON THE LABEL. IT\n18 THE ONLY WELL-KNOWN MEDIUM-\nPRICED BAKINO POWDER MADE IN\nCANADA THAT DOES NOT CONTAIN\nALUM AND WHICH HAS ALL THE\nINGREDIENTS PLAINLY STATED ON\nTHE   LABEL.\nMAGIC BAKING  POWDER\n B CONTAINS   NO   ALUM    \/\nALUM IS SOMETIMES REFERRED TO AS SULPHATE OF ALUMINA OR SODICALUMINIC\n8ULPHATE. THE PUBLIC SHOULD NOT BE\nMISLED   BY   THESE   TECHNICAL   NAMES.\nE. W. GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED\nWINNIPEG TORONTO.  ONT.        MONTREAL\nWhittling for a Living\nA novel Industry has been brougU\nto light by the news that a man who\nIn taking 450 British song birds to\nBritish Columbia ls an expert bird\nwhistler. It appears that it is no uncommon thing for a man who keeps\na bird fancier's shop Si be able to\nwhistle a distinct series of bird notes.\nAt the beginning of each teries says\nThe Daily Citizen, describing the work\nof the professional blrd-whistler, the\ndifferent feathered tribes whose cages\ncompletely covered the walls took up\nthe lay, piping as lt their little hearts\nwould break with joy. When tho linnets ceased the canaries, hearing the\nnotes of the man-whistler, broke Into\nfull-throated song. Then when the\nexpert started to whistle skylark notes\nthe Imprisoned songsters of the heavens (orgot their captivity and gavo the\nsun, peeping shyly in between the\nclosed blinds, a melodious welcome.\nIt appears that when a bird is caught\nand put Into a cage it is very apt to\nsulk. and become miserable, this Is\nwhere the blrd-whlstler comes ln useful. He Imitates the tones ct whatever kind of bird this one happens to\nbe, and the little prisoner, thinking\nit has company, forgets all his troubles and breaks Into a song of joy.\nSometimes the blrd-whlstler can\nteach one bird another bird's song.\nOne man taught a goldfinch to- sing\nlike a linnet and a linnet to sing like\na goldfinch.\nA Long Felt Want\nHe expects to be rich some day.\nWhat's he done?\nHe's Invented a waterproof bread\nfor lettuce sandwiches.\nOil engine propulsion for ocean going vessels has reached so successful\na stage that a $5,000,000 company has\nbeen organized in London to operate\nlines of freight ships of that type.\nYoung Husband\u2014What a glorious\nday! I could dare anything, face\nanything, on a day like this!\nWife\u2014Come on down to the millln-\nChoked for Air. Some little Irritant becomes \/lodged in the bronchial\ntubes, others gather, and the awful\nchoking of asthma results. Nothing\noffers quite such quick and positive\nrelief as Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma\nRemedy. The healing, soothing\nsmoke or vapor penetrates, clears tha\npassages and gives untold relief. Usually lt completely cures. It has behind it years of success. It is the\nsure remedy for every Bufferer.\nWhy He Didn't Understand 'Em\nThat woman snubbed me deliberately.\nPerhaps she didn't see you.\nOf course she did. Didn't I have\non my new suit, nad my (30 bonnet?\nNo woman in the world could pass by\nwithout seeing that.\nReduce the Cost of Living\nThere must be a prohibitive tariff\non moving vans.\nWhat a silly idea.\nNot at all, I just tried to hire one,\nand the cost of moving bas almost\ntrebled.\nMayor Rockwell ot Akron was condemn ng the claln often put forward\nby ti.e rich, that poverty is good for\nthe charac.e\/.\nPoverty-Is good for nobody, he said.\nIt embitters the mind, hardens the\nheart, causes unhappluess and fear\nand Buffering.\nThere's nothing like adversity, a\nmillionaire once said to me\u2014there's\nnothing Ukt adversity to brli-.g a man\nout.\nTes, I repllcU, out at the elbows.\nTHI NIW FRINCHIIIMIDY. N-l. N.l. NA'\nI nCKArlUN Hospital, witti\ntreat sure-ss, cires chronic weakness, lost vigor;\nA VIM, KIDNEY. BLADDER. DISEASES. BLOOD POISON.\nPILES. EITHER NO. DRUOOISTSOf MAILSI. POST 4 CTS\nPOLT.KR.fl CO, SO. BKEKHAM 8T.NEW YORKOTLYMAN BROS*\nTORONTO.   WRITE FOR FRBB BOOK TO OR. LL Cl.-ftG :\nMed. Co. Havi rstocs KD. Hampstead, London, Eng.,-\nTRVNEWDRACEEtTASTBLESSIPORMOP   pASV TO TAXB'\n*-\"\u25a0*\"  \" \u2014*\" \"*-  **   \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0      *\u2014' \"~        BAPE AND I\nLASTING Cl-RB.\nfHERAPION\n'More Cups ,\nand a Better Drink\nBakes Bread\nto Perfection\nNcwPcrt-cctioii\/\nMDCII-KmgpaB-DBBB\nOil Cook-stove\nCleaner than coal or wood.   Cheaper\nthan gas.\nFor best results use ROYAtlTE Oil\nStock carried at all chief point*.\nK\u00ab*p th*  Children\n(i\nWfl\u00bbl>\nTHE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY\nMoatraai\nToroato\nVaatoanr THE   SUN.   GBAND   FORKS,   B. C.\n\u00aeijp$ratt&.3for!ui&mt\nQ. A.  EVAN*. EDITOft AND PUBLISH*!.\nSUBBOBIPTIO-t BA.TII I\n-na TMP   \t\n'lu* Tear fin advanoe)\t\nOne Year, in United Ststes\t\nAddress all oommiinleatlona to\n.11.60\n.. 1.00\n.. 1.-0\nfacta* RU\nThb Gband Porks Sun,\nUhasd Kobes, B.C\nFRIDAY,   AUGUST 15,  19J3\nLondon appears to be tbe favorite summer place of residence for\ntbe cabinet ministers of the British\nColumbia governmt-nt. One of them\nhas just returned, and the premier\nleft this week for his annual vacation trip to the empire's metropolis\nAfter having heen bribed with\ntheir own money for the past decade,\nthe people of a number of district*\nin this province are beginning to\nrealize that their constituencies have\nreceived no more than just doe* in\nthe way nf appropriations. Some of\nthem have not received that much.\nGrand Forks, for instance, got a $50,\n000 court house, while in districts of\nno greater importance 1200,000 and\n\u00a3250,000 publio buildings have been\nerected.\never boast of bis mother love or\nparade his religious belief. Love\nfor mother is ton sacred and love of\ncountry too dear to be loudly boasted of. Yet it is observed in certain\nof the press of Canada that ihey or\ntheir party have a monopoly of all\ntbe love of country going; tbey are\nthe only Simon pure patriots.because of tbeir flag flapping and yelping loyalty. Beware of the man\nwho flaunts his religion or patriotism. Some low, ulterior motive\nprompts bim, aud when he is weigh-\ned found wanting. Tolerance, and\nrespect for a fellow subject's honest\nopinion are indicative of the broad\nmind, the gentleman and true citizen.\u2014Princeton Star.\nNtWS OF THt GITY IN BRIEF\nLeo Mader has been appointed\ngame warden for this district. Mr.\nMader says tbat be intends to enforce the game laws to the letter,\nOnly A Few\nA comparatively unal! number of Hamilton \\\\ atchet are made every year. Their\nextreme aeouraov and tine adjustment\ntorhlda making them In large quantities,\n\u2022Up Ifamtttan Hatrlj\nuThe Railroad Timekeeper of America\"\nNot only the man or woman who wants a\nVery accurate wateh buys the Hamilton -\nbut the Ji.divid.uaK who knowt about\nwatches usually demands a Hamilton. We\nsell Hamilton watches complete, or supply\na Hamilton movement for your present\nwatch case, all \u00abiaet formen and women.\nA. D. MORRISON igffl&gWS.\nW. GLANVILLE\nDAIRYMAN\nQRAND FORKS, B.O.\nMilk and Cream delivered to all parts of the city\ndaily. Dairy absosolutely\nsanitary. We endeavor to\nplease our customers.\nThe proprietors of some of the Tory\n\"windjammers\" in this province would\nrather fight than relinquish their\ngrip on the treasury at Victoria.\nThat is probably the reason why a\nftw bruisers, more fit for the prise\nring than the positions they occupy,\nhave broken into an honorable pro\ntension.\nlt will be interesting to note what\nthe government will do with the\nDoukhobors. For their latest breach\nofthe li.w it is difficult to see what\npunishment can be inflicted, unleaa\nCzar Peter is given a jail sentence,\nas the province at present ha* not suf\nfiuient jail accommodations for the\nentire colony.\nWhen a government\u2014federal, provincial or municipal\u2014pays an exorbitant price for a public service in order\nto repay party loyalty, it ia not ful\nfilling its duty to the people.\nO, what crimes are committed in\nthe names of patriotism and religion. History affords eome striking\nillustrations of callow hypocrisy\npractised by characters who boasted\nof tbeir patriotism or tbeir religion\nin order that they might .persecute\nthose who honestly expressed a differing opinion. The ranting re-\nligeuse or pseudo patriot assumes\nan air of superiority and thrusts his\nideas upon those whom he poses to\nlead. -'Coward\" and \"heretic\" are\nthe words used by them toward\nthose of independent thought and\naction.    No  rensihle   man   would\nMra. N. L. Jackson, of Spokane,\nia visiting at the home of her mother,\nMrs: Mader. i\nKing Reese, of P. Burns & Co,\nGreenwood, visited tbe Arm's local\nbranch yesterday.\nMr. Barker.chicf train dispatcher,\nand Mr. Molison, master mechanic\nof tbe C.P.R-, came over from Nelson on Tuesday and a spent a couple\nof daya in tbe city.\nTbe British Columbia Copper\ncompany will begin shortly to-build\na concentrator at Boundary Falls.\nTbe Granby company bas taken\na bond on the Rig Copper and will\ndo some diamond drilling in the\nnear future.\nL. A. Smith & Co., of Greenwood\nbave purchased the- Russell-Law-\nUaulfield company's stock.\nPARAGRAPHS\nlimelight can't have  many   dark   secrets.\nWe hate to have our friends pity ua\nand think them hard hearted if they\ndon't.\nMoat   people  tell   the truth when\nsomebody triea to get them to lie.\nWhen an editor can't defend him\nself in hia own paper, he should traiu\nfor the prize ring.\n\u25a0 A fool and his foolishness are never\np arted.\nSome men were born grandfathers,\nand their small sons have a tough\ntime.\nNone of the politicians seem to\nwant to save tbe ci-untry by shoveling\ncoal or working in the hardest field.\nSwatting flies is no occupation for a\ntender hearted mortal.\nSome persons are so unlucky that\nthey alwaya get the seat in thu car\nnext to the big lady who has been\neating onions.\nDon't feel hurt if somebody else\ndoes your work better than you do it\nand gets vour job if you don't properly attend tu it vouinelf\nI'rubablv the chief difference be\ntween being a schemer and a dreamer\nis merely one of practicability.\nTou have to show up the   cocksure\nfellow occasionally ore there's no   living witli hiin.\nAnyway, the people who are in the\nYOU NEED A GOOD\nWAGON IF YOU ARE\nA y^OOD FARMER\nWE'VE GOT WHAT YOU\nVANT\nDoing as you please sounds fasoin -\nating, but it doean't take into ac\ncount the bill for damages.\nBargain counters will never appeal\nto men until they offer beer for 3\ncents a glass or two for 5 cents.\nThe great majority of the pay as\nyou go set are the stay at home variety.\nHighest cash price paid for old\n.Stoves anti Ranges. \u00a3. 0. Peckham,\nSecondhand Store.\nTak<> your repair* to ArmannV\nBoot nnd Shoe Hospital, Bridge\nstreet, Grand Forks.\nIf yon arc tired of indifferent\nwork at high prices, try The Sun\njub office. We guarantee salis-ar-\ntinn, and nre prices are right. We\nhave a splendid stock of stationery\nnn hand. .\nThe Sii\" onK cos's tl a y*ar.    Il\nprints all the news.\nn  . '\u2022 ,,,-rt ,|,.,,T|,\u201e <j\u201e\u201e i..,f. ,.,-\nbwt Job printing depurment In the\nBoundary oonntry.\nI   Bod The Son and keep potted\non currant events.\nNOTICE\nWe  wind  tn   inform   the people ul\nGrand Porka that we have  purchased\ni the. bii'vi'le biiiintim from George W,\nCo iper, and will conduul the same in\nfuturo We will carry a complete\nline of wheels. In addition to deal-\ning in wheels, we will do nil kinda nf\nbicycle repairing.    Aii work   will   be\n| done   bv   competent   mechanics, and\nj -fully guaranteed.\nMooTBOKit & Postma.\nOur wagons won't work your horses to death. They\nrun light.\nThey are made of strong, tough, seasoned wood and will\nstand the roughest wear.\nIf you buy a wagon from us and anything goes wrong\nwith it, drive up in front of our store and see if we don't\nmake good.\nMclntyre CS, Smith\nCERTIFICATES OP IMPROVE MENT\nNOTIOE\n\"H. G.\" and \"Copper Kin*\" Mlwral Clalma,\nsituate In the Grand Porka Mining Dlvlsion\nof Ynlf. District.\nWhere located: In Franklin oamp,\nI TAKE NOTICB (tbat I, WUIUm H.W.,ffman,\n1 I formvtelf an executor oi'the will nf the\nlute Catherine Hoffman, and aa agent for\n. itu;ol> M. I'aulaoti, Free Miners' Certificate*\nNoi. 61S49B and SH.I7AB, respectively, Intend,\nsixty .da*** from tlte date hereof, to up.\nply to the Mining Recorder for Certificate*\n, of Improvement, for the purpose of obtain*\nIngCrovtn <\u2022 rant \u25a0 of thf. above claims\nAnd further take notice that action, under\nflection 87, muat be commenced before tbe\nIn ii mice of   Hitch Certificates  of Improvement!.\nDated tbla 6th day of Mar, A.D. Mis.\nWILLIAM H. HOFFMAN.\nWe Have Received Today\nFresh-killed Beet,. ^Mutton, Veal\nand Young Pork\ntf.\nFresh Fish Daily*\nIncluding Salmon and Halibut\nP. Bums <\u00ae> Co. Limited\nP t? A PtT BASEBALL\nXN.JJy.rlV^.ri GOODS\nUsed in the West exclusively, being highest in\nqnapty. See ourjiew stock of Gloves, Balis' etc.\nBeach Balls... .T    $1.23 each\nWoodland C& Quinn\nThe Rexall Druggists\nSP0KANE&T8SFAIR\n<_____. SBPT It TO \u2022_>. too *****\nAUTO LIVERY\nAT Y01II\nSERVICE\nModern Bigs and Good\nHorses at All Hours at\nthe\nModel Livery Barn\nBonn 8 O'Ray, Props.\nPhone 68 Second Street\nInternational Polo\nTournament\nDaily Game* between Canadian\nand Amnion Teams\n$35,000 in Premiums &\nPurses\nCompetition open to tlu World\nThe First National\nIndian Congress\nApprovad by U. S. Government\nSPECIAL CASH PRIZES\nFOR THE CHILDREN\n72d Seaforth Highlanders Band\n$500CashPrizesfor Better Babies\n\"Custer1. LastF$ht\"Nij\nTHB\nLONDON DIRECTORY\n(Published Anuually)\nEnable! tradan throughout th* world to\ncommunicate direct with English\nMANUFACTURERS & DEALERS\nIn each olau of goods. Resides bains a complete coniroeipla) guide to London and Its\nsuburbs, the directory contaiui Hats of\nEXPORT MERCHANTS\nwith the'food* tbey ship, and (he Colonial\nand Foreign Markets they supply;\nSTEAMSHIP LINES\narranged under the Ports to which they tall,\nI and Indicating the approximate Sailing).:\n! PROVINCIAL TRADE NOTICES\nof leading Manufacturer!., Merchants, etc.. In\nI the principal provincial towns and Industrie!\ncentres of the united Kingdom.\nAcopy of the current edition will be forwarded, freight paid, ou receipt of Postal\nOrder for 80s.\nDealers welting Agencies ran advert!**\ntheir trade cards for _\u00a3tt or larger advertisement* from \u00a38.\nTHE LONDON DIRECTORY CO., LTD.,\nin, Almlmmh I_nnn. Luiidim,  R.C.\nA thrilling reproduction of thu ll ,\nbtttltwithSOOIndiuuuvdlOOSoldMn |\nCOMBINATION AUCTION\nSALE OF LIVE STOCK ON\nTHURSDAY AND FRIDAY\nFireworks Display Every Ni&ht\nIndividual Farm Exhibit Prizes\n$20,000 Race Program\nSevan Rkm Daily\nPoultryiuan'sMeetinfc Wednesday\nDairymen's Meeting Thursday\nBroadsword Battleson Horseback\nEXCURSION RAILROAD RATES\nC For illustrated D\u00bbily Program and\nPremium Lilt, address 50J Chamber of\nCommerce Bui-dint u Spokane, Wish.\nElectric Restorer for Men\n: Phosohonol reeteiae mm, uerre l> thi body\nrpiiipuuiroi ta ||\u00a7 (((o|)er ,\u201e,,\u201e,. \u201e,,\u201e,\u201e\n\u2022Im ud tit-lit\u00bb. Praaiature decny and all auiial\nI rakneM averted at ence.   Pkaaai-Mul will\nmWnjH\nlil!!     *   '\"TWTP.\njBi\u2014\u2014\u2014.\nMfrj\u2014 \u2014\u2014\nW+\u2014 -           -\n___________________\u2014 -\nAt tlu\nTht man at\nwhether at hom\nthe one whoae\nto attract\nOur paper p\nof homes and i\u00bb\nthe family. Tl\nraaulta obtain\nClassified Wan\nb Head'\nthe head of adairs\ne or in business, if\nattention you with\n*\u00bb into the bett fttu\nread by the head uf\nat account, (or the\n\u2022d by the use of\n1 Ada.\nIf you read The 8un you get tbe\nnews of tbe city, the province aod\nthe world. It is possible for a Sun\nreader to keep abreast of the times\nwithout tbe aid of the daily papera. 1%\nTHE   SUN,   GRAND   FORKS,   B. C.\nMost Important Events at J\nHome-and Abroad During the East Week\nFriday\nThe  term  of Sir John Gibson as I\nlieutenant-governor of Ontario  may\nbe extended.\nIhe temperance movement if\nspreading in Britain, and the use of\nalcohol by doctors is decreasing.\nJobn Liud, President Wilson's personal representative to Mehico, reaches\nVera Cms on board a United Statea\nwarship.\nIt is reported from Ottawa that a\nmeasure nf redistribution will not be\nintroduced at the next session of parliament.\nBritish Unionists, it is said, will\nendeavor to secure the public opinion\no( Canada on the subject of home rale\nfor Ireland.\nSlow progress is being made with\ntbe tariff bill ut Washington The\nDemocrats are working with a narrow\nmargin, but are coniideut uf success.\nA loss of 300,000,000 bushels of\ncorn, the nation's greatest crop, has\nresulted from the great damage\nwrought by drought and other conditions in the United States since\nJuly].\nThe British house of commons, by\na vote of 210 to 148, today  approved\nWhy Swelter in a\nHot Kitchen\nDuring the hot weather, when for a .small\nsum at our store for any of our large variety\nof ELECTRIC, OIL OR GASOLINE STOVES\nyou can have a cool kitchen and do your\ncooking iii comfort?\nWe have a complete line of Oil Stovesy-Gaso-\nline flStoves and Electric Cookers and labor-\nsaving devices.\nWe are offering reduced prices on all Oil and\nGasoline Stoves.   Below are a few of our\nprices:\n3-burner wickless, blue-flame  Oil   Stove;\nregular $10.00.   Special S8.00\n2-burner wickless, olue-flame  Oil  Stove;\nregular $7.50.   Special  6.00\n2-burner  Gasoline Stove;  regular   $5.75.\nSpecial   5.00\nOil Stove Oven, covering 2 burners; regulsir\n$4.00.   Special    3.25\nMiller & Gardner\nHardware        Home Furnishers Crockery\nwill demobilise at once. Turkey gives\nan evasive reply to the demand of the\npowers.\nAccording to a special Ottawa dispatch, a report received from eonfiden\ntial agents of the immigration depart'\nthe government agreement -giving to j ment\"ther ta to the effwlt that there\nthe Marconi company a contract for * U a well planned scheme to bring to\nthe creation, of an imperial  chain   of Canada upwards of   100,000 Hindus\nu_.i__t_a_l_a._i_j       i-alfiftru ni       _jf.itn.nu       aim  m.i _..'__ ... '\nwireless   telegraph\nthe world.\nstations  oiroling\nfrom\nSaturday.\nH.M.S. New Zealand  sails\nVancouver for San Francisco.\nThe Mexican trades commissioner\ntalked too much, and is realled.\nThe storm and the heat wave claim\nmany victims iu the eastern stoles.\nJohn Lind, personal representative\nof President Wilson, arrives in the\nCity of Mexico.\nThe members of the international\nmedical congress in London attend a\ngarden party at Windsor castle.\nThe police use harsh measures in\nsuppressing a suffragette riot in London. Women are riddrn down and\nSylvia Pankhurst is arrested. The\njail doctor is horsewhipped by women\nThe peace treaty between the\nBalkan states was signed in Bucharest\nat 10:30 this morning, and  Bulgaria\n\/\t\nand their families.\nMonday\nThe Mexican crisis is more hopeful,\nand official circles in Washington are\noptimistic.\nMuch interest is taken in the .debates at the international medical\ncongress in London.\nSweden was {oday conceded the\nright to send wood pulp and paper\ninto the United States free o! duty,\nThe French Academy of Science offers a prize of f 20,000 to any astronomer who will put the earth in coni-\nmunicetiun with any planet utber\nthan Mars.\nA motion is made to impeach Governor Sulzer ot New York. The re\npot t of the Frawley legislative committee charges bim with having, di\nverted campaign funds tn his own\nu\u00bbe. >>\nForeign delegates  to the   interna\n.\/\nWe dispense the tastiest cold drinks in this\npart of the country. We use the best Ice\nCream apd the finest fruits and syrups to get\nthis reputation.\nWe oMann  Drug  Co.\n' Agents for Butter Cup Ice Cream\n-J\nMcNEIL & HENNIGER\nSeeds-, Fertilizers, Poultry Supplies, Salt. Plaster,\nLime, Cement.\nSeed Oats, Wheat, Grass Seeds\nMail orders given careful and prompt attention\nDO YOU KNOW\nThat the majority of cases pf sickness are\ncaused by unsanitary plumbing? Avoid this\nrisk by having your plumbing work done by\nJ. F. KRAUS\nHeating and Sanitary Engineer*\nPHONE ISO       GAW BLOCK, WINNIPEG AVE\nTuesday\nPremier McBride left Victoria today for London.\nThe international medical congress\nin London comes to an end.\nJohn Lind is received unofficially\nby the Mexican foreign minister.\nThe Industrial Workers of the\nWorld are expelled from Minot, N.B.\nThe Canadian Northern issue of\n17,500,000 5 per cent secured notes\nat 98 has been oversubscribed.\nAgricultural duties are debated in\nthe United States senate. Senators\nvote against a party amenpinent Cattle go on thefjee list.\nA change in the regulations for the\nimportation into Canada of livestock\nfree of duty provides that the owner\nmust be a British subject.\nFred St. Amour, a C P.R. clerk at\nCalgary, is sent to the penitentiary\nfor three years for padding the payroll to the extent of 17000.\nConditions in Nanaimo are beyond\nthe control of the city police, and in\nall probability the atterney-general's\ndepartment will iake over the enforcement of law and order.\nWednesday\nThe delegates to the international\ngeological congress are banqueted in\nthe armery at Toronto.\nThe provincial government's free\nlabor bureau of Saskatchewan sends\nsix hundred men to the harvest fields\nHenry Lane Wilson, United Stales\nambassador to Mexico, attacks |ihe\nBritish foreign office, and President\nWilson may dismiss him.\nDiscussion of the agricultural\nsi'h&lulo and the proposed free listing\nof wheat in particular enlivened the\ntariff debate today in the United\nStates senate.\nWith Governor Sulzer impeached\nby the assembly and the date of his\ntrial before the senate and the judges\nof the court of appeals fixed for .September 18, the spectacle was presented tonight of two men claiming to be\ngovernor of the state of New York.\nSix strike breakers are killed in\nNanaimo, and the Morning Herald\noffice is bombarded. The provincial\nexecutive at a special session at Victoria this morning decided to send\nseveral militia companies to the scene\nof trouble. The wen are now being\ngot ready and a special train will\nprobably take them north tonight.\nThursday\nA fierce storm rages in  Winnipeg,\nand the air is filled with wreckage.\ncAlmost cA New Store\nThe carpenters have converted our old building into a\nfaodern plate-glass store.\nQlllt\u00bbfc A fine line of Neg-\nOIlllLb Hgee Shirts, attach-\nStraw Hats-3Lid\nstraw hat weather. We have all\nstyles and qualities, at tbe lowest prices.\nSummer\nUnderwear\nIn fine Balbriggan, fine mesh\nshort sleeves and knee pants.\nAlso the well known sleeveless\nB. V. D underwear. Prices\nrange from 90c to 13 50.\nStylecraft Clothes\u2014We are\nagents for this popular line of\nclothes.\ned and detached collars and cuffs\nFancy- stripes, plain colors.\nPrices f! to $3.50.\nHrxcit-ftS* F-**n\u00b0y Hosiery\n.nus-.iery {or men and\nwomen in silk lisle and  cotton.\nBoots and Shoes \u2014 Agents\nfor Copeland & Rider's well\nknown shoes for ladies and\ngents. Also agents for the Empress shoe for women.\nGroceries\u2014We carry a com\nplete stock of staple and fancy\ngroceries,\nWe invite your inspection ofthe above goods. We are\nstriking at the high cost of living. Those who patronize\nus realize that we have solved the problem. The reduction in their hills prove it. No matter whethea you\nare from Missouri or not, come in and we will show you.\nJOHN DONALDSON\ntional medical congress in London today occupied front seats at the weekly\nmeeting of the  Women's Social   and \\\nPolitical union,  the   militant  suffragettes' organization.\nA dispatch fr nn Peking to the I\nLondon Daily Felegraph says that it\nis reportrd that Oen, Kang Hsun has\ndeclared himself emperor of China\nand that he intends to tight his way\nto Nanking to impose his rule.\nGEORGE W. COOPER\nTHE PLUMBER MO IUTIM EHBIHEER\nWe do nothing but first-class and up-to-date work. If your\nplumbing needs inspection, now is the time have it done lie-\nfore the hot summer months. Sickness is soon caused by a\nleak in a waste or vent pipe. The oldest and best equipped\nplumbing shop in the Boundary.\nWINNIPEG AVLNUE\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nBrisk fighting occurs in Londonderry. Ireland, between Orangemen\nand Nationalists.\nMuch destruction to buildings and\ncrops is caused by wind disturbances\nof cyclonic character in Manitoba and\nsouthern and central Saskatchewan.\nStrikebreakers in Nanaimo escape\nand take to the hills A strong force\nof troops is now camped in the town.\nBoth Nanaimo and Ladysmith show\nthe effects of mob rule.\nThe Sulzer episode causes a muddle\nin New York, and difficulties arise\nwith other states. The civil servants\nare divided into hostile camps.\nWestern problems are'said to worry\nthe Ottawa officials, and the government is giving more attention to British Columbia affairs than  heretofore.\nPresident Wilson publicly repri\nmands Ambassador Wilson for his reflections on the British foreign office,\nand expresses regret to Britain.\nThe United States senate places\nwheat on the free list, aud au amendment to restore the duty on eggs is\nvoted down.\nOre Shipments\nThe following were the shipments\nfrom the Boundary mines during\nthe past week. Oranby mine, 24,-\n476; Mother Lode, 4,830; Rawhide,\n5,298; Napoleon, 245; Victoria, 407.\nSmelter treatments: Granby, 24,-\n865 tons; Greenwood, 11,075.   .\nIt is hard to make some people un\nderstand that what is yours isn't sll\ntheir own and that things that are\ndisagreeable to them may be odious to\nyou.\nSome people wouldn't   be  satisfied\nwith a chance to go to heaven   unless\nthey   were  furnished with a return j\nticket.\nThere is no sense in being a fool,\nfor then vou wouldn't be a fool.\nDon't find fault. If you must work\noff your meanness, just get some\nsharp-tongued person started on the\nsubject you want In see ventilated.\nGRAND FORKS\nIs the Railroad Centre and Natural\nDistributing Point for the interior ot\nSouthern British Columbia. It is\nthe Coming City. Place *Jour money\nwhere it will grow.\n\u2022Invest in Grand Forks\nGrand Forks Townsite Co., Ltd.\nBoundaryTrust & Investment Co.,Ltd\nEstablished 1901 First Street THE SUN. GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nWhy Clacks Stop\nThe reason why mant lplece clocks\nso often get out of order is so obvious\nthat It is nuge that attention to it\nlias not been drawn before. A clock-\nmaker said:\nIt Is because mantelpieces arc rare,\nly level. If a clock meant for a\n.rantelpieee is not placed ln an exact\nly horizontal position it is surj to go\nwrong. When the clock gains or\nloses because of its slanting position,\npeople regularly move the hands forward or backward, as the caso may\nbe, ii. order to adjust it. Eventually\nthe clock's hands are moved about sc\nmuch that the mechanism gets out of\norder, and thc clock refuse.- even to\ntick.\nWntclies and travelling clocks aro\nconstructed differently from the stationary clock, and they wl'.. go in any\nposition. That ls why they are relied upon more than the ornamental\nmantelpiece clock.\nDIMENSIONS APPAL\nNew York's New $6,000,000 Post Office\nis Modern Wonder\nNew York's new $6,000,000 post office building, a massive pile of pink\ngranite five storeys in height and two\nblocks long, facing ths rear of the\nPennsylvania station, is tha greatest\nbuilding of Its kind in the world.\nThe curb to the topmost p.ece of\ngranite ls 101 feet. There ar-' 1654\n000 cubic feet of granite, 18,000 tons\nof ste-=l, 7,000,000 bricks, and 200,000\nsquare feet oi glass in the building\nThe main corridor, corresponding in\nlength to the outside colonnade, is a\ncombination of buff marble, white\nplaster and glass, two storeys high,\n29 feet wide, ..nd 280 feet long. There\nare 400.000 square feet of working\nspace within the building.\nMcCla r\/s\nSunshine Fu\u2122\nnace\nYour fuel bills will be lowerand you'll^\nget more heat, evenly distributed all over the\nhouse, if you install a McClarp Sunshine Furnace.\nThe Sunshine paps for itself in a very few years'1\nby tW saving it effects. Call on the McClarydealer^\nor write our nearest Branch for fullinformation.\nLONDON,   TORONTO,   MONTREAL,   WINNIPEG.   VANCOUVER,   ST. .IdHN, N.B.,   HAMILTON,   CALGARY,  SASKATOON,   EDMONTON\nA Good Remedy\nAviator\u2014Yes, It took me about sin\nmonth's hard work learning to operate this aeroplane.\nMiss Sweetums\u2014And what have you\ngot for your pains'!\nAviator\u2014Arnica.\nExpert Advice\nEvery man ought to save up enough\nto buy himself a good, big farm, aaid\nthe thrifty citizen.\nYes, replied Parmer Corntossel, and\nthen do something else with the money.\nAnother  Way\nWhy are you so anxious to go on\nthe stage?\nI wish to get a rich husband.\nThings will be dull in the theatrical business for several months. Better go Into the manicure business,\nglrllc.\nMiller's Worm Powders ..re a pleasant uiedlcit.e for worm-infested children, and they will take it without\nobjection. When directions are followed it will not injure the mo3t delicate child, us there is nothing of an\nInjurious nature in its composition.\nThey wiH- speedily rift* a child of\nworms and restore the health of the\nlittle sufferers' whose vitality has become Impaired by the attacks of these\nInternal pcsls.\nThe editor cf a great magazine sent\nfor n certain author who had submitted an unsolicited manuscript.\nI am glad to make your .- cquali t-\nance. sir, said the editor, enthusiastically The story . iu sent us ls\nperfectly spleudid. But why use a\nnam de plui.ie? Let us publish it\njver your own name and it will make\nyou faniou..\nI'm not after fame, objected the\nsuthor.     It's money I want.\nBut ,ou'll get Just as much money\nln cither c .se.\nNo, I won't. If I publish it over\nmy own r.amo my wife will get tbe\nmoney.\nMinard's Liniment Co.. Limited\nDear Sirs,\u2014This fall I got thrown\njn a fence and hurt my chest very\nbad, so I could not work and It hurt\nhie to breathe. I tried ail kinds ot\nLiniments ant they did me no good.\nOne bottle ot MINARD'S LINIMENT, warmed on flannels and applied on my breast, cured me completely.\nC.  II.   COSSABOOM.\nftossway, Dlgb>  Co., N.S.\nMrs. Jlpes (looking at proofs ot her\nlatest photograph)\u20141 won't stand for\niny such portrait as tl.ati\nMr. Jlpes\u20140, 1 think I would; you\ntat for it.\nI see they'.o Invented another automatic machine that takes the place\nof a man, remarked Miss Pepper. But\nthey'll never invent a machine tha*.\ncould take the place of a woman.\nOh, I don't know, replied Knox,\nthere's the i-.-inograpli.\nGrease, Ink and all .other stains\ncome off with Snap. Leaves the\nhands soft and white.   Antiseptic.\nMA. DE.ILLKS SKIJ. SXeiP.\n\u25a0ur catvMT, umite.   .\nW.N.U. 957\nI'he elderly matron with the bundles, who was journeying to a point\nln Wisconsin nnd occupied a seat near\nthe middlu of the car, haci fallen\nasleep. On the seat in fron': of her\nsat a little boy. The b:vkeman\no ened the door of the c-.ir ur.i called\nout the name ot the station the .'train\nwas approaching. The elderly lady\nroused-herself with a jerk and inquired hurriedly ot the boy: Where are\nwe, Bobby?\nI don't know, grandma, answered\nthe little boy.\nDidn't the brak.maa say some-\nthlni; just now?\n. No, he just stuck his head inside the\ndoor and sneezed.\nHelp me with these things, Bobby!\nshe exclaimed, she exclaimed, hurriedly. This is Oshkosh. It's where wo\nI\"-'- off.\nTHE SECRmJF \"\nGOOD HEALTH\nKeep tke Blood RicVand Pure\nwith Dr. Williams' Pink Pil's\nThe condition ot the blood makes\nall the difference between health and\nsickness. Impure blood and strong\nhealthy nerves and muscles never go\ntogether, lf the blood is thin every\npart of the body tacomes weak. The\nstorr jch falls in strength and the appetite becomes poor. The body does\nnot obtain enough, nourishment from\nthe food, nnd soon''the nerves begin\nto complain and the person becomes\nIrritable, despondent, worn out and\nnervous. For a time there may be\nno actual sickness, only a run-down\nweak condition, but there is no defence against disease and from such\na condition spring disorders such as\nanaemia, rheumatism, Indigestion,\nneuralgia, and even paralysis itself.\nPeople with impure, thin blood\nshould take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills\nfor Pale People. Every dose helps\nto make new, rich blood, and new\nblood means health and strength.\nThey stop the progress of disease, and\nred cheeks, good appetite, new\nstrength, declare the general improvement in the health. Here ls an example. Miss Ellen Maude McQuo-\ndale, Harrlston, Ont., says: \"I feel\nit my duty 11 add my voice to the\nmany new recommending Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. For years I was\na sufferer with backache**'' rheumatism and nervousness. I was so bad\nat times that I was confined to my\nbed. I felt sleepy and heavy after\nmy meals, and had flashes of* light before my eyes, and a difficulty in collecting my thoughts. After using\nseveral remedies without benefit I began using Dr. Williams\" Pink PIUs\nand used ten or twelve boxes ln all.\nThey gave me the best health I have\nenjoyed for yeaiB, and I have not\nsinco had the least return ot the\ntrou.le.\"\nYou can get these Pills from any\ndealer tn medicine or by mall at 60\ncents, a box or six boxes for $2.50\nfrom The Dr. Williams' Mediclue Co.,\nBrockville, Ont.\nTAGS FIR WILD BIROS\nHow American Bird Banding Association Studies Migration\nTo extend scientific knowledge ot\nbird habits by means of records made\nby t'.udents nnd accurate observers,\nthe American Bird Banding Association\nhae been organized wltb head-quarters at the American Museum of Natural History. Durli. - the last year more\nthan eight hundred wild birds have\nbeen banded with an aluminum ring\nthat is adjusted loosely so as to cause\nno Injury or Inconvenience to the\nbirds.\nOn the ring appears the words: Notify the American Museum, New York,\nand a card In the filed records of the\nmuseum gives the species ot the bird,\nthe date, the place and circumstance\not banding, lt ls hoped by this system to learn the distance birds travel b> migration, their definite routes,\nand Information regarding the!.- winter\nquarters. A long period of time ls\nrequired to obtain results of value.\nSquire Kilbunker\u2014Can you'see any\ngood In letth.g your boy go into all\nthem games an' sports in college?\nMr. Seedmlller\u2014Yep; I wear all his\nbaseball an' tennis clothes fer under-\nPhotographers now receive light\nvery similar to that through the traditional sn-dlo skylight by vapor tube\nelectric lamps filled with carbon dioxide ot mercury vapor-\nConcrete\nis the cheapest\nbuilding\nmaterial\nWHETHER (or a sOo, a mille.\nhouse, or a million bushel grain\nelevator, concrete is the mo\u00bbt\neconomical building material in uie to.\ndsy.\nConcrete never requires repairs, and\nthe saving in repair-expense alone\nmakes the greater economy of using\nconcrete more apparent every day.\nThe cost of other building materials is\nconstantly increasing.\nThe cost of concrete is being reduced.\nCanada Cement\n-which pmadian fanners use, with iheir own sand, stone and gravel to male*\nconcrete, is the only ingredient you hsve to buy.\nWe have, by reason of our large output and scientific methods, been able to\nbring the price of \"Canada\" Cement so low that it is within lhe reach ol\neveryone.\nAn increase in demand results in a greater economy of production, and when\nconditions have warranted it, we have, from time lo\ntime, shared this saving with the consumer by reducing the price of Canada Cement.   This, demand will\ncontinue to increase\u2014as fast as farmers learn of concrete's superiority over other materials.\nWhen you buy cement, see that you get ''Canada\"\nCement; by so doing you -will assure the complete\nsuccess of all your concrete -work.\nSend a post card for our book \"What tha Firmer\nCan do Wilh Concrete.\"   It is free.\nHere li s Cu-di Cmeil dialer ts yssr \u00bbi|Mork\u00abJ.\nIf thit label ii not oa\nevery bag it is not\nCanada Cement.\nCanada Cement Company Limited\nMontreal\nI\nHis New Mark of Favor\nBarrle is a baronet-\nGreat Sir Peter Pan\u2014      \u2022 ,-,|.;\nAny honor Jim may get\nCannot spoil the  nan.\nBarrle ls a baronet-\nSure, it Berves him right;\nHats off to tho man we've never met,\nNever to die knight.\n\u2014Cleveland Plain  Dealer\nTourist\u2014My physician advises He\nto locate whe.e I may have the beneflt of the south wind. .Does it blow\nhere?\nLandlord\u2014My! But you are fortunate in coming to just the rUht place!\nWhy, the su.th wind always blows\nhere.\nTourist\u2014Always? Why, It seems\nto me to be blowing from '.he north\nnow.\nLandlord\u2014Oh. It may be coming\nfrom that direction but It's the south\nwind. It's just coming back, yeu\nknow.\nThe Oil for the Farmer.\u2014A hottl.\nof Dr. Thomas' Eclectr'.c Oil in the\nfarm house will save many a journey\n(or the doctor. It Is not only good\nfor the children when taken with colds\nsnd croup, and for the mature who\nsuffer from pains and aches, but tliere\nare directions for its use on sick cat-\ntie. There Bhould always be a bottle of It tn the house.\nDiscussing ti customs difficulty, Mr.\nLoeb, collector of customs for the\nport of New York, said:\nIf ours weren't such a big and Important country I suppose some tourist would treat us as the Yankee au-\ntomobollst treated Montenegro.\nThis automoblllst, after a wrangle\nwith the customs officers on the Montenegro frontier, shouted:\nHere, shut up the trunks! Put 'em\nback on the car again! I'll not go\nthrough you at all! You're no country! You're only a spot. I don't\nmind losing 10 or 12 minutes to go\naround you.\nYou are an honest boy, said the\nlady as she opened thc roll ot five\none dollar bills, but the money I lost\nwas a five dollar bill. Didn't you see\nthat in  the  advertisement?\nYesslm, replied the boy. It was a\nfive dollar bill that I found, hut I had\nIt changed bo that you could pay me\na reward.\nTry Murine Eye Remedy\nIf you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes\nor Granulated Eyelids, Doesn't Smart\n\u2014Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell\nMurine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, Mc.\nMurine Eye Salve In Aseptic Tubes,\n25c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mall,\naa *n tm*. a*** tie aa tm uut a\u2014* a***\n|f\u00abrts>* *\u25a0-\u2022\u2022 neasedr Co.. Chleage\nPOISONOUS MATCHES ARE PASSING AWAIT\nDangerous chemicals are not used In tip\nping EDDY'S Ses-qui Safe Light matches.\nSea that you get EDDY'S and no other\n\"just as good.\"\nSafety\u2014In Its complete sense\u2014is absolutely guaranteed, but you must ask for\nEDDY'S new\nYour\nDealer\nHas Them\nBright Kind       '\nM-s.  RaleB\u2014Mrs. Ranlco    ls\nsmartest woman In this towu.\nHusband\u2014Explain why.\nMrs.  Rales\u2014She   knows   all\nneighbors' telephone numbers.\n\"Ses-qiii\"\nMatches\nthe\nthe\nShe (after the quarrel)\u2014Leave my\npresence!\nHe (confusedly)\u2014Why\u2014er\u2014you've\ngot them all!\nPa: son\u2014Do you know where little\nboys go to when they smoke?\nBoy\u2014Yes; up the alley.\nAfterthought\nMrs. Wayburn\u2014We're sorry now\nwe called our house a bungalow.\nHer Friend\u2014Why?\nMrs. Wayburn\u2014It we spent $50\nmore ou It wt could call It a villa.\nWhon Woman Reads *\n\u25a0 Henry, It says here that Mr. Jackson pelted the pill for three sacks.\nWhat docs It mean?\nGood heavens, Mary, can't you understand plain English? It means\nthat lie slugged the sphere safe and\nlanded on the third pillo*.\nIn the Spring\nthe Blood is Thin\nThe body ot man can be Influenced\nIn health or disease only through the\nmedium of two channels\u2014the blood\nand the nerves.\nWhen the blood Is thin and watery,\nsb It usually Is In the spring, tho\nnerves are starved and depicted, and\nevery organ in the human body ls les.i\ncapable ot performing Its natural\nfunctions.\nThe action ot the heart weakens,\nbreathing Is weaker, the gustrlc juices\not the stomach do not flow regularly,\nthe liver, kidneys and bowels are less\nactive, and In fact the whole body\ntails au easy victim to disease.\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food goes directly to the formation ot new, rich '\nblood, and on this account Is a restorative ot exceptional value. You caa\nscarcely conceive ot a treatment bet*\nter suited as a spring tonic to enrich\nthc watery blood and put new vim,\nvigor and energy Into every part ot\nthe human body.\nThere Is no trouble from headaches,\nneuralgia, sleeplessness. Irritability,\nnervousness and I'espondency when\nthc nerves aro property nourished with\nan abundance of pure, rich blood. The\nuse of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Is the \u2022\nmost certain means ot getting the'\nblood Into perfect condition.\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food\nGO cents a box, t to. 12.50, at all Healers, or Edmansbn, Bates A Co.. Iii*\nIted, Toronto. THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n\/T\nHAS MANY ACTIVITIES\nLT.-COL. PONTON IS BEST KNOWN\nFOR MILITARY WORK.\nDeputy Registrar et Hastinga Has\nBern a Notable Marksman In His\nDay, Active In Toronto University\nSenate, Ontario Bar Executive,\nRed Cross and Numerous Other\nAssociations.\nbf.-Col. William Nislet Ponton,\nene of the beat-known military men\net eastern Ontario, bas been For more\nth i forty years deputy registrar ol\nt' > county (. Hastings and comes\nfro.-, good old military Scottish\nancestors.\nSince he was a young uan he has\ntaken a deep interest in rifle shooting\nand has been an earnest worker on\nbehalf of the volunteer militia ol the\nDominion,, both by example and precept doing all in his power to en-\nIIECT.-COI. WILLIAM H. POKTOK.\ncourage the force and promote its\nefficiency. He was a crac'.t rifle shot\nhimself for years and actively participated in rifle shooting contests,\nholding three medals and a champion-\nihip cup as proof ot hia prowess as a\nmarksman. He is a member of ths\nFifteenth Regiment. He entered that\n*et\\j as lieutenant in 1882 and was\npromoted to captain in 1884, major in\n_8!M and lieutenant-colonel comman-\niant in 1895. He is acting brigadier\nMajor of the Sixth Infantry Brigsde\nind is one of the executives ot the\ncllevillc Board ot Trade, president of\ntie Bay of (Juinte District Exhibition\nIssociation and president of the Hastings Law Associatior, the Veterans'\nAssociation and a senator ot Toronto\nUniversity, besides bein(f a very prominent Mason and deputy district\nPand master lor Prince \"dward dis.\nict.\n.' Lieut.-Col. l'onton Is vice-president\n>t the loeal Game and Fish Protective\nIssociation. a vice-president of Upper\nCanada College Old Boys' Association\nind a vice-president (or Ontario ol the\nCanadian branch ot the British Red\nCross Association and one of the executives of the Ontario Bar Association.\n' He was born at Belleville in 1850\nind was educated at Upper Canada\nCcllege and Toronto University, be-\nin j a medallist at the latter institution in 1877. He subsequently stud-\nled lsw and wai called to tho Ontario\nBar in 1881 and has since success-\nhilly practiced In the Belleville district. In 1883 he married Miss San-\nkey, ot County Fermanagh, Ireland.\nThs  Australian   Lyn   Bird.\nThe Queen Victoria Lyre bird is one\nol the rarest Australian birds, and ia\na most wonderful songster and mimic,\nfar surpassing any other in these respects. Never common, it is continually becoming scarcer on account of\nIt. peculiar habits. Almost all ot Its\nlife ia spent on the ground, the nests\nart built on or very nesr the ground,\nand to make its continued existence\nstill more uncertain, only one egg is\nlaid. Foxes, which were introduced\nInto Australia to lurnish amusement\nfor the early colonists who could net\ngive up their English ideas of- sport,\nhave practically exterminated the\nLyre birds, ot which there are tbree\nspecies.\nThese birds are ot dull, though very\nbeautiful plumage, the tails being especially wonderful. First discovered\nIIS years sgo, they were thought to\nbe birds ot paradise but it was soon\nsesn that no bird ot paradise had any\nsuch, peculiar tail and the Lyre bird\nwas recognised as constituting a class\nby himself. Only the males have the\nlyre-shape tall, and It fs only fully\ndeveloped when the bird is four years\nold.\nMILITARY DISCIPLINE,\nCommanders'   Methods   ef   Keeping\nOrder Differ Very Widely.\nThat the diseiplinary methods of\nmilitary commanders differ widely was\nshown by two British officers who\ndied within a few days. It used to\nbe said of Sir Frederick Carrlngton,\nwhose muscular prowess was famous,\nthat when an alleged offender waa\nbrought before him he would solemnly resolve himself into a court-martial,\ncall for a statement from the accuser,\nand then demand of the accused:\n\"Did you do this?\" As denials were\nproverbially useless, the answer was\ncommonly, \"Yes, sir.\" \"Then tske\nthat\u2014and that\u2014and that I\" and tba\ncombined judge and executioner\nwould rain blow upon blow till convinced that a sufficient penalty had\nbeen inflicted.\nLord Wolseley, on the other hand,\nwas rather scrupulous about the for-\nLmal preliminaries, and always aimed\nto make the punishment fit the crime.\nOne morning he delivered an address\nto his men on parade, warning them\nagainst carelessness of attire, especially when under the view of the civilian\npublio. .The next day he was halted\nby three of his own men on guard\nat the barrack gate, who refused to\nlet him pass out because he was wearing only one spur. He was so delighted at their literal application of\nhis orders that he presented them on\nthe spot with a sovereign apiece,\nwarning them not to spend any of- it\non drink. Within a few hours the\ntrio were brought before him, under\narrest for intoxication. '\n\"If y'r hon'r 'adn't gi'n us the\nmoney,\" said their spokesman, frankly, \"we'd 'a' been all right.\"\nWolseley pondered the situation a\nfew minutes, and then answered:\n\"You are riglit. I was a fool to expect anything else. You will now\nright about, and march in charge of\nthis sergeant .to the savings bank,\nwhere he will stand over you till you\nhave deposited every penny in your\npockets!\"\nPerhaps the best of sll the barrack-\nlore clustered about Wolseley's name\nhas to do with an order he issued\nduring thc Egyptian occupation, when\nbe posted a guard around the harem\nof a local potentate. A brother officer, strolling into an adjacent garden,\nwas hailed by a sentinel: \"Hi, sir;\nyou mustn't go there, sir!\"\n\"Don't you see who I am?\" protested the officer; \"I am Col. Blank ot\nthe .\"\n\" \"Yes, sir, I know,\" interrupted the\ntrooper, respectfully; \"but they's led-\ndies livin' in thst 'ouse, an' th' borders f'm Sir Garnet is that 'e's not to\nbe let go in there 'isself\u2014no matter\n'ow bad he wants to.'\"\nA Big Incubator.\nThe largest egg incubator in the\nUnited Kingdom, one with a capacity\nfor 3,000 eggs. Is now at work on a\npoultry farm in Kent. The appliance\nis iu reality a succession of incubators joined, operated and controlled\nby one small automatic heater or fire-\npot. The cost of running the incubator Is not more than Is, 3d. a\nweek, u only 15 pounds of anthracite coal ls uScd each day ln the Ore\npot. A well-known authority on poif'\ntry culture said that these maniwoi\nincubators should prove a boon _\nEnglish poultry-farmers. At one man\nean attend satisfactorily to them the\nlabor and capital saved are consider-\nable.\n\\\nA Bird Disciplinarian.\n' For an example of the wisest ot all\nmsde creatures in dealing with the\nfrivolities of the weaker sex, tbe\nhorntiill. an uncouth bird of Africa\nand India, is the most striking. The\nhornbill drills itself a hole into the\nhollow of some old tree when itis\nnesting time. There it builds a comfortable nest and in due course the\neggs are deposited therein by its mate.\nWhen they are all in place and the\nnecessity arises of sitting on them for\nthe necessary weeks, the male hornbill\ndrives its mate Into the nest and proceeds to erect a wall of perfectly good\nmasonrf across the aperture to keep\nher tbere. In this wall h left one\nsmall slit. It is just large enough for\nthe female to put her bill out through\nit. The c-.ale bird does not forget, his\nresponsibility and gathers food for\nhis captive. This lie brings to the\nnest. The captive puts her bill\nthrough the slit and the food is deposited therein. So does the master\nof the flock assure himself thst the\nfemale of his household is not to be\nallowed to gel careless with th; eggs\nand possibly allow the young birds\nin them to come to, harm. When the\nyoung ones are hatched the male tears\nout his masorry wall and the mother\nis liberated.\nHussars Once Freebooters.\nHussars were originally scarcely respectable enough to include a Prince\nof Wales among their numbers, for\nthe word hussar is akin to corsair, and\nthe flrst hussars were simply freebooters. As part of the regular army\nthe hussar appeared in Hungary in\n1458, when King Matthias Corvinus\nraised a corps of light horse under\nthat name to fight against the Turks.\nThe name and fame of the Hungarian\nhussars spread throughout Europe,\nand Frederick the Great was not above\nsending an officer to study their work.\nThe English hussar dates from '1803,\nwhen the Seventh regiment was converted from light dragoons into hussars.\u2014Westminster Gazette.\nOLD ENGLISH KITCHENS.\"\nWhere Not One but Two er Three\nOxen Might Be Roasted.\nThe kitchens ot olden times seem ta\nhave been of extraordinary size, judging from tbe investigations made by,\nan English historical society. At\nHurstmonceux, for example, tber* wa|\na kitchen twenty-eight feet blgh, with\nthree huge fireplaces and a bakehouse\nwltb an oven fourteen feet ln diameter.\nThere la an old Welsh kltcben near\nLlandudno, dating from tbe fifteenth\ncentury, wblcb has many primitive\nculinary contrivances, now obsolete or\nsuperseded by modern devices. Among\ntheae curious old devlcea may be mentioned a meatjack wltb a flywheel, a\nsteel toasting stand and a fan bet-\nlows.\nAt Battle abbey tbere la a curious\neld kitchen containing much ot Interest to the antiquary, and a kitchen at\nSt Mnry's hall, Coventry, ls remarkable for the famous \"knaves' post,\" to\nwhich, It appears, refractory scullions\nwere temporarily attached by way ol\npunlsbment v\nThere la a medieval kitchen at Westminster abbey, although little remain*\nby wblcb to Identify It aside from tbe\nrubble flooring, tbe buttery hatch and\nan adjoining cellar. Hampton Court\npalace shows Its \"groat kltcben,\" wltb\nvaulted roof and sets ot antlers on Us\nwalla\nEnglishmen of other dnys fully recognised tbe advantages ot a large\nkitchen. Tbere ls extant an order,\ndated April 10, 1200, wherein Hugb de\nNevill Is commanded to have the king's\nkltcben nt Clarendon roofed wltb shingles and to cause two new kitchens to\nbe erected, one at Marlborough and\nthe other at I.udgersball, In which \"to\ndress\" the royal dinners. In this order tt ls stated that \"it Is particularly\ndirected that each kitchen shall be\nprovided with a furnace sufficiently\nlarge to roast two or three oxen.\"\u2014\nHarper'e Weekly.\nA Spark Making Alley.\nIt I* a curious fact thnt when TO per\ncent of cerium Is alloyed with SO per\ncent ot Iron tbe metal thus produced\npossesses the remarkable property ot\ngiving ott a shower of sparks when\nstruck lightly by a steel wheel. Tbl*\nsubstance baa been used for making\nauto Igniter* for gas bumors, minora'\nacetylene lamps and cigar lighters. It\nhaa been proposed to utilize It for Igniting motor headlight* and eren to\nemploy It a* a substitute for electrto\nIgnition In the cylinders-Chicago Record-Herald. . .\nBANK DEPOSITS.\nGuarded by a Network of Devlcea te\nInsure Thslr Safety.\nFrom the moment a depositor line*\nnp before the receiving teller's window of a bnnk and lays his bills on the\ncounter until he again receives back\nbis money from the pnying teller bis\ndeposit bas been surrounded by a network of devices to insure Its safe keeping. It bas been subjected to tbe rigid\nbanking law* of tbe state or nation,\nto a guardianship by a bost of public\nofficials, by steel and by time locks, by\ntbe vigilance of tbe bank officials nnd\nthe surveillance of bonding compahles.\nAnd yet In spite of tbls constant effort, tbougb tiie depositor rarely loses\nblmself, sometime* bla money mysteriously disappears, and until tbe guilty\nperson Is detected tbe shadow of a\ndoubt bangs.over tbe personnel of tbat\nbank, from tbe office boy to the president Sucb, however, I* the system ot\nvigilance by which the public through\nIts agents of the law guards funds on\ndeposit that It is only rarely lhat the\nmoney so taken I* not recovered.\nTbe marvel I* nut tbat men dally,\nhourly, tempted wltb opportunities to\npurloin tbe wealth which passes\nthrough tbelr Angers sometimes yield\nto this temptation, but that the set-\ncentnge of loss from theft wblcb tbe\nbanks of tb* country austaln la not\ngreater than It la. Indeed, ao unusual\nIs tbe occurrence of a theft by a member ot tbe bank'* personnel tbnt when\nsuch Is tbe case the bank's nervous organisation ts thrown out of equilibrium. Tbe bank as a bank never rest*\nuntil th* theft I* uncovered and tb*\nguilty man Is mad* to reimburse tb*\ncash take_-.-Wllllam Buckey In Leslie'*.\n| Ths Only Excuse.\n\"1 see tbat somebody say* many l\nnan I* * poet without knowing It\"\n\"Oee. what luckf-Chlcago Record\nHerald- -   -\nThree Star*.\nIt wu 1*1* Fuller, tbe famoua\ndancer, who Introduced Dumas tb*\nyounger to Flammarloo wben they met\nIn her dressing room it th* Athene*.\nSbe tell* of It In \"Fifteen Year* of a\nDancer** Life:\"\n\"I* It posslbl* that th* two most\ndistinguished personalities In Pari*\nare not acquainted with each other?\"\nshe nld. \"It I* not to remarkable,\"\nreplied Duma*, \"for yon se* Flam-\nmarlon dwell* In space, and t am Just\na euraberer ot tb* eertb.\" \"Ye*,\" (nld\nFlammarlon, \"but a llltl* iter coin*\nout of th* west haa brought us together.\"\nDoge and Their Feed.\nDog* growl wben you touch their\nfood, even In play, because tb* dog\nwu originally a ferocious animal, like\ntbe wolf, and self preservation by way\nof food I* bl* foremost and all pervading Instinct Only dogs that ar* so\nnear humankind tbat they understand\npractical Jokes allow their master te\ntake away tbelr food. Tbey will never\nallow another dog to do so notes* living In abject tear of tbe robber.-Bo*-\nton Herald. H__N\nA CELEBRATED SC00R,\nGeorge Gregg Was Late and Get Naw*\n\u2022f D'Arcy McGee Murdsr.\nIt-is just forty-five years sgo tbat\nthe late Hon. D'Arcy McGee was,\nassassinated on Sparks street, Ottawa, on the spot where now stands\nthe departmental store of Bryson,\nGraham tt, Co., and although there *\nhas been talk year after year in re-1\ncard to erecting a suitable memorial'\nto the renowned Irish-Canadian orator, statesman and patriot, it looks\nas if another session pt the House\nwill elapse and nothing be done in\nthis direction. In the Reference Library on College street, Toronto, file*\nof The Leader of April 7, 1868, may\nbe found. The edition ot that dat*\ncontained one of the greatest scoops\never recorded in the annals of Canadian journalism, and yet this exclusive news item was.printed under\nmodest single column, head lines.\nHow different would be the displsy\nto-day, when even the closure measure\ncommands a caption four ai_4 five\ncolumns wide, in type an inch or\nmore deep. Dr. George H. \u2022 Locke,\nChief Librarian, regards this file of\nThe Leader as among the most historic possessions in the library. The\nstirring tragedy of McGee's death,\nwho was shot down just as he was\nentering his boarding-house, and\nwhose body was found, lifeless, on\nthe pavement, occurred shortly after\ntwo o'clock in the morning. The noted\nParliamentarian had just finished a\nbrilliant two-hour speech in the Com-,\nmons upon the Nova Scotia question,\nin which he had uttered the loftiest\nsentiment of loyalty to the crown and\ndevotion to the country. He had expressed the hope that the deep sense\nof loyalty of the people of that province would induce them to forsake\ntheir attitude of hostility and unite\nwith the rest of the provinces in\nbuilding up a Canadian nationality.\nThe newspaper man, who scored the\ngreat beat on McGee's lamentable\ndeath, was the late George Gregg, who\nwas then Ottawa correspondent for\nThe Leader. That paper, which was\npublished until about 1875, was issued on Leader Lane on the very\nspot where the Leader Hotel now.\nstands on King street cast, Toronto.\nThe assassination occurred after the\nHouse had adjourned. It had been a\nbusy night for the representatives in\nthe Parliamentary Press Gallery,\nand, alter completing their work, all\n\"thc boys\" had departed and were in\nbed when the murder took place\/\nGregg was the only one^to remain.\nHe was a little late in finishing his\nreport and was on his way to bis\nhome when, on reaching Sparks\nstreet, he heard of the shooting. Not\nanother paper in Toronto or Canada\ncontained a line that morning regarding the terrible tragedy except The\nLeader, and thus was recorded one\not the greatest scoops ever pulled off\nin Canada. George Gregg, the man\nwho tallied in that great news story,\ndied himself a few years later under\nsad circumstances. He was an enthusiastic curler and, while engaged\nin the game, caught a cold which\ndeveloped into pneumonia and he\npassed away after only a few days'\nillness. He was at the time on the\nstaff of The Toronto Mail, of which\nhe was one of the founders.\nOns Hundred Francs.\nMcGillivray \"Knowles one of our\nwell-known Canadian painters, tells\nsn amusing story of a curious artist\ncharacter, Stcttler, from Belgium,\nwhom he met in Paris, This artist\nwas slways hard up. He asked\nKnowles for a loan of a hundred\nfrancs, which he was to pay back in\na month. He got the money and at\nthe appointed time paid it back. In\ntwo days bsck he came again.\n\"M'sieu Knowles, I should lak to\nborrow from you one hundred Irenes,\neh?\"\n\"All right.   Here il is.\"\nAnother month and the money was\npaid hack. As promptly thc request\ncame again:\n\"One hundred francs, please to\noblige, M'sieu Knowles?\"\nFor a whole year Stcttler kept on\nborrowing and paying back the hundred francs. When Knowles left\nParis he was obliged to terminate the\narrangement, bnt said:\n\"Look here, Btettler, if you want to\nkeep that last hundred francs a while\nlonger, do so, and send it to me when\nyou make good.\"\n\"Ah, M'sieu Knowles, I must pay\nit now. I nevarc mske good. I waa\nbehind once one hundred francs. I\nhsve nevarc caught up.  Mercil\"\nDonates Scholarship.\nSir Thomas Shaughnessy, president\nnf Ihe Canadian Paciflo liailway Co.,\nhas announced that he will give two\nscholarships in McGill University.\nMontreal, to be competed for by apprentices on the permanent staff ot\nthe road under 31 years nf age by\nminor sons of employes. The scholarships will be four years' tuition in\nthe faculty of applied science of that\nuniversity. The two candidates making the highest marks on thc regular\nentrance matriculation examination\nof thc university will be awarded the\nscholarships. The forms tor this ex-\naminatiqp will be distributed through.\nout the Dominion to those entering\nthe competition, which Is to be held\nin June.\nFOUR TIMES PREMIER\nDEATH OF SIR GORDON SPRIGQ\nA LOS8 TO SOUTH AFRICA.\nHis View ef Nature.\nHuxley wu once talking to Sir\nWilliam Gull about the healing power\nof nature. \"Stuff!\" said Gull. \"Nine\ntimes out ot ten nature does not want\nto eure the man. Sbe want* to put\nI WjSL-UJlll.flaBo-\" s \u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nVeteran Statesman Who Went To the\nDark Continent In Search of Health\nand Entered Politics\u2014Was Prime\nMinlstsr ef Caps Colony on Feur\nOccasions and Saw. Two Wars\nIn That Country.\nSouth Africa, in the recent death of\nSir Gordon Sprlgg, mourns a statesman who had played a distinguished\nSart in the public life of the country,\nir Gordon was Premier of Cape Colony on no fewer than four occasions.\nBorn in Ipswich in 1830, the son of a\nBaptist minister, he began lite in\nLondon u a journalist, and was a\nParliamentary reporter and contributor to various newspapers. When\ntwenty-eight his health broke down,\nand, like Cecil Rhodes, he went to\nSouth Africa in search of health. So\nill was he when he left England that\nbe had to be carried on tlie ship. Becoming a farmer, he soon become tbe\npossessor of great herds of cattle and\nsheep. The settler was drawn into\npolitics, and eleven years after his arrival he was elected to the Cape\nHouse of Assembly. He quickly came;\nto the front, and a decade later waa\nmade Premier. During his first term!\not office the Basuto war occurred, and;\nThe Peer Rests.\n\"Poet* we born, air,\" said the bard\nto the editor.\n\"Yes, I know they weren't hatched\nfrom duck eggs,\" answered the editor.\n\"But the question ta, Whv are Uus\nbornf\"\nsin soidoii sritioo.\nSir Gordon did his best to bring it to\na successful conclusion. He worked\nenergetically in raising scratch volunteer regiments and he was to be seen;\nstanding on the bridge ol coasting!\nvessels', addressing tn magniloquent1\nterms the very mixed body ot recruit*.;\nDuring the Boer War Sir Gordon, u,\nPremier and Treasurer of Cape Col-;\nony, bad a difficult task. Thia wu\nfollowed by, perhaps, the most momentous campaign of hla career. A'\nmovement wu started at the close ol\nIhe war for the suspension ot the\nConstitution of the Colony. It rapidly gained powerful support, and became the all-absorbing political topia\nof South Africa. Sir Gordon Sprigg\nand some of his colleagues vigorously\nopposed the proposal, in the face of.\nmuch hostility, until eventually Mr.l\nChamberlain, as Colonial Secretary,'\ngave bis decision against the suspension. Nevertheless, in the General\nElection of 1904, Sir Gordon wu defeated by Dr. Bmartt at East London\nby a majority of 964, and, the Progressives winning the election. Dr.)\nJameson formed the new Ministry.'\nSir Gordon attributed hia physical\nand nervous strength chiefly to the\n(act tbat he wu Suffolk-born.\nRadium and Photography.\nThe alpha and beta rays of radium,\nthe positive and negative particles into which the atom breaka up, are now\nstudied by photography. The process\nhas been developed in recent months\nby C. T. R. Wilson, and waa illustrated by Prof. W. H. Bragg, at the lut\nmeeting of the British Association.\nThe bit of radium is'held in a short\nglass cylinder six inches in diameter,\none end of which is closed with a glaae\nfilate, wbile a movable piston is fitted\nnto tbe otlier. The chamber being\nfilled with moist air, the piston ia\ndrawn outward, when the sudden expansion cools the moisture, and a log\nis formed that settles on the \"ions\ntbat are led u trails of any alpha\nand heta>aya.\nBy illuminating the to? and photo\ngraphing it, a picture showing Ur\npath of tbe rays ia obtained.\nTo tbe amsalngly long list ef article!\nmade ot paper tber* may be added paper cannon, wblcb bnve been manufaci\nlured at tbe Krupp work* In Germiny.\nThese paper Held pieces sre for special\nuse of the Infantry. Their caliber I* a\nlittle less tbsn two inch**, and tb*'\npieces are ao light tbat a soldier caa\neasily carry one. But the reslsMhc* tag\ngreater tbsn that of a field piece ol\n\u25a0teel ot the tarn* caliber. It ls not t*\nbo understood tbat tbese paper gun*\nar* in nny way to replace tbose mad*\net steel. The paper arm* ar* Intended\nmerely fer uses In situations when tb*\nmovement of field artillery wonld tm\nImpracticable. Faptr artillery en \"\"\nHeld of battle seems an extnordlur;\nthing, but lt I* hardly mor* to than |\npar wheels for freight car* on railway\nappeared whtn they wer* Snt Intr\naucatt tt, 1st that matter, tban pap\n\u00bbat*r Milt w\u00ab*,-N\u00abw. York Trlbwfc I TBE  SUN,   GRAND   FORKS,   B. C.\n1\n\u25a0!<***'\"\nram\n\u2022\n\u2022'\nfl1*;',\n\u00bb  \u2022\nYour House Needs\nPainting\nNow is the time to have it\ndone. Paint before the hot\nsummer dust begins to fly.\nSherrTin-Williams High Standard   Paints\nAre the right kind to use.\nA.tUs\nOur Paint Advice ta Free\nMANLY'S HARDWARE .\nFor Sale\u2014Ten acres of good fruit\nland in the West end of the city,\nabout half of which is planted- to\n'fruit trees, now commencing to bear\nApply to E. Barron, Grand Forks,\n'B.C.\nNtWS OF THE CITY IN BRIEF Follick's residence near   the Baptist\n  . church on Winnipeg avenue.   The\n_.        .     _-. ,           .,,\u201e. \u201e, ,l\u201e pricei paid for Ae property is aaid to\nThe prize   ist committee of the f      \u2022*                         ,.   ,     ,    ,\n-.    .   ,, \u201e   ,.        uu-.i     __________ have been iu tbe neighborhood of\nProvincial Poultry exhibitwn.which ^                        B\nwill be held in this oity next Decern- \t\nber, held a meeting in the office of\nthe secretary, W. E. Hadden, on\nWednesday evening. Those preaent\nwere Messrs. Fowler, Hadden and\nMcKim, of this city, and J. Koll\nmar, of Trail. A great deal of progress wag made in arranging the\nprizes, whioh will be more valuable\nthia year tban at any previous show\nof the association.\nA few small ehipnieniB of Yellow\nTraiispareut apples were made from\nthia city tbia week. Ubaa. Hesse\nsent out li-5 boxes, for whioti be\nrealized tl.M per box.\nAt the special meeting of the\nUrand Forks Agricultural associa\ntion, on Friday evening, the spi eial\nprize list was completed. A com\nmittee was also appointed to solioit\ndonations for the fair, and the association decided to offer a prize for\na football game. A discussion of\nfinancial matters in connection with\nthe forthcoming fair took up the\nmajor portiou of the time of the\nmeeting.\nH. A Nichols, local CP.R, agent,\nleft yesterday for Chicago, to whioh\nplace he was hurriedly railed by a\ndispatch from headquarters. He\nexpects to be away about tbree\nweeks. Mr. Patterson, of Eho'.t, is\nfilling bis position bere during bis\nabsence.\nMiss Aoua McDonald, of Boston,\nMats., arrived in tbe city ou Wednesday to visit, ber unole, Joseph\nMcDonald, bit- MuDouaid bad\nuever seeu bis meow until ber arrival bere.\nTbe dauce glveu io the opera\nI bouse uu VV edueaday ulgbt uuder\nlbe auspices ut the Uraud Forks\nbaud was very largely attended, uud\nit proved to be a tuuruugtily eujuy-\nuoie alfuir.\nI'tie Chicago Vaudeville company\nauiacied laigo auuieuces to lhe\nopera house ou Mouday uud Tuesday evemugs. iUose who attended\nwere satisfied wilb tbe show.\nJobn Simpson, priucipui of the\nVienua (Out, I blgU school, who bus\nbeeu speuding a mouib iu the uuy\nloosing after tils orchard, left yesterday for the oust viu lUe coast.\nThe heavy rains yesterday caught\na number of ranchers with tbeir\nhay and grain crops out in tbe fielH_\nThey say ibat if it had kept clear\nfor tbree diys longer they would\nbave been more thankful for the\nfree irrigation.\nMr. si'.l Mrs John M'Kie returned lionit* un Monday from Van-\nC hi ver.\nMiss Marjoiie Kerman is visiting\nrelatives ut Aramata, in tbe Okanagan country.\nWilliam Huffman commenced\nwork last Monday ou a Urge two\nstorey dwelling near K. K. Gilpin's\nresidence.\nLust Saturday three Italians were\nsent tn ttiH Nelson, jail for two\nmourns  hy   Jud_(e  Cuuhrane    fur\nshooting grouse out of season.\n  -\u2014\u2014\u2014.\nGwi.   A Men. \"the 0. P. R conHnc-      W  J. Bohannan, of Madras, On-.,\nto-, on Widneeilay purchased E R   visited the city on Monday\n' Dr. E. R. Follick, of North Van\ncouver, was in the city yesterday.\nMr. Follick wae formerly a member\nof the Qrand Forks city council.\nWanted\u2014Plain sewing; 11.SO per\nday. Call or address Miss Bessie Justus, Riverside ave., North Fork add.\nW. 0. Miller, district superintendent of the C.P.R, spent several\nday* in tbe city this week.\nThe old Graham ranch of 320 acres\nnear Cascade is for sale. Five years\nin which to pay. Apply to owner,\nW. K. Esling, Rossland, B. C.\nJohn Burns & Son, of Nelson,\nhave been granted the oontract hy\nthe Dominion government fer the\nconstruction of the new post office\nat Greenwood, according to advices\nDAD C A f IJ A 5-roomed\nrUROALE cottage with\nall modern improvements-\ntwo lots\u2014on Observation ave.\nFor particulars apply to \"\nGeo. W. Gowland,\nPort Alberni, B.C.\nW. F. ROBINSON\nGENERAL TRANSFER WORK\nWOOD    AND    ICE\nOFFIOE AT PCTRIE'S 8TORI\nPHONF 64      GRAND FOIKS, B. C.\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture   Made   to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly Done.\nKAVANAGH & McCUTCHEON\nWINNIPEG AVENUE\nPalace Barber Shop\n^1\nKamii' \"oii'nc h SiwolaSy.\nFree Children's Playground at the Spokane Fair\nSuits to Order &18 iwds\n1 We are agents for some of the leading tailorihg establishments in the east. When you order from us you have\nthe advantage of being measured by a' practical tailor,\nensuring perfect fit.   We guarantee satisfaction.\nOur Spring and Summer Goods Have Arrived\nThey are thc best you can buy. We guarantee you the\nbest made clothes in the country at the lowest prices.\nWe always have men that know their business making\nthese clothes. Call and see our goods and prices. We\nwant your trade, and we can give you satisfaction.\nGeo. E. Massie, the  Reliable Tailor\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\n1st Door Nohth or (Ihaxhv Hotki..\nKlKHT iSTKKKT.\nOVCI1 C3 YEARS'\nKXPEMENCC\neimtrtm,tTimtm\nTalent, like-,\nTmoc Mama\nDtSIONO\nComioHTs 4c\nletcrtptlin mat\n 'iiotiter au\n\u2014munleiv\nscitMiflc Jilt\nto\n, UMnUdlMUf. xmrtoexe\nIBT Ktwulflu Journal. Tartu I\n.t*m,t-mt*nW*V*U.   BoM\nDr. de Van's Female Pills\na-ahal-la French ragulator; never hill. Then\n\u25a0 ue exceedingly powerful la regulattu the\nnomtlTe portion ol the female lystem. KcIuh\nafichaap Imitation. Br. do Tao* ire sold at\nfe'gaCtfgtiglS' M*1_9___i'____S_? \u2022?<!__<\nPicture Framing\nWe are experts\nin this line, and\nhave on band a\nchoice selection of Mouldings in all styles and finishes.\nBring in your pictures and have them framed to beautify your home.   Our charges are very moderate.\n****\nGrand Forks Furniture Go\nWUowSluJei.Eu. The Complete House Fa-mis hen\nGRAND FORKS MEAT MARKET\nSECOND STREET, NEAR BRIDGE.\nFresh and Salt Meats, Poultry always on hand.\nHighest market price paid for live stock.\nPHONE 58 and receive prompt &nd courteous attention.\nwhich have reached thst eity. It is\nsaid that the contract involves sn\nexpenditure of $45,000.\nFor Sale\u2014Five and one fifth acres\nof the best fruit Und; cleared; fenced;\nwell; fonr-roomed house; fifteen minutes' walk from town. For particulars\napply to owner, G. H. Pell, Grand\nForks, JB. C.\nWOOD as FENCE POSTS\nDry four-foot Fir and\nTamarac. Cedar and Tamarac Posts. Prompt attention to phone ordrrs.\nA.   GALLOWAY\nRANCH WOOD DIALER\nPHONE L14 COLUMBIA. B. C.\nGrand Forks Transfer\nrBONI 1J9\nCOAL, WOOD, OIL, CEMENT\nDBATiNfi OF AU HINDS\nTrunks to ini From Station*\nMclntyre 8 Clayton, Props.\nHANSEN SCO\nCin BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER\nWOOD AND COAL DEALEIS\nAND eiNERAL TIAMINa\nOrricil\nf. Downey's Cigar Store\nTiuraoRni; __.__,.\nOram, KM Mwt ttlftAt\n-Umiti'l RMIDIKCI. BIS 'US* SU SSI\nP r in ting\nWe are prepared to do\nall kinda of .\nCommercial Printing\nOn the shortest notice and in\nthe most up-to-date style\nBECAUSE\nWe bave tbe most modern jobbing plant\nin the Boundnry Country, employ com\npetent workmen, and carry a complete\nline of Stationery.\nWE PRINT\nBillheads and Statements,\nI_\u00abttnrhfada and Envelopes,\nPosters, Dates and Dodgers,\nBusiness and Visiting Cards,\nLodge Constitutions and By-laws,\nShipping Tags, Circulate and Placards,\nBills of  Fane and Menu  Cards,\nAnnouncements   and Counter\nPads,   Wedding  Stationery.\nEverything turned out in an\nUp-to-date Printery.\n\u2022it*\nfifi(\\I\\ PDIMTIltt-fi\u2014th\u00abkind we d\u00b0\u2014\u00bb in ibwlf\nV-llJUU [IV1L111L1VI M advertisement, and a trial\norder will convince you that our stock and workmanship are of the beat. Let ns estimate on vonr ordor.\nWe guarantee satisfaction.\nUf;* ftrot flint &lt0p\n*:","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Evening_Sun_1913-08-15","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0341765","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.031111","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-118.439167","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Titled The Evening Sun from 1902-01-02 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-09-20 to 1929-05-10","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Grand Forks, B.C. : G.A. Evans","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1913-08-15 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":"1913-08-15 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":""}]}