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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":" :ismmm^-\nSun.\nSeventh Year\u2014-No. 37.\nGrand Forks, B. C, Friday. July 10, 1908.\n$1.00 Per Year in Advance.\n$300,000 BLAZE\nThe most disastrous conflagration\nin the history of the Boundary country broke out in the rear of the\nClarendon restaurant shortly after 2\no'clock last night. As a result two\nblocks and a half of the business\ncentre of the city are a mass of\nsmoldering ruins this morning.\nThe fire was not discovered until\nit had gained quite a headway, and\nwhen the department reached tbe\nscene it was beyond control. Tbe\ndry frame buildings burned liko\ntinder, and made an exceedingly bot\nblaze.\nThe district ravaged by the flames\niB bounded on the north by the\nNorth Fork of Kettle river, on the\neast by Main street, on the south by\nFirst street, and on the west by Winnipeg avenue.\nThe buildings razed to the ground\nwere: The Yale and the vacant\nbuildings east of the hotel on the\nriver bank; the Valhalla hotel; tbe\nVictoria hotel, occupied F. W. Russell's saloon and P. A. Z. Pare'B\nbarber shop; R. Pribilsky's barber\nshop; the old Grand Central hotel\nbuilding; The Bodega, occupied by\nR. L. Miles' second-hand store; the\nold Norden hotel building; A. E.\nSmith & Co.'s block, occupied by\nTeddy Waldron's barber shop;B. C.\ntelephone exchange; C.P.R down-\ntO'vn telegraph olliee; the Windsor\nhotel (shell of the building still\nstanding); Eastern Townships bank\nbuilding, occupied by the Eastern\nTownships bank, the British American Trust company, Dominion Ex\npress company, Rutherford Bros.'s\ntransfer office, nnd \\\\'. B. Cochrane's\nlaw olliee; F. Downey's cigar store;\nthe Province hotel; the Square\nhotel, occupied hy the Clarendon\nrestaurant; the Union hotel building; the Grand Forks hotel; the\nRoyal hotel; Sam Horner's building;\nthe Addison block, occupied by J.\nA. Hartley1! jewelry store, the Cooperative, Waugh Bros.'s ware-\nroom, the second floor being lilted\nup as a hall and lodge rooms; R. R.\nGilpin's building, occupied by his\nmajesty's customs olliee; the Chappie block, occupied by Geo. Chappie's bicycle store and plumbing\nshop and H. K. Woodland's drug\nstore, Iln: second Moor being used\nas lodge rooms liy the I.O.O.F.,\nK. of I'. und other fraternal orders.\nThe following is as complete a list\nof the total losses and the amounts\nof insurance carried as is obtafnable\nal ihe present time;\nTotal Loss. Insurance\nYale hotel SliU.OOO   iJI5,000\nA. E.Smith .fcCo...    1,500       1,500\nCo-Op. Store    5,000       2,500\nWaugh Bros        600 300\n*Insnred in Toronto; amount not\nknown.\nThe fire boys did excellent work,\nand the citizens rendered them every\npossible ossistance. When it became\napparent that the fire would spread beyond control the fire engine was\nbacked down to .liver, and this, together with the water in the large\nstorage tank, gave the department an\nample water supply. The flames\nburned fiercely until about 5 o'clock,\nwhen they were gotten under control.\nUp to the present only one casualty is known to have resulted from the\nholocaust. This was a man named\nNels Barneby, who arrived in the\ncity yesterday from Malo, Wash\nHis charred remains were found in\nthe ruins of the Hotel Valhalla at\nnoon today. Ed Noble, -a local painter and paper hanifer, has also been\nmissing since last night, and up to the\npresent no trace of him has been\nfound.\nTHE CITY COUNCIL\ntrack near the court bouse with\nhim. *\nThe council then went into ion-\nmittee of the whole for  the consid-i\nI eration of the electric light rate bylaw, which was  adopted   clause by\nThe regular meeting of the city I c|rum   *\u201e   com,niUeii ftnc, tht!n ap.\nproved in its entirety, after which it\npassed its third leading in the council. The new metre rates fur light\nare: 1 to 25 k.w.h., 15c; 25 to 100,\n13c; 100 to 150, 12c; 150 to200, lie;\nF. W. Russell .\nValhalla hotel\nP.  A. Z. Pare,\na, Pribilsky....\n1.'i,000\n8,000\n1,200\n2,300 i\n2,500\n2,500\n800\nT. Waldion     1,200\n2,000\n3,000\nfi,5()il\n6,000\n1,000\n1,000\n4,000\n6,000\n1,000\nli. L Miles\t\nB. C. Telephone Co\nWindsor hotel\t\nE. T.  Hank\t\nWm. Spier\t\nGranby hotel\t\nIi. A. Trust Co Fullv insured.\nI<\\  Downey     2,800 1,500\nRutherford Bros...Fully Insured.\nG.I''. Mercantile Co.  15,1)00*       \t\nPer. Loan Co   25,000*\nDominion Ex. Co..     1.000\nProvince hotel    17,000\nG. P, Hotel      6,000\nRoyal hotel      2,000\nSam Horner        500 \t\nJ.A.Hartley     1,000\nR. H. Gilpin    2,600       1,000\nGoo. Chappie  14,000       8,500\nH. E. Woodland ..    5,600       8,800\nNearly all of Lbe merchants burned\nout have secured new locations temporarily. H. E. Woodland has re\nopened his drug store in Morrison's\njewelry store; the E. T. Bank will\nbe ready for business in the brick\nblock next the opera house on Monday morning; the British American\nTrust company is doing business atD.\nD. Munro & Co.'s old stand; the B. C.\nTelephone office has been moved to the\nbuilding next to Morrison's store; the\nC.P.R. telegraph office and the customs office are doing business in the\nKettle Valley line depot, and Fred\nDowney will reopen his cigar store in\nthe postoffice. The Provin e bote'\nhas opened a bar in a tent.\nFrank Hartinger, owner of the\nGrand Forks hotel, has announced his\nintention of rebuilding as soon as lie\ncan get the material on the ground\nA number of other persons who had\ntheir properties destroyed have made\nthe same declaration.\nMayor Fripp has declared tomorrow\n(Saturday) a public holiday in order\nto give the citizens an opportunity to\nclear away some of the debris from\nthe burnt district.\nMayor Fripp yesterday received a\ntelegram from Mayoi Taylor of Nelson, expressing tho sympathy of the\ncitizens of Nelson for the people of\nGrand Forks in their great loss by the\nfire.\nA conservative estimate places the\nloss to buildings at about 8225,000.\nThe loss to goods will likely bring this\nsum up to $300,000,\nThe most irreparable loss is the\ndestruction of the Yale hotel. IC was\none of the best hotels in the interior,\nnud was Grand Forks'best advertisement. It is doubtful if present conditions warrant the reconstruction of\nthe house on its former magnificent\nscale.\nMuch sympathy is being expressed\nfor the unfortunate people who lost\nthe result of years of hard toil and\nsaving by tlio fire.\n7,000\n.1,000\n1,000\nOver sixty thousand dollars will\nbe expended forthe Interstate fair,\nwhich will he held in Spokane this\nfall, October 5 to 10 inclusive. Bigger and hetter than ever before is the\naim of the fair management, and to\nfulfill this end and attract better exhibits the premium list has been\nthrown wide open and tbe largest\nsum in the history of the fair association will Jbe given away to the\npeople of the Inland Empire this\nfall.\ncouncil was held in the council\nchamber Monday evening, all the\nmembers being present with the exception of Aid. McCallum.\nThe monthly reports of the chief\nof police and the chief of the fire\ndepartment were read and ordered\nfiled.\nThe chief of police was instructed\nto turn in the names of persons\nfrom whom he had collected dog\ntax.\nAfter some discussion on the subject, it appeared to be the opinion\nof the council that the lawn sprinkling regulations should more rigidly\nenforced. The council thought the\npolice should enforce the bylaw, as\nit was not the duty of the aldermen\nto act as policemen.\nThe chairman of the finance committee stated James Bruno, Dan\nO'Rae P. T. McCallum and I. A.\nDinsmore had been summoned before the police magistrate last week\nfor allowing stock to run at large\nwithin the city limits, in violation\nof the recently enacted pound by-\nluw. The charges against O'Rae,\nMcCalluin and Dinsmore had been\nwithdrawn on application of the city\nsolicitor, and in consequence of this\naction Bruno bud been let off without a line. The chairman stated\nthat considerable talk in regard to\nthis matter had been indulged in on\nstreet corners, and that Aid. McCullum had made assertion that thought\nhis being summoned before the police magistrate was spite work either\non tho part of the police or the\nfinance committee. .He had hoped\nthai Aid. McCallum would be present at the meeting to give the council\na full explanation of his action. Mr.\nWoodland concluded by saying that\nif the bylaw could not be enforced\nwithout the his motives being impugned, he desired to resign as chairman of the finance committee. The\nother aldermen also spoke in favor\nin favor of the pound bylaw and\nwere of the opinion tbat it should lie\nenforced. Sonic of them said it was\nunfortunate that there was a member of the board who would not\nrecognize it. The mayor thought\nthat both thc council and the rate\npayers were in favor of a strict enforcement of the bylaw.\nThe chairman of tho water and\nlight committee reported that the\ncommittee recommended furnishing\ncity water to the residents of the\nRuckle addition for domestic purposes only at a rate of 50c in excess\nof the regular rates, the consumers\nto pay forthe laying of mains.which\nshould be done under the supervision of the city engineer. The\ncommittee was given discretionary\npowers to act in the matter.\nThe committee also recommended\nthat a metre be procured for the motor in P. Burns & Bo.'s cold storage\nplant.   Approved.\nThe city solicitor reported that he\nwas yet unable to formulate an estimate of the cost to the city in the\nMcintosh bridge inspection case.\nThe\n200 to 250, 10c; 250 to 350, 9c: 350\nto 500, 8c; 500 to 1000,.7c; 1000 to\n1200, 6c; over 1200, 5c. The rates\nfor power are identical with the\nabove figures. The minimun charge\nfor metre rates is 81 per month.\nThere are also charges foi metre\nrental and testing of metres. The\nflat rates remain the same as in the\nold bylaw. During the discussion\non the bylaw the fact was brought\nuut that the light reveuue had decreased $320 during the first mouths\nof the present year. This does not\nmean, however, that the city has\nactually lost this amount in cash,\nus tbe power bills have been lighter\nthan formerly.\nAid. Woodland was granted leave\nto introduce a tax rate bylaw, which\nwas read twice and then passed the\ncommittee stage.\nThe council then adjourned.\nREPUBLIC MINE\nNews wns brought down from\nFrunklin cump this week of an important strike of high-grade gold;\ncopper-stiver ore un the group of\nclaims owned hy John Morrell and\nSalvatijre Bonnaeci. Tnis group\nlomprises the Iota, Judittn, Maggie\nand Xunziella mineral claims, situate four miles south of the McKinley mine and one mile west of\nthe wagon road, and adjoin Ihe\nSilver King and Silver Queen claims\non the south. The strike was made\nat the bottom of a 20-foot shaft,\nwhich on the surface just showed a\nsmall trace of gold. A pulp was\nmade of the ore, and samples were\nsent to Spokane, Vancouver and lbe\nGranby smelter to be assayed. The\nassay returns, giving the following\nvalues, were received a few days\nago: Spokane, 8380; Vancouver,\n.\u25a0*395; Granby s'nelter, SHOO. A\nsample of the pulp was also retained by the owners. Nothing has\nyet been learned of the extent of\nthe find. Parties from this cityjwill\nleave for the camp next week to investigate the correctness of strike,\nand until they return no tuller details can be given.\nPERSONAL\nThe Syndicate Deep Mines have\nmade arrangements to reopen the\nfamous Republics mine at Redublic,\nWash. The deal was completed a\nfew days since. The sinking of tbe\nthree-compartmwit abaft that was in\nprogress when the former owners\nabandoned the pioperty is to be\ncontinued. The mine was originally\nowned by Patrick Clark and associates, and was located by some prospectors that Messrs. Clark, Robbins\nand Long, of Rossland, grubstaked\nin 18'J6, during the Rossland boom.\nA company was formed; the ore\nproved rich and near the surface;\nabout a million dollars was extracted from the mine and dividends\nwere paid and the mine became famous. The original owners sold out\nto a syndicate of Montreal and Toronto capitalists, among whom were\nRobert Jaffray nnd Clarence Mc-\nQuuig. A large cyaniding plant wns\nerected.    Mnjor   R.     G.     Edwards\nI.eckie wns placed in charge us superintendent. Soon the ore petered\nout, and although considerable\nmoney was spent in an endeavor to\nlind the shoots, the quest was unsuccessful. Several years since work\nwns abandoned, nnd since then the\nRepublic bus been idle. Taxes accumulated and the mine and mill\nbecame the property of Kerry\ncounty through their Don-payment,\n\u2014Rossland Miner.\nGeo. Chappie returned from Calgary last night.\nE. W. Barrett, a well known Vancouver real estate man, arrived in the\ncity on Wednesday,\nMiss   Olive   Henderson, of   Chilli*\nwaek, is visiting at the home   of   her '\nparents ill this city.\nWin. Dinsmore will leave the latter\npart of this week on a month's vacation trip to the coast cities.\nMrs. P. D. McDonald, of the Hotel\nColin, returned on Saturday last from\na short visit to Spokane.\nP. II. liui'iihaui, district freight and\npassenger agent of the Great Northern, returned last Saturday from Spokane.\nI). H. McLean and F. it. Knight,\nwho are interested in the Little Bertha mine, arrived ill the eity from\nSpokane on Wednesday, and left yesterday morning for the property up\nthe riyer.\nMrs. J. W. Rutherford and sister\nMiss Andrews, left on Tuesday for a\nvisit with their parents in Smith's\nFalls, Out.\nF. B. MeKeehan, United States\nimmigration inspector at this port,\nreturned on Tuesday from a week's\ntrip to northern Idaho points.\nJ. F. Royor.forinerly engaged in the\nlivery business here, and who i.s   now\nmayor reported  that Vice-! running a stage line between   Kere\nPresident Warren,   of \u25a0 the Kettlo! \"leos aml  -Princeton, called on old\nValley line, would arrive in the city ! ^\u00ab\u00bb*ntances in this city  last  Toes-\nsoon, and he thought this would be i \t\na good time to discuss tbe matter in !    s,no|.e \"Boundary\" Cigar.    Union\nSmoke \"Boundary\" Cigar\nreference to tbe removal of tbe side- made; Havana filled.\nPrice of Copper\nM. M. Johnson, consulting engineer of tho Dominion Copper company, who spent some days in the\nBoundary last week, spoke with\nconfidence of the red metal situation, and said he thought it would\nimprove from Ihis on.\n\"I do not sec what there is to keep\nthe price of copper at the low figures of the last few months,\" he\nsaid. '\u2022I'he condition of the whole\ncountry seems to be better than a\nfew weeks ago. I think this is due\nto some extent to the presidential\nnomination having been settled.\nAlthough I am not a politician, I\nbelieve that some men who know\nmore about the metal markets than\nwe do here in tho west had something to do with bringing on the appearance of hard times last fall. I\nthink it was a veiled slnp at Roosevelt. They are fairly confident now\nof what is to take place, and industries arc bound to improve, I believe.\"\nGone np in Smoke.\nCigar is the best.\nThe Boundary Columbia's Big Store\nMaple Syrup\nAnd n\nSugar\nStraight From the Producer\nAbsolutely Pure\nJohn Donaldson\nPhone A30       Columbia Avenue\nQllfp iEfonitti} j\u00a7>un\nPublished at Graoit Forks, British Columhla.\n Editor and Publisher\nA Hie of this paper can he seen nt the olliee\nof Messrs. B. 4 J. Hardy * Co., 30,31 nnd 32.\nFleet Street, B.C., Loudon. England, free of\nclmrjre, and that fl I'm will ho triad to receive\nsubscriptions and advertl.eineuts ou our behalf.\nBUBSOBIPTION BATES I\nOne Year $1.50\nOne Yenr (In advance)  1.00\nAdvertising rates furnished on mo\nl.etral notices, 10 and II cents per line.\nAddress all communications to\nTbe Evening Sun,\nPhonb B,4        Grand I'obks, B.C.\nhas taken years to place even the\nmost successful of them on a divi-\ndeng paying basis.\nWHY don't you wake up the people of this city and valley?\"\nsaid one of the leading business men\nof the Kootenays to The Sun man\nthe other other. \"The people don't\nappear to realize what they possess\nin the way of potential wealth.\nLook at the broad valley of undeveloped agricultural lands, the\nmagnificent mountain scenery, and\nthe abundance of'the water supply\nin lakes and beautiful flowing\nstreams. These advantages, taken\nin connection with an unsurpassed\nclimate and the best market facilities\nin the province, should have made\nGrand Forks a city of ten thousand\ninhabitants ere this time, and the\nvalley should be dotted with homes\nof prosperous ranchers. Why, if we\nhad your opportunities for enterprise in my home town, we would\nnow have twenty thousand people\nthere.\" The speaker lives in Koot-\nenay's most progressive city\u2014a city\nthat has gained its present commercial eminence solely through enterprise. As he has made irequent\nvisits to this city during the past\nten years, it must be taken for\ngranted that spoke from knowledge\ngained by a close observation of our\nenvironments. His remarks furnishes food for thought.\nFRIDAY, JULY 10, 10U8\n''PHIC dasire to get rich quick is\n1 responsible fer a great deal of\nactual poverty. People who are not\nsatisfied to amass wealth in a natural and rational manner, usual invest\nin every \"wild-cat\" scheme that\npresents itself. These schemes\nare usually fathered by glib talkers,\nwho do not give their victims time\nto exercise their better judgment.\nOnce the victim has been swindled,\nhe bites at tne next scheme that\ncomes along in order to play even\u2014\nwhich they seldom do. Then the\nhabit fastens its fangs on them like\nthe opium or liquor habit, and they\nare kept in a state of perpetual destitution. Recently promotors of\nAmerican townsites have been doing a thriving business in the Boundary; and more are on the way\nhere. Whether or not the lots exchanged for Canadian are wonh the\nmoney, we arc not prepared to sny;\nbut we do know that, according to\nthe laws of the state of Washington^\nit is unlawful for a Canadian to\nown realty in lhat commonwealth.\nIt is therefore clear that the sale of\nthese lots to British subjects is nothing short of an unadulterated fraud.\nThere is also another phase to this\nhabit of investing away from home.\nLast week canvassers sold 812,000 j\nworth of stock in this city in an em-1\nbryo East Kootenay undertaking.\nThis enterprise may lie nil right, and\nin tbe course of years it may even\npay big dividends. Fur the snke of\nthe investois we hope that this will {\nbe the case. Rut the men who put'\ntheir money in this concern take\nthe cbances of mismanagement,\nstock jobbing, and all the other\nevils that big corporations are fre-\ni|lit'inly cursed with,even though the\nenterprise should prove a finanr'a1\n\"success. We venture the opinion\nthat this money could hnve been invested with better advantage, nnd\nwith absolute security to the invi-s-\ntors, riglit here in the valley.\nThere is no longer the slightest\nchance of a loss by investing in Ket.\ntin Valley lands, and by improving\nthem the pri fits are certain, permanent and resonably rapid. This\nis an assertaih that can be snid of\nvery few industrial undertakings,\nbecause  past history   shows that it\nWHEN do you intend to resume\noperating the Sunday passenger train between Grand Forks\nand Marcus?\" asked The Sun man\nof a Great Northern official during\nmoment's leisure one evening this\nweek. '\"Not until you start an agitation for a Sunday passenger service,\" replied that gentlemen. \"The\ncompany probably takes it for\ngranted that, as long as you don't\nkick, you are satisfied with the\npresent schedule. Rosslnnd kicked.\nIt has now had a Sunday train for\nover a month; and thnt city does\nnot give the road half the traffic\nthat Grand Forks does. Nothing\nworth having is ever gained witnout\nan agitation. Ask and ye shall receive.\" The bint thrown out by\nthis official is worth acting upon. A\nSunday train from Marcus to Grand\nForks would give passengers for the\nwest a twenty-four hours' lay over\nin this city\u2014ample time in which\nview some of the beauties of the\nvalley.\nA MORE cordial welcome to the\nnew business firms being established here would help Grand\nForks' growth materially. Instead\nof looking at them akance and asking if they will be able to \"make it\ns ick,\" it would be infinitely better\nto give them a share of your patronage and to cheer them with a few\nwords of encour igemcnt once in a\nwhile. Every new business house established here adds to the wealth\nand population of the city, and the\npolicy of the people and the city\nadministration should be to make\nroom for all who come.\n\"\u25a0PHE city' government should be\n1 given all possible support by\ntl e oitizens in its effort to enforce\nthe bylaw prohibit ng cattle from\nrunning at large wiihin the city\nlimits. Grand Korks has outgrown\nits cow-pasture days, and people\nwho desire to improve their properties should be given every protection possible from the depredations\nof slock.\nminded policy, usually prompted by\nself-interest. No city ever attained\ngreatness by pursuing tbis course.\nTI7TTH the solution of aerial navi-\nVV gation the slang expression\n\"going straight up\" will become a\nrespectable dictionary phrase. Invention appears to be unable to keep\npace with our language.\nP. BURNS <& CO.\nLIMITED.\n1r*HEJ present generation are ac.\nquiring 'such a great foqdness\nfor travel, that it is doubtful if they\nwill be satisfied in any one place\nafter death.\nAN enthusiastic aeroplanist died\nin Paris this week. He bas\nprobably solved the problem of\naerial navigation by this time.\n1)EOPLE who complain of being\nburied in country towns are\nnever heard of after they remove to\nthe large cities.\nTHIS is not the season of the year\nto worry about the fuel bill,\nbut keep on friendly relations with\ntbe ice man.\nA\nPEOPLE who have acquired the\nfaculty of distinguishing criticism from chronic kicking and\n\"knocking\" have emerged fiom the\nwilderness of ignorance and started\non the road that leads to true\nknowledge.\nFAVORITISM and the attempt to\nbuild up one institution at the\nexpense   of   a rival   is  a  nnrrow-\nThe \"Kilties\"\u2014Canada's greatest\nconcert band\u2014gave a splenoid performance in the Rink last Saturday\nnight to an audience composed of\nabout 500 men, women and children\u2014and a few Hindus. The\nmeritorious character of concert was\nevidenced by the liberal applause\naccorded the performers. The program redered was a good one, consisting of the following numbers:\nMarch, Diplomat ..Sousa\nOverture, Jubilee Weber\nBagpipe Solo\u2014Hon. Pipe   Major  Albert Johnstone.\nCornet .Solo\u2014Richard Stress..Selected\nScotch    Reel\u2014The   Clan    Johnstone\nTroupe.\nPart Song\u2014The Kilt'e< Choir.\nSword Dance\u2014Master   Willie   Johnstone,\na Intermezzo\u2014-\"After Sunset\"\n(new) Pryor\nb Humoresque\u2014\"The Merry\nWidow\" Lebar\nBurlesqued in the  following  manner:\n1. Little German Band.\n2. Flute Solo with Organ Effect.\n3. An Amateur Trombonist.\ni. A Street Piano.\n5. A La Bag Banjo.\nFinale: A Brain Storm.\nScottish Airs\u2014Robei t Bru e. G idfrey\nSailor's   Hornpipe\u2014The Jolinstones.\nGrand Selections nf Popular\nClassics  Tobani\nIrish Jig\u2014The Jolinstones.\nFinale\u2014The Overture from William\nTell     Rossini\nWhile the musical numbers were\nthe features of the program, the\ndancing of the Johnstone Troupe\nproved very enjoyable, and they\nwere tendered several very hearty\nencores. The general opinion of\nthose present is that it was the best\nband that has ever appeared in the\naity. Tone and balance, appearance, discipline and behavior of the\nmen were beyond criticism. The\nonly fault to be found with the program was its shortness, even with\ntbe many encores, to which Band\nmaster Cook invariably responded.\nThe whole concert was so good tbat\nit is exceedingly difficult to single\nout special numbers for commendation, but Mr. Stross' cornet Bolo cannot be passed over without praise.\nHis tone was superb and his phrasing beautiful. The Scotch element\nin the audience was greatly enthused over Pipe Major Johnstone's\npipe solo, whicli was really a mar\nvelloys performance.\nThe street parade in the afternoon\nwas a good one. The band presented a very fine appearance as, headed\nby the two \"Genial Giants,\" Mackenzie and McCormick, and led by\ntheir fine bugle band and the pipes,\nthey marched through the principal\nstreets.\nOn Sunday evening the band gave\nDealers in all Kinds tf\nFRESH AND\nCURED MEATS\nFish and Game in Season\nFIRST ST.,  GRAND FORKS, B. C.\na sacred concert in the Rink after\nthe church services, at which a fair-\nsized audience was present.\nThe \"Kilties\" most assuredly\n\"made good\" here both from a musical and financial point of view.\nThey will be remembered long by\nthe people of Grand Forks, and will\nbe heartily welcomed should tbey\never return here.\nThe concert demonstrated one\nthing\u2014that the Rink can easily be\nconverted into a cool and very\ncom ortablc summer theatre.\nThe Granby Consolidated company is now making thirty million\npounds of copper a year at a cost of\nabout eight cents a pound. The\noutput will be increased before next\nwinter.\nFor Sale\u2014Brand new No. 3 Gra\nphophone; cost $50; also $14 worth of\nrecords; will sell at a sacrifice if taken\nat once.    Particulars at this office.\nCollection Agency\n1 purpose opening an office for\nthe collection of accounts, adjusting of books of existing\nbusiness, and also made tip\npreparatory to final administration of estates.\nLeases and Contracts Drawn Up\nSale*i of Property Negotiated\nRents Collected\nCorrespondence attended to immediately Financial returns\npromptly made and guaranteed\nS. T. HALL. J*P.\nOffice\nCF. Telegraph Company Bridge Street\nFor Sale\u2014Full-blooded Black\nMinorica eggs; SI.OO per setting. A.\nC. Uren, Box 294, Grand Forks.\nFor Sale\u201420-acre ranch; all under\nhigh state of cultivation; 200 fruit\ntrees; good house and barn; one mile\nsouth of city. For particulars call at\nThe Sun office.\nLOST\u2014On Tuesday, between R. W.\nTrotter's house and the greenhouses^ 19-jewel Waltham watch.\nReturn to this office and receive\nreward.\nFor Sale Cheap, or Trade\u2014Business lot on Winnipeg avenue near\nThe Sun office. Enquire of Lew\nJohnson.\nNEST 169\n0.0.0.\nCnmmenc-\niiitronJuufl\n1st, And continuing during the sum*\nmet season\nmeetings of\nthis order will hi- held twice a month onlv. The\nineetmgn will lie on the first and third Friday\nnights of eaeh month.\nJ. E. GRAHAM, President.\nJ.C HARD, Secretary.\nTN THE MATTER of The Land,Registry Act\nI and In thp Mutter of the Title to Lots 13. 14,\n15 ard 16, Block 1; Lot9, Hluek 8; Ut 11. Block\n.5; Lots 2, 3 and 1, llloek 7: Lot 9. Block 11: Lots\n6, 7, Hand!). Block Vi Map 22, Van New Addition, (Jrand Porks Townsite.\nwiikukab the Certificate of Title of Henry\nWhite, being Certificate of Title No.\n:tl71'a tu the ahove hereditaments, lias heen lost\nor destroyed, and application has heen made to\nnie for a duplicate thereof;\nNott K i\u00bb hereby given thnt a duplicate of\ntitle to the ahove hereditaments will he Issued\nat the expiration of one month from the date of\nthe first nnhltuatiou hereof, unless in the meantime vhIi-1 Objection to the contrary Is made to\niiiclti writing.\n\\V. H. EDMONDS.\nLand Roglstrv OfflCft- District Registrar.\nKamloops. B.C., May 20th, l'Jt)8.\nCertificate ol Improvements\nColumbia, Bonita Vista and Helene Mineral\nClaims, situate to the Urand Fork! Mining Division of Yale District.\nWhere Located: l'artly on District Lot ,2735\nand on Mountain South of Coryell Pass.\nTAKE NOTIOE that I, Wm. E. Caporn, Free\n\u25a0 Miners'Certificate No. B5826, intend, sixty\ndays from date hereof, to apply to the Mining\nRecorder for a Oettlflcateof Improvements, for\nHie purpose of obtaining crown grant-1 of the\nabove claims.\nAnd further take notice that action, under\nSeotion 87. must lie commenced before tiie issuance of suoh Certificate of Improvements.\nDated m (irtmd Forks. B.C., this 23rd day of\nMay, A; I). 1908.\nWM. E. CAPORN.\nDowney's Cigar Store\nA Complete Stock of\nCigars, Pipes and Tobaccos\nA K.ysh Consignment of\nConfectionery\"\nReceived Weekly.\nBRIDGE STREET\nBICYCLES\nAND MOTOCYCLES\n. High grtitle bicycles. A complete line of accessories. Come\nin mid see the 1908 models.\nWheel repairing.\nGEO. GHAPPLE\nFIRST STREET     OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nJUST -.ARRIVED\nAll Kinda of\nLadies'  and Children's\nUnderwear\nTHE WONDER\nNext to \u00a5elnnes7 Bridge dteet.\ncTWRS. IDA L. BARNUM\nR# A. HENDERSON, CE. 8 M.E.\nB. C. Land Surveyor\n&*.\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0       Grand Forts, B. C.\nSynopsis of Canadian Homestead\nRegulations\nANY available Dominion Lands within the\nRailway Belt of Hritish Columbia may be\nhoniBHteaded by any person who ii the head\nof a family, or any male over eighteen years\nof nc\u00ab. to the extent of one-quarter section\nof 160 nercs, more or leas.\nEntry must be made personally at the local\nland office for the dlltrlot in whioh the land\nte situate.\nThe homesteader ii required to perform\nthe conditions connected therewith under\none of the following plans:\n(1) At least six months' residence upon and\ncultivation of the land in eaoh year for three\n(2) If the father (or mother, If the father is\ndeceased), of the homesteader resides upon a\nfarm in tbe vicinity of the land entered for,\nthe requirements as to residence may be satisfied by such person residing with the father\nor mother.\n(3) If the settler has his permanent residence upon farming land owned by him in\nthe vicinity of his homestead, the requirements as to residence may be satisfied by\nretddence upon the said land.\nSix months1 notice in writing should be\ngiven the Commissioner of Dominion Lands\nat Ottawa of intention to apply for patent.\nCoal-Coal mining rights nrnv be leased\nfor a period of twenty-one years at an annual rental of $1.00 per aere. Not more than\n2.56U acres shall be leased to one individual or\ncompany- A royalty at the rate of five cents\nper ton shall be collected on the merchantable coal mined.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy of the Minister of the Interior.\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorized publication of this\nadvertisement will not be paid for.\nThere's No Other Way\nTo reach the large and ever-increasing\ncircle ol our readers than through Thk\nSun's advertising columns. CHURCH SERVICES\nKnox Presbyterian Church\u2014.\nSabbath services at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.\nin.; Sabbath school and Bible class at\n9-Ao a.m.; Young People's Society of\nChristian Endeavor, Monday, 7:30 p.\nm. Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday at 8 p.m. All are cordially\ninvited; seats free.\nMethodist Church, Rev. Schlich-\nter.\u2014Services next Sunday at 11\na. m. and 7:30 p.m.; Sunday school\nand Bible olass at 9:45 a.m. All\nare welcome.\nBaptist Church, Rev. F. W. Auvache, pastor.\u2014Services on Sunday\nat 11 a. m. anil 7:30 p. m.; Sunday\nschool and Bible class at 3 p.m.\nThree bottles of cold Phoenix Beer,\n50c.   Lion Bottling Works.\nBicycles and Repair Work\u2014A\ncomplete line of 1908 models. A few\nsecond-hand wheels cheap. Wheel;\nto rent. Geo. Ciiapple, opposite\nPostoffice, First street.\nWhen remitting money get an express order. Cash on demand of\npayee. To all parts. S. T. Hall,\nbranch agent Dominion   Express  Co.\nFor Sale\u2014 Brand new No. 3 Gra-\nphophone; cost 850; also 814 worth of\nrecords; will sell at a sacrifice if taken\nat once.   Particulars at this office.\nYou might as well try to reach\nthe orb of day by walking on a sunbeam as to attempt to reach The Sun\nreaders by advertising in any other\nmedium.\nWe are still offering The Sun and\nthe Toronto Weekly Globe and Canada Farmer for 81 per year in advance. The illustrated supplement\nthat accompanies the Globe is wonh\ntwice the money we ask for the two\npapers.\nWe have somo of the highest grade\npaper and stationery for up-to-date\ncommercial printing every brought to\nthe Boumiary.    .Sun Job Office.\nThe  Sun  anil  the Toronto Weekly\nGlobe for SI.OO per year.\nAgents Wanted \u2014 10x20 crayon\nportraits -10 cents, frames 10 cents\nand up. sheet pictures one cent each.\nYou cun make 400% profit or S#(i pel\nweek. Catalogue and samples free,\nFrank W. Williams Co., 1208 W.\nTaylor St., Chicago, III.\nTHE\nCOPPERj\nHANDBOOK\n(New Edition Issuer! Nov. 15, 1906.)\nIs a dozen hooks in one, covering the\nhistory, geography, geology, chemistry, mineralogy, metallurgy, terminology, uses, statistics and finances of\ncopper, It* is a procioal book, useful\nto all and neeessary to most men engaged in any branch of the copper\nindustry,\nIts facts will pass muster with the\ntrained scientists, and its language is\neasily understood by the everyday\nman. It gives the plain facts in plain\nEnglish without fear or favor-\nIt lists and describes 462fi copper\nmines and companies iu all parts of\ntho world, descriptions running from\ntwo lines to sixteen pages, uncording\nto importance of the property.\nThe Copper Handbook is conceded\nto he the\nWorld's Standard Reference\nBook on Copper\nThe mining innn needs the book for\ntile fti'ls it gives him about mines,\nmining anil the metal.\nThe investor needs the bunk for the\nfacts it gives hiin about mining, min-.\ning investments and copper statistics.\nHundreds of swindling companies are\nexposed in plain English.\nPrice is (6 ill Buckram with gilt\ntop; 87.50 in full library morocco.\nWill be sent, fully prepaid, on approval, to anv address ordered, and\nmay be returned within a week of receipt if not found fully satisfactory.\nHorace J. Stevens,\nEditor and Publisher,\n453 Postoffice Block,\nHoughton, Michigan.\nSwindler Caught\nA clever piece of detective work,\ncarried on for some time by United\nStates Immigration Inspector McKeehan, resulted in the arrest of a\nman named W. S. Carter last night\nfor using the United States mails for\nfraudulent purposes. Carter's scheme\nhas been to get acquainted with some\nyoung man in the town in which he\nmight be sojourning who had well-to-\ndo parents in the east, aid then write\nto them for money, stating that their\nson was sick in a hospital, and that\nthe money was needed tojdefray medical charges. This game he has Worked\nall over the west.' His last victim was\na lady in Cherryvale, Kan., from\nwhom he extorted quite a sum of\nmoney in this manner. Lately the\nofficers of the law have been on his\ntracks in the states, and he crossed\nthe boundary line and came to Grand\nForkB. By means of decoy letters,\nhe was lured to Danville last night,\nand there he walked right into the\nhands of the marshal of Ferry county.\n. Rifle Association Shoot\nFollowing are the scores made by\nthe members of the Grand Forks\nRifle association, on the 4th and 8th\ninst., out of a possible 70\u201435 each\nrange:  .\nJuly 4th\u2014\nName. Distance. Total\nF. Hutton....; '200....8 3 4 .1 4 5 5\u201427\n '\u00ab ...8 8 S ,H 5 5 5-211-56\nW.Dlimmore 200 ...3 3 8 8 5 4 5-211\n\"  5011... .4 2 8 4 8 5 6\u201426\u201452\nJ. Hutton    200. ...2 8 5 4 3 5 8--2M5\nJuly 8th\u2014\nO.O.Wheeler .  200 ...4.5 5 55 5 5-84\n 500....3 I 5 4 5 5 5-31-65\nTalbot 2011 ...2 4 3 4 5 4 4\u201426\n 600....3 8 6 5 3 3 1-211-52\nU. I'llttllison 200. ...434554 8\u201438\n '....500...53 8 4 3 5 8   20-54\nR Oreen 200...3 3 4 4 3 4 4-25\n .500 .. .2 4 3 4 3 II 6\u201421-111\nMUlward... 200... .2 2 6 \u00bb 3 3 4\u201421-24\nMining Stock Quotations\nNew York, July 8.\u2014The following are today's opening quotations for\nthe stock mentioned:\nAsked. Bid\nGranby 100.00 97.00\nDominion Copper     2.U0 1.87^\nB. C. Copper     4.87\u00a3 4.6:4\nMetal. Quotations\nNbw| York, July 8.\u2014Silver, 53J;\nelectrolytic copper,  12 J % 12f.\nLondon, July 8.\u2014I*ad, \u00a312 15s;\nsilver, 24 9-16.\"\nT. R. Dnlmmond, formerly manager of the Dominion Cupper company ut Boundary Falls, has been\nappointed manager of the Cactus\nmine at Newhouse, Utah. Mr.\nDrummond left thc Boundary in\nApril, 1907, for Cobalt, where he\nhad charge ol' the Nipissing mine up\ntill last month.\nThe ore shipments from the Granby mines for the month of June\nwere 85,257 tons. The shipments\nfor the first six months of the present year were 379,574 tons.\nK You Read This\nIt Will be to learn that the leading me Ileal writers and teachers of all the sove -al\nschools of practice reeomnumd, in the\nstrongest terms possible, each and every\ningredient entering into the composition\nof Dr. Pierce's Gold-in Medical Discovery\nfor the euro of weak stomuch, dyspepsia,\ncatarrh of stomach, \"liver complaint,\"\ntorpid liver, or biliousness, chronic bowel\naffections, and all catarrhal diseases of\nwhatever region, namo or nature. It is\nalso a specific remedy for ull such chronic\nor long standing cases of catarrhal affections and their resultants, as bronchial,\nthroat and lung disearo (except consumption) accompanied with severe coughs. It\nIs not so good for acute colds and coughs,\nbut for lingering, or chronic cases it Is\nespecially ellicadous in producing perfect cures. ItcontainsIllackCherrybark,\nGolden Seal root, Illoodroot, Stone root.\nMandrake root and Queen's root\u2014all of\nwhich aro highly praised as remedies for\nall tho above mentioned aflections hy such\neminent medical writers aud teachers as\nProf. Bartholow, of\/Jefferson Med. College: Prof. Harc.JJi the Univ. of Pa.i\nProf. Fintejr-fcmngwood, M. D., of Ben-\nnett Med.jfcpllego, Chicago; Prof. John\nKing, M. Ol of Cincinnati j Prof. John\nM. ScudderrM. p., of Cincinnati; Prof.\nEdwin M-?H>Kj. M. D., of Hahnemann\nMed. CptTcad, Chicago, and scores of\nothers\/etufally eminent In their several\nschoJjUIf practice.\n-The \"Golden Mitral Discovery Ms the\nnjv ipedgggft nm7in?7\u00a3r~sjiie, JT|ggggg\nIT PATS\nTODEAL\nAT THE\nNEW DRUG STORE\nOur\nIceCreamSodaFountain\nIs the Place to Cool Off.\nPRESCRIPTIONS \"\"\u2022\"*\nyour doctor\nwants them\nnpilPO '''!\"'  purest  and   freshest\nUDUUO that can be procured.\nRutherford 8 Mann\nG. R. B. Newton, Mgr.\nCor. Bridge and 2nd       Phone 35\nRANDOM REMARKS\n*M\nrlignlsts lor lme Iiurnyi\"'*. Mint, has nn-\nm\nIJJO\n'M~,\nO....M ~Tffiht%lrtimtiY ei^iirii'iiwriT^^i\nmore than any 555E5B2 ordinary\"!'\n , ..... \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0.......-\u201e \u25a0T.,...irv       .\n6*i'IUs.   Open iiuulicltv 01 us formula\n-ir    I '     VJtn:il   I'uuiicity   ui lis IUIUIU14\nIs The nest possible guaranty of Its merits,\nA glance at this published formula will\nshow that \"Golden Medical Discovery*\ncontains no poisonous, harmful or habit-\nforming drugs and no alcohol\u2014chemically\nfiure, triple-refined glycerine \"being used\nnstead. Glycerine Is entirely Unobjectionable and besides Is a most useful agent\nIn tho cure of nil stomach os well as bronchial, throat and lung afflictions. There\nis tho highest medical authority for its\nuse In all such case^. Tho\" Discovery\" Is\na conconlruted glyceric extract of native,\nmedicinal roots and is safe and reliable.\nA booklet of extracts from eminent,\nmedical authorities, endorsing Its Ingredients mailed free on request.   AddZSM\nThose who marry for money usually\nearn it.\nThe water wagon is run by will\npower.\nBad luck gets the blame for a lot i f\nlaziness.\nSome people who take things easy\nland in jail.\nCompromising witli sin is accepting\nwage from satan.\nThe nearer some people ore the\ndearer they are not.\nFight the devil with water\u2014fire is\nhis favorite w'eapon.\nOpportunity often knocks, but tco\noften with a hammer.\nA lot of men lose character trying\nto live up to reputation.\nTaking things as they come and selling thein begets success.\nThe business of a dog dealer is apt\nto be a howling success.\nHard words seldom make an impression on soft people.\nNo man approves of a woman who\nflirts with another man.\nThere is no race suicide among the\npoor and savage nations.\nIt is sometimes safer to back down\nthan to get your back up.\nIt's easy for a man to do right win n\nhe can't do anything else.\nLet a grafter get under a could and\nhe will steal its silver liuing.\nSome men ask, \"Is it safe!\" The\nbest men ask, \"Is it right!\"\nFools fatten on flattery, but wise\nmen only accept it as dessert,\nIt reconciles one to growing old\nwhen ono sees serene old age.\nA cracked mirror is responsible for\na whole lot of self-deception,\nA wise man never tries to please\nhimself and a woman at the same\ntime,\nPeople who are unable to control\ntheir passions are usually control led\nliy them.\nIf you see a man making love to a\nWoman in public, it's a sign she isn't\nhis wife.\nPeople have time to listen to stories\nof success, but tbey have failures of\ntlieii own.\nWhy not borrow your neighbor's\nspectacles and have a look at your\nown faults!\nThe wise theatrical manager hitches\nhis wagon to a star t'other thou to a\ngirl ill the chorus.\nMany a man's popularity is duo ti\nthe fact that he adheres to the truth\nonly when necessary.\nDon't pay any attention to the disagreeable things people say about you\n\u2014if tbey are not true.\nSome people's countenances are as\nexpressionless and devoid of character\nas the clay whenco they sprung.\nWhon we become wise enough to\ntake our parents' advice we are too\nold to reap the full profit of it.\nAll evils appear to possess some\ncompensating virtue. Even a wife's\noold feet should be a boon these sultry\nnights.\nIt's un easy matter to furnish entertainment for your neighbors; all\nyou have to do is to make a fool of\nyourself.\n&2.00  THMfEE    S2.00\nRegular Price &3.00\nAn Ofter Which Meets the Special Wants of All Classes of Readers\nThe Western Canadian reading public is made up chiefly ,of these classes\nPersons who have lived in the West for a lengthy period and are out and nut\nWesterners, and recent arrivals from the Old Country, from the United\nStates and from Eastern Canada.\nPerhaps no one newspaper could cater with complete satisfaction to all these\nclasses, but bv this combination offer every special need is met\nThe Weekly Free Press and Prairie Farmer gives a complete record week\nby week of all happenings in the Western Provinces. In addition it has special\ndepartments for American and British settlers. The Family Herald and\nWeekly Star supplies the former resident of Eastern Canada with news of tho\nEastern portion of the Dominion iu detail, and the Grand Forks Suu provides\nthe local and Boundary news, which you cannot do without.\n 19U\t\nGRAND   FORKS   SUN;\nFind enclosed 82.00, for which send me Weekly Free Press and Prairie\nFarmer, Winnipeg; Family Herald and Weekly Star, Montreat; and the Grand\nForks Sun, for one year each.\nR.L. MILES\nsecond-hand store\nBRIDGE STREET\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture   Mode  to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering  Neatly Done.\nr. McCutcheon\nFIRST STREET, NEAR CITY HALL\nH. A. SHEADS\nCITY REAL ESTATE AND\nFRUIT LANDS\nAiiKST roil\u2014\nLondon Mutual Tin- Insurance Co,\nMontrenl nnd Canada,\n'Anglo-American,\nEquity,\n,   Ami other substantial companies.\nBRIDGE STREET, 6RRND FORKS, B. C,\nCarpets Cleaned and Laid,\nFurniture Repaired, Ophol-\nstpred and Cleaned, and\nOther jobs in the house-\ncleaniiiK line. Rubber Tires\niur Baby Carriages.\nSecond Hand Goods\nBOUGHT AND SOLD\nNEW YORK\nCLIPPER\n18 THE ORE AT EST\nTHEATRICAL i SHOW PAPER\nIN THE WORLD.\n$4.00 Per Year.   Single Copy, 10 Cts.\nISSUED WEEKLY,   ,\nSample Copy Free.\nFRANK QUEEN TUB. CO. (LMi,\nALBKRT .1 HOME,\nPUBLISHERS,.\n'\" 47 \\v. 8WB St.. X u\u00bb: Vour.\nPrints more live Boundary news than\nany other paper published in the\ndistrict. The price of The Sun is\nonly SI.OO per year\u2014one-half the cost\nof its competitors. The Sun is never\non \u25a0 the fence regarding questions of\npublic interest. The Sl'N is acknowledged to be one of the brightest\npapers published in the interior of\nthe province. Those who subscribe\nand feel dissatisfied, will have their\nmoney refunded by calling at theollics\nof publication.\nThe EvEKINO Sun and the Toronto\nWeekly Globe and Canada Farmer,\n81.00 per year in advance.\nThe EvBKINO Sun, Tho Winnipeg\nWeekly Free Press and Prairie Farmer and the Montreal Family Herald\nand Weekly Star, $2.00 per year in\nadvance.\nPROVINCE\nHOTEL\nfcMIL LARSEN, PROPRIETOR\nHot and Cold Baths. Skciv Furnished\nStove*Heated  Rooms.    Entirely refurnished and renovated throughout*\nKirst-elass    board   by   duy.   week   ur\nmonth,  Speeiul rates to steady board*\nit--    American und European plans.\nFinest iiar in (ity in Connection.\nBRIDGE STREET     GRAND FORKS, B. C,\nCOLUMBIAN    COLLEGE\nNEW WESTMINSTER,    B. C.\nKecoivo both Ladies and Gentlemen   ns resi*\ndent ur dny Students) ban a complete Commercial or   iUiMiiehs Course) prepares stu\u00ab\ndentsto 1'iiiii    Teachers'  Certiiicnten  of  all\ngrades; (fives tho four years' course for the\n. A. decree,and tbe first year of tbe School\nof Science eourse, in attUintion with the To*\nronto University { has a special prospectors* *\ncourse for miners who work in B.O. Iintruc-\ntion is also Riven in Art, Mtude, IMiy-b-nl ('ill-\nture and Elocution. Term opens Sept.Ith\n1900.   For Calendar*, etc., address\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGB. j^BuII Dorf Suspenders\n^r%4\n'\u25a0^vv-'^^-'-'^y^OT\nEPTANPAlWlwcatwotlies' fit, because tiny contitin mora\ni and better rubber than other inskot,   kltowliic  ens;, free\n*  m\u00abvemi>\"t of ili-i'bndyiu oTcry ponifiun: bccuiit* tboy Iisto ri1d*|lft\niiH'iril purls, eunrnnlned nut to mat or tni-nbli, nml bDrmiio ths conl\nwuh tiro ftrotiik-r tban usually found ta suipondora. prerunUlilthuin\nfwm f ruy fop audit-uur i tig throuEh.\nTHEV OUTWFMITIIUKK OnniNARY KINDS. WHICH MEANS\nTUBES TUlk-S TUE EERVICB OF USUAL H CENT SORTS.\nTho |((wt OomtOlUbls Baipendin Mado for Man, Youth or Roy\nIn Llulil, Heavy nr V.xt ri heat v Wi'lclits. Exi tn I...iib(Nh Estrn fustl\nHon' We. Iiiuiiieutivo (lifts Every llauand Koy Will Gladly Hecoiva\nFOH THE BEST  INSIST ON  MODEL B  BULL DOG SUSPENDER\nHBWES a POTTER. Dept.\n87 Lincoln St. Boatoa, Mm.\nOur uioful Bnt Dou SrsiitKDia Com   akd Casb malnd for 10c. pontage.\nlutlruelive bntiMct, \"Style, or   How tn Drnw Correctly,\"\nfroo ff you mention tbta publication.\nSHOFTALK\nWe have a large supply of all kinds\nof visiting cards in stock, and the\nmost fashionable styles of type to\nprint tliem with.  The Sun Job Office.\nShow cards for widnows and inside\nare a fine form of silent salesmen.\nMake them brief, terse and pointed.\nPrint them plainly, to be read at a\nglance.\nWe carry the most fashionable stock\nof wedding stationery in the Boundary country. And we are the only\noffice in this section that have the\ncorrect material for printing it. The\nSun job office.\nThe Sun is read by everybody because it prints all the Boundary news.\nA new lot of latest designs of program and menu cards just received at\nThe Sun job office.\nBREVITIES\nThe Sun and the Toronto Weekly\nGlobe for $1 per year.\nFor Sale\u201490 acres of good land;\nalso two new milch cows. Apply at\nthis office.\nBefore closing your contract for\nlending matter for the coming year,\nread the tempting clubbing offer we\nmake on the third page.\ncy4. Snap\n11450\nBUYS seven-acre\ntract adjoining the\nsouthsrn boundary\nof the city limits; three-room\nhouse and good well; thirty-\nseven hearing fruit trees and\na quantity of small fruits.\n6500 cash; balance in three\nyears. Best fruit land proposition in the valley.\nFor  full  particulars call at\nWe SUN OFFICE\n60  YEARS'\nEXPERIENCE\nTimoc Marks\nDesigns\nCopyrights Ac\nAnyone lending m sketch and description msf\nqnlclilT iisiuTinln our opinion free woollier an\nInvention la pnihm.lf patentable. Cominmilcn.\nIlmiaMriaUrrnnililciitlal.. HAHDMOKonPMonu\nwilt froo. olil,'\u00ab iiL-encyrof socurtngpMenta.\nl'ntoiite tnktin through Munn ftn, MOUft\nniriaimke, without obsnra, In the\nScientific American.\nA handsomely illustratcil weekly. Largest olr-\ncohitlon of any snow mo Journal. Term* for\nCniiKlii,$l.7& n year.fostage prepaid. Bold by\n'\u25a0\" newsdealers.\n\"Branch Ontoo, hi V St., Waihlnitton, D. C.\nRutherford & Mann, the druggists,\nhave added a soda fountain to their\nstore.\nTrained nurse seeks employment.\nAddrAsP. O. Box 12, Grand  Forks.\nThe Greenwood band is now giving\npublic concerts. A good example to\nimitate.\nD. D. Munro & Co. have moved\ninto their new store on the corner of\nBridge and Second streets.\nToday is payday at the Granby\nsmelter in this city and at the company's mines in Phoenix.\nThe Sun office is being repainted\u2014\npartly red. As soon as we collect another dollar from our delinquent subscribers we'll paint the whole shop\nred.\nGateway Lodg I No. 45, I.O.O.F.,\nheld decoration services at the ceme-\nterday Sunday afternoon, when the\ngraves of departed brethren were\ndecorated with flowers. I\nThe Dominion Copper company is\nis planning a number of improvements\nto its Phoenix mines, among them being an aerial tram line from the Idaho\nto the Stemwinder.\nJohn Nelson, a smelter employee,\nwhile on his way to the smelter on\nhis wheel last Saturday afternoon,\nfell from the sidewalk on Wellington\navenue, resulting in the breaking of\nhis arm just above the wrist.\nFred Clutterbuck, while attending\nthe celebration in Republic last Saturday, had his foot badly bruised by\ngetting it caught between the passenger coach and a box car of the Kettle\nValley line excursion train.\nLast Monday was nomination day\nfor a school trustee to fill the vacancy\nin the board caused by the resignation of I. A. Dinsmoie. Postmaster\nGeorge Hull was the only candidate\nplaced in nomination, nnd the returning officer declared him elected\nby   acclamation\nOnlv one inning was played in the\nOrovilleGrand Forks baseball ga neat\nOroville on the Fou th. A pa ably\nrank decision by the umpire w.s the\nprimary cause for the abreviation of\nthe sport. The claim is also made\nthe prize originally hung up had been\nconsiderably curtailed.\nJ. I). McDonald, formerly an alderman of this city, but who is n iw engaged ln the contracting business in\nVictoria, returned to the city this\nveok for the purpose of removing his\nfamily   to  the  coast city.   Mr. Mo-\n| Dodald and family etpect to leave to-\n! day for their new homo.\ni    The return cricket  mutch  between\nthe   city   team   and one composed of\nsmelter employees was played on  the\ncricket grounds  hist Saturday,   Tl\nsmeltermen won by a seme of 103   to\nPacific Hotel\nOFF. C.F.R. STATION\ntMrfit'Olail in every respect.\nSample rooms for commercial travelers.\nHot and Cold Baths.\nitiir in Connection.\nFinest lliiinilKiif Wines.\nM(|ii<jrsiuidOiuuri.\nCHAS. PETERSON, Prop\nREPUBLIC BEER\nThe Purest and Best In the City.\nOn Draught Exclusive!\/* at\n50. Gray for the smelter made a\nscore of 45 runs, and VV. J. Pearson,\nfor the same team, took eight wickets,\nincluding the hat tried.\nH. W. Warrington, formerly chief\nengineer of the Kettle Valley line, is\nnow an officer and one of the proprietors of the Umpqua Valley Land\ncompany, of Roseburg, Ore. An attractive pamphlet descriptive of the\nbeauties of Roseburg and its environments has bten received by The Sun\nfrom Mr. Warrington.\nPhoenix is to have a new park and\none that will bo a credit to that city.\nThe location of the park is on the\nNew York townsite. The land has\nbeen donated by George W. Rumberger and J. Sercu, and the Granby\nConsolidated company donated the\npowder. It is stated that $5000\nwill be expended in putting the\nground in shape.\nLocal advertisers should make a\nnote of the fact that The Sun is the\nmost widely read paper in Grand\nForks.\nTHE VICTORIA HOTEL\nOne of the best and most carefully\nselected race programs put on any\ntrack in |he northwest will bo run off\nat the Interstate fair, to be held this\nfall at Spokane, October 5 to 10.\nEvery indication points to the most\nsuccessful race meet ever held on i,he\nSpokane track, and, us indicated by\nthe list of entries in the early closing\nraces, some of the best horses in the\nPacific Coast circuit will be seen at\nSpokane this full. Over two hundred horses have been entered in the\nearly closing races. The time for\nthese entries expired May 25th, and\nevery one of the eight trotting and\npacing events were well filled.\nBOUNDARY   ORE   SHIPMENTS\nFor Sale \u2014 Full-blood Black\nMinorica eggs; $1.00 per setting. A.\nC. Uren, box 294, Grand Forks.\nThe following table gives the ore\nfor 1905, 1906  and for the past week:\nGranby Mines, Phoenix\t\nSnowshoe, Phoenix\t\nMother Lode, Deadwood\t\nB. C. Mine, Summit\t\nEmma, Summit\t\nOro Denoro, SummitCamp\t\nBonnie Belle, Deadwood\t\nBrooklyn-Stemwinder, Phoenix.\nIdaho, Phoenix\t\nRawhide, Phoenix\t\nSunset, Deadwood \t\nMountain Rose, Summit\t\nSenator, Summit Camp\t\nMorrison, Dead wood\t\nSulphur King.Sumniit\t\nWinnipeg, Wellington\t\nHig Copper, West Copper\t\nCarmi, West Fork\t\nSully, West Fork\t\nRambler, West Fork\t\nButcher Boy, West Fork\t\nProvidence, Greenwood\t\nElkhorn, Greenwood\t\nStrathmore, Providence\t\nPreston, Skylark\t\nPrince Henry, Skylark\t\nSkylark, Skylark Camp\t\nLast Chance, Skylark Camp\t\nE. P. U. Mine, Skylark Camp...\nBay, Skylark\t\nMavis, Skylark\t\nDon Pedro, Skylark\t\nCrescent, Skylark\t\nHelen, Greenwood\t\nRepublic, Boundary Falls\t\nMiscellaneous\t\nshipments of  Boundary mines\n1907 1908    Past Week\n613,637 543,84a     20,522\n135,001 367\n208,321 40,170\n1,712\n18,274\n14,481 13,666         1,190\n43,295\n12,253\n64.173\n31,270\n31,258\n104\ni'5'0'0\n450\n4.5\n104\n1,500\n450\n45\n649\n65\n80\n700\n20\n55\n224\n\"36\n130\n50\nTotal,  tons...  1,148,237\nSmelter Treatment\u2014\nGranby Smelter  637,626\nB. C. Copper Co.'8 Smelter  341,952\nDominion Copper Co.'s Smelter  153,439\n599,768'    29.751\n525,073\n51,078\n2,099\n19,807\n11,654\n2,099\nTotal treated.\n     1,133,017\nBOUNDARY DIVIDENDS.\n578,050       32,06q\n-DIVIDENDS-\nAuthorised r\u2014 \u2022haber\u2014.      Paid Total to    Latent     Per\nName of CoHPAKY.              Capital.    lamed. Par.       1906. Onto.       Dato.   Share\nGranby Consolidated-Copper.   S1B,UOO,000     118,000 JUKI $1,680,000 $2,M8,630 Sopt. 1907  $11.00\nRarlhoo McKlimey-Gold     1.2JO.0OO  1,B0,000     $1   Slll.sin;Fob. 1904     .04\nProvidonce-Sllver.       208.000       11000     $5         16.000 88.221 Soot. 19116     .*>0\nB.C. Copper-Copper     3,000,000   303.000     $.1           2111,200 ISopt. 1907     .40\nPRINTING\nWe are prepared to do all kinds of\nCommercial  Printing\nOn the shortest notice and in the\nmost up-to-date style\nBECAUSE\nWe have the most modern jobbing plant\nin the Boundary Country, employ competent workmen, and carry a complete\nline of Stationery.\nWE PRINT\nBillheads and Statements,\nLetterheads and Envelopes,\nPosters, Dates and Dodgers,\nBusiness and Visiting Cards,\nLodge Constitutions and By-laws,\nShipping Tags, Circulars and Placards,\nBills of Fare and Menu Cards,\nAnnouncements and Counter Pads,\nWedding Stationery, ,\nAnd everything turned out in an\nUp-to-date Printery.\nW. C. CHALMERS\nAlways Carries in Stoek\na Fresh Supply of\nFRUITS, CANDIES, TOBACCOS\nAND CIGARS\nIce Gream  and  Summer Drinks\nCOR. BRIDGE AND FIRST STREETS\nPalace Barber Shop\nKazor Honing a Specialty.\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nVictoria Hotel,\nBridge Street, Orand Forks, B.C.\nr^nnn PDiMTiMfi\u2014the kind we do\u2014is in itself an\nVlUUf IIVlDlllLlvI advertisement, and a trial order\nwill convince you that our stock and workmanship are of\nthe best. Let us estimate on your order. We guarantee\nsatisfaction.\nGrand Forks Sun\nJob Department\nFoo Lee\nLaundry\nFINE LAUNDERING.\nCOLLARS,   CUFFS    AND\nSHIRTS WASHED CLEAN AND\nNICE. AND  IRONED BY\nMACHINERY,    NEW\nMEN EMPLOYED.\nNEXT CHINESE STORE\nRIVERSIDE AVENUE.\nYale  Tranfer Co.\nLight and Heavy Transferring to and from tha depots.\nA. Mackintosh\nOffice i   Windsor Hotel. Phone A88\nDRAYING\nHeavy and Light Dray Work\nAttended to Promptly, Passengers and Trunks to and\nfrom'all trains.\nTelephone Al29\nGRAND FORKS TRANSFER COMPANY\nRUTIIEBFORD   BROS., PROPS.","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_1908-07-10","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\/1.0341787","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":"1908-07-10 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":"1908-07-10 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Evening Sun","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}