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This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2017-01-30","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1909-01-29","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341845\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" \u00a3be\nEighth Year\u2014No. 13.\nGrand Forks, B. C, Friday, January 29, 1909.\n$1.00 Per Year in Advance.\nL MEET!\nFarmers'   Institute Elects\nOfficers for the Current\nYear\nResolutions Adopted in Favor of a Fair and an Irrigation System\nThe annual meeting of the Kettle\nValley Fajmers' institute was held\nin the city hall on Wednesday\nevening, President Jas. Rooke presiding.\nThe minutes of the three previous\nmeetings were read and approved.\nThe president stated that he had\nnothing of especial interest to communicate to the members. He believed that the institute could accomplish a great deal of good, however, and if for no other purpose it\nshould be encouraged in order that\nthe members might obtain the benefits of the government's literature on\nagricultural topics, free lectures,\netc.\nThe secretary-treasurer's report\nshowed that four meetings had been\nheld during the past year. The institute now has a membership of 68,\nand there is a balance in the treasury of $55.15. The expenses during the year bad heen $12.85. Interest in the organization is increas\ning.\nThe election of officers resulted ae\nfollows:\nPresident\u2014A. D. Morrison.\nVice-President\u2014Scott Gallaway.\nSecretary-Treasurer\u2014Fred Clark.\nDirectors\u2014Jas. Rooke, C. A. S.\nAtwood, Leonard Vaughan, Tom\nPowers and J. D. Honsberger.\nThe new officers, on assuming\ntbeir offices, made brief speeches,\nthanking the members for the honor\ntbey had conferred on them.\nSecretary Clark stated tbat he\nwould have more time to devote to\nhis office during the coming yenr\nthan he had had in the past. He\nreported having received a letter\nfrom tbe C.P.R. in reference to its\nindustrial department, an institution which be thought would prove\nadvantageous to the community if\n' furnished thej necessary data. He\nalso advocated holding an agricultural exhibition in this city next fall\nNow wa\" on opportune time to\nmake a start. There wis lots of\nmaterial in the valley for such a\nshow. All that wns required to\nmake the enterprise a success was\nfor the citizens to devote a little of\ntheir time to it.\nMr. Atwood was also heartily in\nfavor of this scheme, and thought\nthe city council should be approach,\ned on the subjeot. The institute\nshould also take up the matter of\nsecuring an irrigation system for the\nvalley. The advice of a competent\nengineer should be obtained through\nthe co-operation of the city council\nand the board of trade.\nThe following resolutioes were\nunanimously adopted:\nMoved by Mr. Atwood, seconded\nby Mr. Powers\u2014That the secretary\nbe instructed to communicate with\nthe city council and the board of\ntrade of Grand Forks relat ve to se\ncuring an expert opinion in regard to\nan irrigation system for the valley,\nand to ask them to appoint committees to confer with a committee from\nthe Farmers' institute.\nMoved by Mr. Galloway, seconded\nby Mr. Collins\u2014That the secretary\nbe instructed to communicate with\nthe city council and the board of\ntrade of the city of Grand Forks in\nreyard to a fall exhibition, and if\nadvisable to appoint committees to\nconfer with a committee from the\nFormers' institute.\nMoved by Mr. Atwood, seconded\nby Mr. Honsberger\u2014That the thankB\nof the institute be tendered to the\ncity council for the use of the council chambers for its meetings, and\nto the press for the courtesies extended to tbe association during the\nyear.\nThe secretary was voted a salary\nof $25 per year.\nThe secretary was instructed to\ncommunicate with the government,\nand endeavor to induce it to establish a rain guage at this point.\nJames Rooke wns appointed as\ndelegate to the Central institute in\nVictoria.\nThe meeting then adjourned.\nwood It Climbs to\nthe Top\nacting police magistrate. The witnesses examined were Chns. Hnrri-\ngan, Chief Savage, Dr. Kingston,\nDr. Trunx and Constable MoDon-\n\u201er,     ,        _ \u00ab i aid.     All   the   evidence   adduced\nBy   Winning irom   OT66_- tended to establish the faot that the\nman wns suffering from mental delusions, as he appeared to be in constant dread that some one intended\nto kill him. At the close of the\nhearing Mr. MeCnlluiri committed\nthe mnn to Ihe New Westminster\nhospital fur the insane.\nConstable McDonald deputized\nJohn Webster to take Harrigan\nto New Westminster, and he left for\nthat place with the unfortunate man\non Wednesday afternoon.\nSome Good Individual Playing in Last Monday's\nGame\nResidence Damaged by Fire\nWhile thawing out the water\npipes in the basement of T. A. Mc-\nIntyre's residence, on upper Main\nstreet, opposite the Methodist\nchurch, last Monday, the fire communicated with the building, and\nbefore the brigade could reach the\nscene and extinguish it about $900\nworth of damage had been done.\nThe department responded promptly\nto the call, and it did not take tbe\nboys long to subdue the flames after\nthey arrived on the ground. The\ndamage to the building is estimated\nat $500, and to the furniture at\n$400.\nC. P. R. Extensions\nIn Montreal, on Friday last, Second Vice-President Whyte announced that the C.P.R. program\nfor western extensions had been set\ntied by the executive. One of tb<\nmost important lines to be built will\nbe from Wey burn to Lethbridge,\nabout 400 miles, running about Midway between the main line and tbe\ninternational boundary. Twenty-five\nmiles of this line is expected to be\ncompleted in the spring. There is\nto be another line from Lethbridge\nto connect Macleod wilh the Calgary\nand Edmonton line, a little north of\nHigh River station. The branch\nnorth from tIheadle to connect the\nline from Lacombe to Alix will bc\ncarried as far us Ghost Pine creek\nthis year. The foundation of a huge\nscheme of terminals at Fort William\nwill also be laid this year. Mr.\nWhyte added that while he did not\nwish to state the exact amount of\nthe appropriations fur western development, they ran into millions.\nThe league hockey game in this\ncity last Monday night between\nGreenwood and Grand Forks resulted in an easy victory for the\nhome team, the score being 6 to 1.\nThe game was fast, the ice being in\nfirst-claes shape. The members of\nthe local team were in splendid condition, and gave the best exhibition\nof hockey witnessed in the rink here\nthis season. Elliot and Mann, for\ntbe home team, played an exceptionally good game, tbe latter making a very pretty individual play in\nthe last quarter, taktng the puck up\nthe whole length of the rink alone\nand making a successful shot at the\nGreenwood net. The winning of\nthis game places the Grand Forks\nteam at the top of tbe league. Tbe\nline-ups follow:\nGrand Forks. Greenwood\nWoodland Goal Thompson\nMcAlmond Point Dill\nElliot Cover Point Russell\nKei'l Rover Cameron\nMann Centre   ..Clerf\nLonghurst L.   Wing  Swain\nJost R. Wing Medill\nReferee\u2014G. Cole, of Phoenix.\nJudge of Play\u2014Dr. Spankie, of\nGreenwood.\nThe next game in the schedule\nwill be played at Phoenix this evening between the Greenwood and\nPhoenix teams. On Monday evening Grand Forks will play at Greenwood, and on Tuesday the home\nteam will play at the Rossland carnival.\nMINING INSTITUTE\nResolutions Passed at Fourth\nAnnual Meeting in\nGreenwood\nPremier Laurier's Action in\nRetaining Templeman\nEndorsed\nStanding of Hockey Clubs\nThe standing of the Boundary\nleague of hockey clubs at present is as\nfollows:\nPlayed. Won. Lost\nGrand Forks  5 4        1\nPhoenix  4 3        1\nGreenwood  5 0       5\ncity\nLocal Option\nSudden Death\nWord was received in this\nthis morning tbat Mr. Richardson,\nwho has been station agent of the\nC.P.R. at Farron for a number of\nyears, bud died suddenly at that\nplace during the night of heart\nfailure. Deceased was about fifty\nyenrs of age. His fumily is ul present visiting in Vancouver.\nFebruary Rod and Gun\nVaried in its contents, but redolent throughout of the many delights\nof the Canadian winter the February number of \"Rod and Gun nnd\nMotor Sports in Canada,\" published\nby W. J. tayior, Woo.detook, Ont.,\nbrings with it the breeziness attached to this particular season of the\nyear. The record of a fine snowshoe\ntramp, on Indian tale of a mooje\nrace on Ihe ice, the story of a winter\nin northern Ontario and an article\non Snow Blindness by Martin Hunter, an ex-Hudson Bay Factor, show\nhow many sided are the beauties of\nthe Canadian winter, and how thoroughly the inhabitants of the Dominion appreciate and enjoy them.\nA fine illustrated account of the\nQualification Climb of Mt. Hermit,\nin connection with the last meeting\nof the Alpine Club of Canada, is contributed by Mr. D. B. Taylor, who\nhas been touring the west as representative of the magazine since that\nevent. It is evident from this arti\ncle that the spirit of the mountains\nseized the writer and ma.ie him an\nenthusiast. One of the best papers\nwritten by Mr. Bonnycnstle Dale,\n\"Chief Cnniin Tl'kope of the Skag-\nits,\"with the author's illustrations,\ntells of an old Indian chief out in\nVancouver island, who makes canoes\nwith primitive tools and disposes of\nthem at unheard-of prices. Notes\non the last deer season, a couple of\ngrave indictments against the alleged\ninefficiency of the Ontario fish nnd\ngame depnrtment, one of the Rev.\nA.Murdoch's copital hunting stories,\nSome Old Time Reminiscences of\nOld Toronto, intensely interesting\ntelling of pioneer days, and stories\nof camping and fishing trips, are\nsome of the further papers making\nup a number strong in every department of outdoor life with which the\nningnzine denls. It is Canadian\nthroughout, imbued with the spirit\nthe Dominion, and nil good.\nThe fourth annual meeting of the\nwestern branch of the Mining Institute of Canada, was held in Greenwood on Monday and Tuesday The\nfollowing resolutions were unanimously adopted:\nThat the institute dues hereby\nendorse and express its appreciation of the action of the provincial\ngovernment in aiding the important\nexperiments which are being conducted at Nelson towards the separation and reduction of complex\nlead-zinc ores by electro-thermic\nmeans.\nThat, this meeting does hereby\nexpress its appreciation of Ihe services rendered the mining industry\nby the first and present minister of\nmineB, tbe Hon. Win. Templeman,\nand of the action of the Rt. Hon.\nthe premier of the Dominion in retaining him in oflice.\nThat this institute does hereby\nexpress its approval and appreciation of the action of the federal government, through its mines deportment, in seeking a solution of the\ndifficulty attendant on the economical smelting of eastern iron ores by\npractical experiments in electro-\nthermic reduction, conducted at the\npublic cost. In this connection this\nmeeting desires to commend to the\ngovernment the desirability of aiding\nin and codtributing to the advanced\nexperiments which have already\nbeen made in this province towards\nthe separation and reduction of lead\nzinc ores by slectrothermic energy.\nThese experiments hove demonstrated the practicability of the separation of metallic zinc from metallic lead and its recovery ns spelter\nfrom complex lend zinc ores. Important deposits of such ores occur\nin this province and remain un-\nworked through luck of economic\nreduction fncilities. In the opinion\nof this meeting n solution of this\nproblem will be of very great importance to thc mining industry of\nthe Dominion.\nGet on the List\nThe secretary of the Farmers' institute is preparing the mailing list\nfor free government literature. All\nCranbrook   has   sent over eight! members   wbo   wish their    names\nhundred   names   in favor of local placed on this  list must  pay   their\noption to Dr. King, M.P.P., and the dues before the 1st of February.\nlieutenant-governor of the province.\nIt is claimed   that throughout   the\nprovince   70 per eent of the people!\nare signing the petitions.\nSent to New Westminster\nAn investigation regarding the\nmental condition of John Harrigan,\nDuring the year 1908 the tonnage > well known young man of this\nmined by the B. C. Copper company city, who was placed in the city\nwas: Total material smelted, 376,043 lockup ,Mt week on suspjcion 0{ bo-\ntons; Mother Lode mine, 294,635,. . ,, . , . ,. .\ntons; Oro Denro, 58,989  tons; Nap0. | \u00bb'(?'\"entally deranged, was held  in\nleon,   11,206   tons;  oihers,   11,213  we   police  court on Tuesday and p|owg nll(| cooking out(it\ntons. ! Wednesday before J. A. McCallum,' of Mrs. George Taylor.\nWorld's Fair Director\nWilliam Whyte, second vice-\npresident of the C.P.R.. and Hugh\nSutherland, executive agent Mackenzie, Mann ct Co., Ltd., Winnipeg, have linen elected directors of\nthe Winnipeg Industrial Exhibition\nassociation, which proposes to hold\na world's fair tliere in 1912 to celebrate the centenary of the land of\nLord Selkirk's settlers.\nGranby officials state that their\ncompany is not a part of of the copper combine being formed in New\nYork, and it is not likely that any of\nthe other British Columbia companies\naro directly interested.\nFor Sale\u2014One heavy  horse,  wagons, harness,   hay  baler, burrows,\nInquire\nWealth of the Province\nThe I'ncilic province is regarded\nas the Dominion's great storehouse\nol minerals and timber, says the\nToronto Globe. K iture has been\nmagnificently kind in rearing tbe\ngreat peaks with their stores of mineral wealth, nnd clothing the const\nslopes with a growth of timber unequalled in the world. Much of the\nmineral wealth io still undiscovered,\nand there nre areas awaiting the\nthe more careful prospector. While\nit would be nn over-courageous\nthing to declare the timber wealth\nof any region inexhaustible, the\nforests of the Pacilic slope* arc certain to meet all the demands of this\ngeneration.\nThe Sun and the Toronto Weekly\nGlobe for $1 |ier year. \u00ael|p f-bptttng #mt\nPeihllcehecl at Graced Porks. British Columbia.\nQ, A. Evans Editor acid Publisher\nious colors being mixed with water\nand poured over the root of the tree.\nDahlias are also colored by a similar process.\nA li le. cef thli paper eace be seeei at the olllc-e\nof Messrs. I'., ct J. Hardy 4 Co., HO,81 and 8!,\nFleet Street, E.C.. London, Eeieieieed, free of\nchurge, - et lie en will be triad to receive\nseclesc-ric. iied adveitl.emeiits oee our be\nhalf.\nWhat Is Earth's Center Like\nM.    Camille    Flammarion,   the\nfamous French astronomer, who attributes the disaster in Italy  to vol-\nBussoniPTios baks i jcanic  action, suggests again, as he\none Year $1.80 did forty years ago, that an attempt\nbe made to find out with  certainty\nlleee Year (In advance)  1.00\nAdvertising ratesfurnished 'en unci\nl.ereel notices, 111 and fl cent! per line.\nAddress all communications to\nThk Evkning Sun,\nphonk 1171 oliand i'ohks, h.c.\nFRIDAY,.JANUARY 29, 1909\nThe announcement that the provincial government cpmplates establishing another asylum nt the const,\nmay he taken cither us a compliment\nto the good sense of the people of\nthe interior or a slur on the sanity\nof the coast inhabitants. New Westminster already  has an  institution\nthe internal composition of the terrestrial globe. The only means of\ndoing this would be to bore a huge\nwell several kilometers deep. Such\na work would not be beyond the\npower of present day engineering.\nThis well would he a source of inexhaustible heat for humanity.\nIf the various governments would\nagree to direct toward this work nil\nthe soldiers of Europe, each employed in accordance with his special\ntrade or occupation, they would win\na victory superior to all past and\nfuture   wars   of  extermination, by\nMining Stock Quotations\nNew Yokk, Jan. 28.\u2014The following are today's opening quotations for\nthe stocks mentioned:\nAsked.        Bid\nGranby Consolidated. 110.00    105.00\nB. C. Copper     8.50       8.37i\nDominion Copper.. .      .62^       .50\nof   this   character, and if a second\none is required, it should be located I bringing to light the mystery which\nat some point in the  interior,   thus ! is hidden benenth  our surface, and\nreducing the expense of taking unbalanced people to the institution.\nWhile it may be claimed that the\npeople of the interior are likely to\nretain their sanity, thus obviating\nthe need of such an establishment,\nyet occasionally an individual arises\nwho persists in firing shots at imaginary shadows, and it is always\nwell to be prepared for emergencies.\nIf the delegations from other sections of the province resembled the\none from Grnnd Forks, the annual\nConservative convention at the coast\nmust have been a great jollification\nof government officials, employees,\nami prospective officials and employees. There appears to be a\ngreat deal of frailty lurking around\nRichard McBride's civil service\npolicy.\nas while this work was being executed the habit of fighting would be\nlost, humanity would have gained\nby it a double process, both scientific\nand social.\nScience teaches us that man is\ncomposed principally of water,\nwhich probably accounts for the\nweakness of the average mortal.\nA \"dance hall\" is more appropriate in a wild mining camp than in\na highly civilized community.\nUnique Definitions\nThe system of too much home\nwork in schools and tbe cramming\nthat the young mind must get until\nthey really know nothing will be\ninstanced by the following answers\nto definitions:\n\"Stability is taking care of a stable.\"\n\"A mosquito is tbe child of blnck\nand white parents.\"\n\"Monastry is the place for monsters.\"\n\"Tocsin is something to do wilh\n! getting drunk.\"\n\"Expostulation is to have the\nsmallpox.\"\n\"Cannibal is two brothers who\nkill each other in the Bible.\"\n\"Anatomy is the human body,\nwhich consists of three parts\u2014the\nhead, the chist and the stuinmick.\nThe head contains the eyes and\nbrains, if any. The chist contains\nthe lungs and a piece of the liver.\nThe stummick is devoted to the\nbowels, of which there are five, a, e,\ni. o, u, and sometimes w and y.\nThe Wonders of Water\nThe extent to which water mingle\nwith bodies apparently solid is wonderful. The glittering opal, which\nbeauty wears as an ornament, is only\nHint and water. In every plaster of\nPaster bust which nn Italian carries\nthrough the streets for sale, there is\none   pound   of water to every four I Bet8 y,e yue8 and grumbles\npounds of chalk. The air we breathej a \u201e0UIj eat| lhen ^ j\ncontains five grains of water to every j 8i\u201e t0 8tart t|1B digestive juiees  working.    There  will   be  no dyspepsia or\nMisery in Stomach\nWhy not start now\u2014today, and\norever rid yourself of stomach trouble\nand indigestion! A dieted stomach\nGive it\n'ape's   Diapep-\nCHUKCH SERVICES    :\nKnox   Presbyterian   Church\u2014\nSabbath services ut 11 a.m. and 7:30 p,\nin.; Sabbiith school mirl Bible class at\n9:45 a.m.; Young People's Society of\nChristian Endeavor, Monday, 7:30 p.\nni. Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday at 8 p.m. All are cordially\ninvited; seats free.\nMethodist Church, Rev. Sohlieh\nter.\u2014Services next Sunday at -11\na. in. and 7:.'10 p.m.; Sunday school\nunci Bible class at 2:30 p.m. Ttie\nEpworth League of Christian Endeavor\nmeet every Monday evening at 7:30.\nEverybody will be welcome.\nBaptist Ciiuhoii, Hev. F. W. Auvache, pastor.\u2014Services on Sunday\nat 11 a. ni. and 7:30 p. m,; Sunday\nschool and Bible ctass at 3 p.m.\nP. BURNS C& CO.\nLIMITED.\nThree bottles of cold   Nelson   Beer,\n50c.    Lion Bottling Works.\nTWELFTH\nANNUAL\nWINTER\nCARNIVAL\ncubic foot of its hulk. The potatoes\nand turnips which nre boiled for\nour dinner have, in their raw  state,\nbelching of gas or eructations of undi\ngested food; no feeling like a lump of\nthe one 75 per cent and the other 90 |eH,i in ti)e Btomtt0h or heartburn, sick\nper cent of water. headache and dizziness, and your food\nIf a man weighing ten stone  were wj||   not  {e,.nlellt umi poil)0(l        ^\nsqueezed fiat in  a   hydraulic press breath with nauseous odors.\nseven und   one-half   stone of water pttpe>8 Diapepsin costs only 50 cents\nwould   run  out, and   only two and for   a   |ttl.ge   case at any drug store\none-half stone ol dry residue remain,' her0| aMel will relieve the  most obstin- j\nA man is, chemically speak ing, forty- at0  eus0  \u201ef  indigestion ,,m|   upiBA\nlive pounds of carbon and   nitrogen Htomach in live minutes.\ndiffused   through   fi*e  and a half There is nothing else better to takel\npailluls of water.   In plants we find Igtt8  f,,\u201en   Si\u201e|1Ml,.|, ,lr\u201e]  cleHiine the\nwitter thus mingling in no less won- ,(\u201emacli and intestines,   and   b.'sicles,\nderlul n manner. ,\u201e\u201e, triangule will digest and prepare\nA sunflower evaporates one and a fl\u201e assCmilation into the blood all your\nquarter pints of water a day, and   a fc\u201e\u201e|   tho  Sllllm  tt!l u mmi^ UmhUy\ncabhnge about the same   quantity, stomach would do it.\nA wheat plant exhales in 172   dnys |     When Diapepsin works, your stem-\nabout 100 000 grains of   water.    An ft,,|, rests\u2014gets itself in order, cleanse\nacre of growing wheat, on   this  cal- Up-ai\u201el   then   vou   feel like eating\ndilation, draws and pusses out about w|len vou \u201e,,\u201e\u201e t0 the tllblB| HU|, w]M\nten tons of water per duy. you eat will do you goud.\nThe sapof plants is the medium '  Absolute  relief from all stomach\nthrough which this muss of fluid  is \u201e,im.y is waiting for you as  soon   as\nconveyed. It forms a dclecate pump, you deoide to begin taking Diapepsin.\nby which the watery   panicles   run Tell your   druggist   that  you   want\nwilh the rapidity of   a swift stream. p\u201epB>8 Diapepsin, because you want to\nBy  the  action  of tbe sap, various be thoroughly oured of indigestion,\nproperties may be communicated to __________\nthe   growing   plant.     Timber    in J\u201elg(. Bottle Port Wine, 75c. Lion\nFrance is, for instance, dyed by var- Bottling Works.\nRossland\nUnder the Auspices of\nthe Citizens of Rosslnnd\nDANIEL THOMAS.\nPres.\nFeb.2to6,1909\nSplendid Sport\nHandsome Trophies and\nPrizes\nA Grand Program From\nTuesday Night Until\nSaturday Night\nHocfcey\nChampionship uf B.C.\nSki Jumping\nChampionship of B.C.\nSnowshoe Races\nChampionship of B.C.\nSkating\nChampionship of B.C.\nTobogganing\nCurling Bonspiel\nHorse Races\nMasquerade and Dance\nAnd Other Events\nReduced Transportation\nRates\nFor information apply to\nH. P. McCRANEY, Sec.\nSEE\nTHE WONDER\nLadies' and Children's Hosiery\netyleK and i>rl<Ts.\nHand-Embroidered Waist Drawn Work\nCushions and Braid Centers\nNojct    Mo In n ci', Brldfre -teet.\n\u25a0_7WRS. IDA L. BARNUM\nDealers in all Kinds tf\nFRESH AND\nCURED MEATS\nFish and Game in .Season\nFIRST ST.,  GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nOLIVE   BATH\n7s a combination ot purely vegetable oils\nand contains nothing injurious to the\nmost delicate skin. Good for bath, toilet\nand nursery. 10 cents a cake, 3 cakes\nfor 25 cents.\nWOODLAND <\u00ae, CO\nPHONE   13\nPrescription Specialists\nA new lot of latest designs of program and menu cards just received at\nThe Sun job oflice.\nCERTIFICATE    OF     IMPROVEMENTS\nNOTICE\nMontana Mineral Claim, situate In the\nGrand Korku Mining Division of Yale District.\nWhere located:   In   Gloucester camp,  and\nadjoining the    Titjur,   Opher and  Pinto\nMineral Claims.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, R. A. Henderson, acting  as   agent  for  Seymour    Birch,   Kree\nMiner's Certificate No. B107U0, intend, sixty\ndavs from the date  hereof, to upply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate of Im-\np nvmneiii- tot  the purpose of obtaining a\nCrown Grant of the above cluim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under\nsection  37,   must   he commenced before the\nissuance  of  such  Certificate  of   Improvements.\nDated this 18th day of August, A.D. 1908.\nR. A. HENDERSON.\nJ. B. HENDERSON\nBuilder 8 Architect\nDowney's Cigar Store\nA Complete stock op\nCigars, Pipes and Tobaccos\nA Frpflh Oonsfgnnieut of\nConfectionery\nReceived Weekly.\nPostoffice   Building\nPlans, Estimates, Specifications, Ltc, at Reasonable\nRates.\nPrice Lists of Buildi rg Material on Hand.\nOFFICE AND RESIDENCE c\nWinnipeg    Avenue\nPHONE   18\nParties intending to build wl.l do well to consul L mo.\nCERTIFICATE OF  IMPROVEMENTS\nNOTICE\nExcelsior, Greenwood eemi Kxohnngo Mineral\nClaims, sltuato In the Grand Forks Mining Division e.r Vale llistrte:!.\nWhere Located: PassCreole Cnmp and East\noforiccinal Mineral''laim,\nTAKK  NOTICK Unit I. II. A.  Henderson, as\nnetcnil forNev nr Hlrc-le.  Free Millers' CeT-\nilile'ieie. So, iiiimin. and I', w. MoOrouor, Free\nMinns' Certllleate  No.   minis, Intend, sluty\ndavs from elate:  hereof, to nnlely   to the Milliner\nIteoerder fcern Ouittdcnteof Improvements, for\nthe purpose of obtaining itowii giants of the\nabove I'lainis.\nAnd further tnke notice that actlicli. under\nsection :i\". inuiet be commenced In-fore tbo issu-\nnnoo of suede CerttfloaiQ of Improvement*.\nHated eel (creeled Korks. H.C,  ll.is 8th I day of\nCctober, a. D. wus\nK. A. HENDERSON.\nBICYCLES\nAND MOTOCYCLES\nHigh grade Bicyeles. A complete line of accessories. Come\nin and see the 1908 models,\nWheel repairing.\nGEO.GHAPPLE-\nWINNIPEG AVENUE, NEXT E. T. BANK\nTHE\nCOPPERo\nHANDBOOK\n(New Edition Issued Nov. 15, 1906.)\nIs a dozen books in one, covering the\nhistory, geography, geology, chemistry, mineralogy, metallurgy, terminology, uses, statistics and finances of\ncopper. It is a praoical book, useful\nto all and necessary to most men engaged in any branch of the copper\nindustry.\nIts facts will pass muster with  the\nI trained scientists, and its language is\neasily   understood   by  the everyday\n1 man. It gives the plain facts in  plain\nj English without fear or favor.\nI It lists and describes 4636 copper\nmines and companies in all parts of\nthe world, descriptions running from\ni two lines to sixteen pages, according\nto importance of the propel ty.\nThe Copper Handbook is conceded\nto be the\nWorld's Standard Reference\nBook on Copper\nThe mining man needs the book for\nthe facts it gives him about mines,.\nmining and the metal.\nThe investor needs the book for the\nfacts it gives him about mining, mining investments and copper statistics.\nHundreds of swindling companies are\nexposed in plain English.\nPrice is !$5 in Buckram with gilt\ntop; 87.50 in full library morocco.\nWill be sent, fully prepaid, on approval, to any address ordered, and\nmay bo returned within a week of receipt if not found fully satisfactory.\nHorace J. Stevens,\nEditor and Publisher,\n453 Postoffice Block,\nHoughton, Michigan.\nR# A. HENDERSON, C.E. 8 M.E.\nB. G. Land Surveyor\n?ilBe_'\"       Grand Fort*, B. C.\nLocal advertisers should  make\nnote of the fact that The .Sun is the\nmost   widely read   paper   in  Orand\nForks.\nWe have a large supply of all kinds\nof visiting cards in stock, and the\nmost fashionable styles of type to\nprint them with. The Scn Job Office.\nFor  Sale\u2014160   acres   of    good\ntimothy land.   Apply this office.\nGood paying business for sale,\nbuire at Sun office.\nIn- Moving a Town\nThe novel sight of a town being\nmoved bodily to a new site will be\nwitnessed when the C.P.R. begins\nputting into effect its regrade scheme\non the Crow line next spring, making important changes on the line\nbetween Frank and Macleod. Cowley will in the spring be moved two\nmiles south of its present location.\nThe C.P.ft. has promised to pay all\nexpenses of moving rhe town.\nA Question of Beauty\nClear the skin of chap, roughness and redness with our excellent WITCH HAZEL LOTION. Apply it before going out\nand it protects the skin nsiainst chaps. Good for habit's as\nwell ns grown-ups. We have a full assortments of SANITOL\nPREPARATIONS.\nRutherford & Mann\nPhone 35\nDRUGGISTS\nA. R. MANN, Manager\n.\u25a0\u25a0Him mil 11 inn in n_'\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u2014'\u00ab\u2014-\u2014\nHotel Colin\nOpposite Great Northern Station\nP. D. MoDONALD, Proprietor\nRecently completed and\nnewly  furnished  through-\nnut. Conveniently located\nfur   railway    men.     I'irst-\nalasfl accommodation! for\ntransient*, (to a rd a n il\nrooms liv the week nt pre*\nvailing rates, Rue Hue of\nWines, Liquors uml < i rm *,\nalways in stack at the hur.\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nFANCY DRESS BENEFIT CARNIVAL\nMONDAY, FEBRUARY 1ST\n8:00 P.M.\nBest Lady's Costume.\nFIRST PRIZE.\n85.00\nSECOND PRIZE.\nCentre Piece\nBest Gentleman's Costume..\nBest Girl' Costume\t\nKodak\n(H. E, Woodland)\nBest Boy's Costume,       Pair Skates.\n(T. A. Mclntyre)\nMostOriginal Lady'sCostume Jardiniere Stand\n(Heron & Miller)\n\"       \"   Gent's Costume..       Ham\n(P. Burns A Co.)\n\"       \"   Girl's Costume...    Box Candies\n(J.  Donaldson)\n\"       \"   Boy's Costume...   Jack Knife\n(Geo. Chappie)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014 Half-mile (8 laps)\nRace for Men Pipe (F.Downey)\nMatch Box\n(A. D. Morrison)\nQuarter-mile (4 laps) Race for\nLadies Gauntlet Gloves\n(Jeff Davis & Co.)\nBroom Ball.\u201420 minutes by amateurs in costume.\n10 P.M.\u2014Best Married Couple\nSkaters Sack Flour and\nPkg Pancake Flour\n(McNeil & Henniger)\n1 lb. Tea (A. Waugh)\nQuarter-mile Race for Boys under Fifteen  Sweater\n(D. D. Munro)\nBroom Ball.\u201420 minutes by \"Professionals.\"\nTug-of-War\u2014 I.O.O.F. vs. K.P., 1st prize, Box\nby E. Larsen.\nNames and character of   all   costumed   skaters\ncard and handed in at the box office upon entering.\nthe ice by 8:30 will he ineligible for prizes.\non time.    The bund will be in   attendance\ncents, children 25 cents.\n(Donated by N.L.McI.&Cn.)\n5.00 Box \"Boundary\" Cigars\n(Dan Sohnoter)\nPair Skates\n(W. K. C. Manly)\nJack Knife.\nFancy Box Candies\n(W. Chalmers)\nBox Cigars\n(Granby Hotel)\nBox Candies\n(J. Donaldson)\nJack Knife\n(Geo. Ciiapple)\nBox Cigars (Wpg.Hotel)\nSafety Razor\n(A. R. Mann)\nFruit Dish\n(R. P, Petrie)\nSteel Engraving\n(W. H. Itter)\nPair Gloves\n(Clark Bros.)\nof Cigars,  donated\nmust be written on\nAny  pkater not on\nAll  events called  promptly\nall   evening.   Admission   50\nt G\u00b099 o#*%S\n&2.50  \u2122*H\u2122    S2.50\nRegular Price .3.00\nAn Oiler Which Meets the Special Wants of All Classes of Readers\nThe Western Canadian reading public is tuado up ohiefly of those clas\nPersons who have lived ill the West for a lengthy period and are nut and uut\nWesterners, and recent arrivals from the Old Country, from tho United\nStates and from Eastern Canada.\nPerhaps no one newspaper could cater with complete satisfaction to all these\nclasses, but by this combination offer every special need is mot\nThe Weekly Free Press and Prairie Farmer gives a complete record week\nhy week of all happenings in the Western Provinces. In addition it has spec _\ndepartments for American and British settlers. Tho Family Herald and\nWeekly Star supplies the former resident of Eastern Canada with news of tlio\nEastern portion of the Dominion in detail, and tho Grand Forks Sun provides\nthe local and Boundary news, which you cannot do without.\n.190..\nQRAND   FORKS   SUN;\nFind enclosed $2.00, 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.\nPERSIAN PHILOSOPHY\n[l-'llUM TUK IIULISTAN OF SA'dI.1\nNobody will throw a stone at a tree\nthat bears no fruit.\nWbat (can the rival effect so long as\nthe charmer is our friend!\nThe rays of virtue cannot illuminate such us are radically vicious.\nA peace-mingling falsehood is preferable to a mischief-stirring truth.\nTill a man has declared h_ mind,\nhis virtue and vice nitty have lain\nhidden.\nHis ban I will tremble on rendering\nhis account who has been accessory lo\na dishonest aet.\nTo confer a favor upon the wicked\nis of like import as if you did an injury to the good.\nTo be overmuch facetious is the accomplishment of courtiers and the\nblemish of the wise.\nThe whelp of a wolf must prove a\nwolf at last, notwithstanding he may\nbe brought up a man,\nWhen a man is desperate he will\ngive latitude to his tongue, like a cut\nat bay will (ly at a dog.\nThrust not again thv band into a\nscorpion's hole till thou canst endure\nthe pain of its lirst sting.\nWorth rests not on riches, but on\ntalents; and the discretion of age, not\niu years, but on good seuse.\nMen soured by misfortune anxiously desire that the state and fo.itune of\nthe prosperous may decline.\nEsteem bim not a friend who during thy prosperity will brag of his\nlove and brotherly affection.\nAt the moment of compulsion when\nit is impossible to fly, the hand will\ngrasp the sharp edge of a sword.\nBe generous and avail thyself of\nlife, before they proclaim it as an\nevent that such a person is not left.\nThat fool who can illuminate day\nwith a camphorated taper must soon\nfeel a want of oil for his lamp at night.\nIf ambitious of a great name make\na practice of munificence, for the crop\nwill not shoot till thou shalt sow the\nseed.\nWhoever sows the seed of vice and\nexpects a virtuous produce, pampers a\nvain brain and encourages an idle\nwhim.\nTill thou canst perceive a convenient time) for obtruding an opinion,\nundermine nut thy consequence by\nidle tall;.\nSo long as a warrior is replenished\nwith food he will light valiantly, anil\nwhen his belly is empty he will run\naway sturdily.\nStand in awe, O wise man, of him\nwho stands in awe of thee, notwithstanding thou canst cope with a hundred such as he.\nThe poor ass, though devoid eef understanding, will bo held precious\nwhen carrying a burden; oxen and\nassi's that curry loads are preferable to\nmen that injure their fallow-creatures,\nRepine not at thy bankrupt circumstances, nor let thy heart despond,\nfor the fountain of Immortality has\nits source of chaos. .Sit not down\nsoured at the revolutions of the times,\nfor patience is bitter, yet it will bear\nsweet fruit.\nWhen, through an act of Ond, a\nman has fallen, the whole world will\nput their feet upon his neck; when\ntbey seo that fortune has taken him\nby the hand, tbey will put their\nhands upon their breasts and be loud\nin his praise.\nOriginally, the basis of oppression\nin this world was small, and every\nnewcomer added to it, till it reached\nits present extent. Let the mouaroh\neat but one apple from a peasant's\norchard, and his guards, or slaves,\nwill pull the tree by its roots. From\nthe plunder of five eggs that the king\nshall sanction, his troops will stick a\nthousand fowls upon their spits.\nLAND ACT\nForm OF NOTICE,\nYnle  Lontl   Ulstclot.    Dlitrlot of Siniilltn-\nItlfCII,\nTAIvK    NOTICE   tlmt    Smith    Curtis,    of\nKoMlAijiI, n.C,. ouoiipuUoti mine unerator,\ninteiidfl u, tipplv fur permission to |m roll use\nthe roUowttifrdescribed minis:\nOommenctiiftat n port planted on the western side line of the Nelson a Kurt Bhepherd\nitiiilwiiy upmpany'i i.nn<i Urniii-ahd nt tli\u00ab\nsouth-tut corner of Peter Show's preemption or. Biti Sheep Creeks thenoe west7Q\nahalnst theueu south 15 ahnlns, more or less,\nto the north Hi f ,|..i. GUI'- pre-emption;\ntlieiloe etisl :i.ri ohains, more or less, to nortli-\neast corner of n.i.l til IPs preemption;:\nthenoe south 15 chains! thenee east 85 ohains.\nmorn or less, to the western line of aforesaid\nKniiwiiy [.ami Oriuit; tlnnee north .11) elm J lis\nto point of eoinnieneemeiit. containing IUU\nncres, more or lefi-s.\nJAMES ROBINSON PRANSTON,\nA gent for SMITH CURTIS,\npated December Uth, lfWK,\nSynops\nCHARLES G. WHEELER\nM, Inst. M. Ii.\nPlumber by Examination\nand Sanitary Engineer\nRepairs of Every Description\nShop :\nSecond Street\nPaoxe B77\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture   Made  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\nAOSWT roil\u2014\nLondon Mutual Fire Insurance Co,\nMoiHroul mul Ciiuuriti,\nAiii;l'>-Anierietui,\nEquity,\nAna other substantia] nompanics.\nBRIDGE STREET, GftflNO FORKS, B. G.\nRegulations\nANY available Dominion IjhhU within the\n'* Railway iVlt of British Columbia maybe\nbomesteadetl by any h'imhi wiio is the hcml\nof it family, or an) male over eighteen years\nof age, to the extent of one-quarter section\nof tGU acres, mole or less.\nKntr.v most he made personally nt the local\nIiiihI olliee for the dihtrli tin whioh   the hind\nIs situate.\nThe homesteader is required to perform\nthe conditions couuejted therewith under\none of the following plans:\n(1) At least six mouths' resitlouoe upon nnd\ncultivation of the land in each year for three\nyears.\n(2) If the Father (or mother, If the father Is\ndercased), of the homesteader resides noon it\nfarm in tlo* vicinity or the hind entered for,\nthe requirements as to residence muy be sat*\nisfled by such person residing with the father\npr mother.\n(;i) If the settler has his permanent resi*\ndence upon farming laud owned hy him in\nthe vicinity of his homestead, tbe require*\nmentsRs to residence may he satisfied liy\nresidence upon the snid Inml,\nSix months' notice in writing should be\ninven the Commissioner <>f Dominion  Lands\nnt Ottawa of intention to apply for patent.\nCoal-('oui mining rights niav be leased\nfor a period of twenty-one years nt an annual rental of $1,1)11 per acre. Nut more than\na.MJOacres shall he leased to one individual or\ncompany, A royalty at ttie rute of Hve cents\nper ton shall be collected on tiie merchantable coal mined.\nW. W.CORY,\nDeputy of the Minister of the Interior.\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorized publication of this\nadvertisement will not he paid for.\nR.L. MILES\nSECOND-HAND STORE\nFIRST ST., OPP. CITY HALL\nCarpets Cleaned and Laid,\nFurniture Repaired, Upholstered and ('leaned, and\nother John In the house-\ncleaning line. Rubber Tires\nfor Baby Carriages.\nSecond Hand Goods\nBOUGHT ANO SOLD\nNEW YORK\nCLIPPE\nIS THE OREATEBT\nTHEATRICAL \u00a3 SHOW PAPER\nIN THE WORLD.\n$4.00 Per Year.   Single Copy, 10 CIs.\nISSUED WEEKLY.\nSample Copy Free.\nFRANK QUEEN PUB. CO. (Ltd:,\nALBF.KTJ BORIB,       ,\u201e I'l'llLlSlIKllS\nM.KiOEII. 47 W. JSTH ST.. NEW Yum\n(MpEuMtiigftttt\nhints more live Boundary news than\nany other paper published in Mm\ndistrict, The price of Tiik Mux is\nonly 'SI.OO per year\u2014one-half the enst\nof its competitors, Thk Sun is never\nuu the fence regarding questions cif\npublio interest. Tiik Mux is acknowledged tec be cceie nf the; brightest\npapers published in the interior of\nthe province. Tlieise; who subscribe\nunci feel dissatisfied, will have their\nmoney refunded by calling at the o_.es\nof publication.\nTiik Evening Son and theToronto\nWeekly Qlobe unci Canada Farmer,\n$1,011 per year in advance.\nThe Evening Sun, The Winnipeg\nWeekly Free Press and Prairie Farm'\nr   and   tho  .Montreal Family Herald\nand Weekly Stur, 8_00  per  year in\nadvance.\nThe Sun is  read  by  everybdy  be\ncausu it prints all the Houndnry liows\nGood   milch   cow, pnrty Jersee\nand calf for sale.    Apply this olliee\nPROVINCE\nHOTEL\nKMIL LARSEN, PHOPRIETOB\nlicet eieiel Cold Motem, Moely (furnished\nStove-Heated lin,.ens. Entirely re\nfurnished eonl renovated throughout.\nFlrcet.clasn boiird lev day, week or\neeee.cilli. Spcolel rates to stendj boarders. American mul European plans.\nFinest Uur lei City In Connection,\nRIVERSIDE AVE,     GRAND FORKS, B, C.\nCOLUMBIAN    COLLEGE\nNEW WESTMINSTER.    B. C.\nReceive both Ladlw and Gentlemen ec reel.\ndent or day students! hat a ootuplete Oom-\nceee'ei'iiel or  Business Coursei prepares '.ne-\ndiiutsliiimlli     '1 reedier.1   IVrtilleeete-   c,f   all\nf-radost gives tbe four years' course f... the.\nI, et. degree,and the flrsl yenr eel tin. Bchool\nof Science courso, lu affiliation with the To*\nroceto (Jieivor.ity; lens ii spc-einl prccHtirctors*\noourso fcer uiiiie-ree cc he, v.uric ice ll ('. Instruction Ii alio given in ArLMuslo, Physical Oui.\nture uml Kleicutleiei. Term opens Sept, II,\n1'.\"\".   I ur Ceeleiiduree. etc , aclelrcNM\nrnlXMIilA.N COLLEGE,\nThe .Sun  and the Toronto Weekly\nGlobe for 81.00 per year.\niilCYCI.KS   ANO   HkI'AIH    WORK\u2014A\nComplete line of 1008 models. A few\nsecond-hand wheels cheap. Wheels\nto rent.   Ono.   CuAPPLE, Winnipeg\nAvenue. A Clem Mm\nOutside cleanliness is less than hall the battle. A man may\nscrub himself a dozen times a day, and still be unclean. Good\nhealth means cleanliness not only outside, but inside. It means\na clean stomach, clean bowels, clean blood, a clean liver, and\nnew, clean, healthy tissues. The man who is ?Iean in this way\nwill look it and act it. He will work with energy and think\nclean, clear, healthy thoughts.\nHe will never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood\ndisorders. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean stomachs. Blood diseases are found where there is unclean blood.\nConsumption and bronchitis mean unclean lungs.\nDr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery\nprevents these diseases. It makes a man's inside, clean\nand healthy. It cleans the digestive organs, makes pure,\nclean  blood, anil clean, healthy flesh.\nIt restores tone to thc nervous system, and cures nervous exhaustion and\nprostration,   It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs.\nConstipation thf; most unclean uncleanliness. Dr. Pieroe's Pleasant Pel-\n'eta ourc it.   1. -y never gripe.   Easy to take as candy.\ncity news\nMiss Bruce, of the stulF of public\nsell.'ol teuchers, left on Tuesday for\nber home near Calgary, having received u telegram announcing the\ndeath cef her father. Miss Alnrs is\nacting as her substitute during her\nabsence.\nThe following officers have been in-\nstulleil fur the current year bv L.O L.,\nNee. 52: W. C. in C P. McNevin;\nEx. C. in C, VV. Kicston; C. Chaplain, W Ditisuiiire; scribe, C. A. Mix;\ntreasurer, \u2022). Walker; H. at A., N.\nMcNevin; 1st I,., M. Schafer; 2d Ie,\nJ. Hutton; 1st C, M. Pierce; 2cl C,\nG. Burt; J. H., 0. liuekle; 0. H., D.\nShannon. The installing officers were\nK. S.Clougb and -..Shannon.\nThis evening Josephine Hive No.\n10, L.O.T.M., will give a sleigh ride\nm the residence of Mrs. Frank\nRuckle, a few miles from 'the city.\nSupper will be served and cards and\ndancing indulges] in by those attending.\nMrs. lielaek, of Malo, Wash., wm\nbrought to the eity last Monday to\nreceive treatment for a bioken leg.\nShe was taken to the home of her\ndaughter, Mrs. Medow, where she is\nis under the cure of Dr. Truax.\nThe Canadiun Mining Journal says:\nThe vigorous unci sanely constructive\npolicy pursued by Manager Hodges,\nof the Granby Consolidated, is an object lesson to Canadian mine managers. Those who are familiar with\nconditions   in   southeastern    British\nGee, but that Tuekawilla Tea of\nJohn Donaldson's is great. If you\nhaven't aheady tried it, you should\ndo so right away. Jt has such a delicious flavor.\nGeo. A. McLeod, formerly of this\ncity, is president, and H. H. Shallen-\nberger secretary, and A. D. McPhee\nsuperintendent, of a eompanv organized to develop the International, a\nga'ena pro| erty on Salmon river.\nGive your next order for groceries\nto John Dotaldson. You svill not regret it.\nThe T.ndies' Auxiliary nf Holy\nTrinity church will hold a social nt\nthe rectory tomorrow eveifing.\nA good cigar is nil right for u mn'n,\nbut give a womnn a cup of Donaldson's Tuekawilla Tea and she will be\nyour friend forever.\nOn account of the big carnival next\nMonday night, the Fraternal Order\nof Fugles have decided not to hold\ntheir regular weekly meeting that\nevening.\nTuekawilla Ten\nIs just the thing for ine.\nTwte it, try it\u2014\nTuekawilla Tea.\nThe marriage of F. J. Deane. formerly proprietor of the Nelson Daily\nNeA's, is reported from Portland, Ore.\neV'rial   Old   Port\nLion Bottling Works.\nSI   per   gallon.\nThe Bossland Winter Cnrnnival will\nopen on February 2nd and continue\nfor four days with a program of races,\nI I Mil .11 tiuiin III .llllUllllinLI'l i| IMlLiail      i i \u25a0     . 1\nColumbia will appreciate the vigilance j hockey mBtcl,,,s an,) other K\"n,e9-\nand strength with which the affairs of;\nthe Granby Consolidated are administered.\nFor Sale, Cheap\u2014A course of bookkeeping in the I. C. S. Apply at this\noflice.\nBOUNDARY    ORE    SHIPMENTS\nTiie  following table gives tbe ore shipments of\nfor 1905, lilUG and for the past week:\nBoun\n(l.'iry  mines\nGranby Mines, Phoenix\t\nSnowshoe. Phoenix\t\nMother Lode, Deadwood\t\nB. C. Mine, Snmmit\t\nEiniiiii, Summit\t\nOni Denoro, SummitCamp\t\nBonnie Belle, Deadwood\t\nBrooklyn-Stemwinder, Phoenix.\nIdaho. Phoenix\t\nRawhide, Phoenix\t\nSunset, Deadwood \t\nMountain Rose, Summit\t\nAthelstan\t\nSenator, Summit Cnmp\t\nMorrison, Dcndwood\t\nSulphur King.Suniniit\t\nWinnipeg, Wellington\t\nBig Cupper, West Copper\t\nRiverside\t\nCarmi, West Fork\t\nSully, West Fork\t\nRambler, Wesl Fork\t\nButcher Hoy, West Fork\t\nDuncan\t\nProvidence, Greenwood\t\nElkhorn, (Ireenwood\t\nStrathmore, Providence\t\nGolden Eagle\t\nPreston, Skylark\t\nPrince Henry, Skylnrk\t\nSkylark, Skylark Camp\t\nLust Chance, Skylark Cump\t\nE. P. U. Mine, Skylark Cump..,\nBay, Skylnrk\t\nMavis, Skylark\t\nDon Pedro, Skylark\t\nCrescent, Skylark\t\nHelen, Greenwood\t\nRepublio,Boundary Fulls\t\nMiscellaneous\t\nTotal, tons\t\nSmelter Treatment\u2014\nGranby Smelter\t\nB. C. Copper Co.'s Smelter\t\nDominion Copper Co.'s Smelter.\nTotal Treated      1,183,017    1,420,21\n1907\n813,537\n135,001\n208, Mil\n1008\n1,032,51!)\n\u25a045,956\n314,029\nPast Week\n14,421\n9,744\n18.274\n14,4\u00abJ1\n65,S00\n43,298\n12,253\n64,17:)\n31,270\n31,258\n5,780\n10,7-10\n8.802\n630\n120\n\t\n649\nDO\n60\n88\ntt)\n700\n20\n55\n60\n224\n80\n50\n215\n1,148,237\n1,479,682\n24,163\n637,626\n341,952\n153,439\n1,031.671\n355.938\n22,666\n18,794\n7,731)\nGeo. Chappie went up to Greenwood on Wednesday to install the\nofficers of the Greenwood I-edge,\nKn'ghts of Pythias.\nFor Sale\u2014150 acres of good fruit\nland.    Apply this office,\nBorn\u2014In Grand Forks, on Saturday, January 23, to Mr. and Mrs. C.\nM. Davidson, a daughter.\nOne of the best medicines is a good\nbrisk walk in the fresh air. Take a\nrun up to Donaldson's for yours.\nThe prizes for the carnival next\nMonday night nre now on exhibition\nin the show window of F. Downey's\ncigar store.\nA cup of Tuku\"'illa Tea tastes\ngool at nny time, no matter if ,it is a\nhot dav or a cold ono.    Phono A30.\nShakft in a Bottle\nNow is the time when the doctor\ngets busy nnd the pntent medicine\nmanufacturers reap the harvest, unless great enre is taken to dress\nwarmly nnd keep the feet dry. This\nis tbe advice of an old eminent authority, who says thnt rheumatism\nand kidney trouble weather is here,\nand also tells what to do in case of\nan attack.\nGet from any good prescription\npharmacy one-half ounce Fluid Extract Dandelion, one ounce Compound Kargon, three ounces Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla. Mix by\nbaking in a bottle and take a teaspoonful after meals and at bedtime.\nJust try this simple .home-made\nmixture at thc lirst sign of rheumatism, or if your back nches or you\nfeel I lint the kidneys are not acting\njust right. This is said to be a\nsplendid kidney regulator, and almost certnin remedy for all forms of\nrheumatism, which is caused by\nuric acid in tha blond, which tbe\nkidneys fail to lilter out. Any one\ncan easily prepare this at home and\nat small cost.\nDruggists in this town and vicinity, when shown the prescription,\nstated thnt they can either supply\nthese ingredients, or, if your readers\nprefer, tbey will compound the mixture for them.\nPRINTING\nWe are prepared to do all kinds of\nCommercial   Printing\nOn the shortest notice and in the\nmost up-to-r'ate style\nBECAUSE\nWe have the must modern jobbing plant\nin the Boundary Country, employ competent workmen, nnd carry a complete\nlino 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 nnd Counter Pads,\nWedding Stationery,\nAnd everything turned out in an\nUp-to-date Printery.\nGOOD PRINTING-SLrn,dU\nitself  an\ntrial order\nwill convince you that our stoek and workmanship are of\nthe best. Let us estimate on your order. We guarantee\nsatisfaction.\nFRUIT\nORNAMENTAL\nAND SHRUBS\nTREES\nFor Homes Orchards and\nResidence Grounds.\nOuit Motto:\nSUPERIOR HIGH-GRADE NURSERY STOCK\nNot tho cheapest in price\nbut  the best in quality.\nBurbank's New Stoneless\nMIRACLE PLUM\nCapital City Nursery ompany\nSALEM, OREGON\nW. G, CHALMERS\nAlways Carries in Stock\na Fresh Supply of\nFRUITS, CANDIES, TOBACCOS\nAND CIGARS\nIce Cream  and  Summer Drinks\nCOR, BRIDGE AND FIRST STREETS\nPalace Barber Shop\nKnzur Hoiilnff a Specialty.\nGrand Forks Sun\nJob Department\nP.  A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\n1st Doon North of Guanuy Hotel,\nFirst Street.\nDRAYING\nHeavy and Light Dray Wdrk\nAttended to Promptly. Passengers and Trunks to and\nfrom all trains.\nTelephone A129\nGRAND FORKS TRANSFER COMPANY\nRutherford Bros., Props.\n60  YEARS'\nEXPERIENCE\nTrade Marks\nDesigns\nCopyrights Ae.\nAntone lending a sketch and deaorlntlon nay\nQuickly ascertain our opinion free whether an\niDTentlon la probably patentable, Communlea.\ntloiiBHtrlctlycfinUdiMitliLl. HANDBOOK onI'ati-nl\neetit free. Oldest scency forBucurinirpatents.\npAtonta token through Munn * Co, resell\ntrnecialnotlce, wlthoutchamo, lathe\nScientific American.\n\"  ndi  \"\"'  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n:1m\nda,\newi\nINI\nAhandaomely illustrated veekly, leiugeut circulation of any Bdentlllo Journal, 'i'ormee for\nCanada, S_5 a yoar, fostmio prepaid. Sold by\n rMealorr\n|Q36IBraadmy,|\n' *1 IT St, Waatelnciroir. _ J\nPacific\nOFF. C.F.R. STATION\nHotel\nPlrat-olaafl in every respeot.\n.-iuiiiiiV rooms for oottiiuer*\ndial traveler*-\nHot nml Cold l.ntlis.\nHur In Connection.\nFinest BratidVof Wines.\nLiy no runnel Oimin.\nCHAS. PETERSON, Prop\n\u25a0BOUNDARY DIVIDENDS.\n-ntVlDENDB-\n36,688\nName of Company.\nGranby CouiioHuatea -Copper.\nQarlbbo McKliumy\u2014Hold\t\nPreevleleneco- Silver\t\n11.0. Copper\u2014Copper\t\nAuthorized ^-flHAliES-^ Pnlel    Total to    Lateat      Per\nc'ecijiliel     iRHiiecl. Par. 190*3.       Date.       Dnte.   Share\n$5c  mi   mm tm n,&) t*mm \u00a3<*.m t\u00bb.oo\nISMOOO  1.250 000    $1          510,831 Feb. 1904     .00\n'      WM      81000     ts 6 000        38.221 Sept. 1906     .50\nV    3,5,,\u2122     503,000     tS          201.200 Sept. IM?     .0*\nWe carry tlio most fashionable stock\nof wedding stationery in the Boundary country. And we aro the only\nolliee in this seotion that have the\ncorrect material for printing it. The\n.Sun job office.\neShow cards for widnows and inside\nare a fine form of silent salesmen.\nMake them brief, terse and pointod.\nPrint them plainly, to be read at a\nglance.\nWe have some of the highest grade\npaper and stationery for up-to-date\ncommercial printing every brought to\nthe Boiinoary.    kun Job Otlice.\nFor Sale Cheap, or Trade\u2014Business lot on Winnipeg avenue near\nThe Sun office. Enquire of Lew\nJohnson.\nBefore closing your contract for\nreading matter for the coming year,\nread the tempting clubbing offer we\nmake on the third page.\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.","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_1909-01-29","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\/1.0341845","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":"1909-01-29 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":"1909-01-29 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":""}]}