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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":" y\n-\nTHE\nA\n28th Year-No\nTejl tne what you Know ls true,\nI can guess as well as you.\"\nFriday, September 20, 1929\nLOCAL WEATHER:\nWarm, with lots of sunshine.\n%aM FEB YEAR\n\u2022e FEB COPS\nFruit Freight\nRates to Coast\nNow Lower\ntlon; this Is due to one large retail\n| concern getting a retail rating, while\ncompetitors, moving ten times the volume, are denied this. Steps are now\nbeing taken to correct this situation.\nI We have just returned from a visit to\nthe three prairie provinces and listened to many complaints on this score.\nWinnipeg ls buying Ontario Wealth-\np^,^^,^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ les anB tomatoes. We heard that ap-\n  pies will be shipped to the prairies ln\n\u25a0mr-rvtxsra aw ia m.il\u00ab^\u00abn 26c and 50c cartons, all ready lor the\n.JES^h K^JJcSrfS! \u00ab\u00abt\u00abneH. We do not know if such\nconferences with the presidents of the nackaees are legal\n^.^i^thl^\"^^ Sw\"l We \u25a0\u00bb \"*\u00ab\u00bb* that British Ool-\n\\\\\\\\Vl^in ^?L^^'\u00bb5^SThu1\u00abnWa Mcintosh apples will roll on\n\\\\\\\\\\\\JSL ^tSSSSU* \"IdSSL^tai the 2l8t lnstal,t' No P'lccs \u25a0\" 1uoted\nSS'wSfchfTS.^anni.^ \u00abJ? \u00b0n them \u00bb \u25a0*\". Salmon Arm and\nftS\/ASl?nltvf \u25a0\u00a3\u201e*?^mm*?!I Sloops tomotoes are  more popu-\n5^M\u00a3Ea*<\u00a3 taS5ltLP^J&! owna !\u00bb\u25a0*\u2022 Wealthies are showing ex-\nSS^h^f^t. JL*!\u00a3? ?\u00a3 ?St\u00a3j client color, especially the later shlp-\nSSia\u2122^\/f^Htv w^h ~SS'ments o'   household.    Supplies   are\nports.\nPooley Says\nNelson Has\nPassed Buck\nSelf-contained\nPre-cooling\nSuccessful\nFederal Member\nfor West Kootenay\nComments on Douks\nVICTORIA, Sept.. 19\u2014Reports that\nfanatical Doukhobors encamped out.\nside Nelson are causing a serious sanl.\ntary problem will be investigated by\nDr. H. E. Young, provincial health officer, Acting Premier Pooley an\nnounced yesterday. Dr, Young will\nleave for the Interior immediately and\nsubmit an early reply to the government.\nMr. Pooley had before him yesterday a sheaf of telegrams from Mel-\nson declaring that conditions in the\nROSSLAND, Sept. 17\u2014Commenting\non the Doukhobor situation, W. K.\nBaling, member for West Kootenay,\n\u25a0aid: \"It la true that the Provincial\nGovernment primarily ls responsible\ntor tbe enforcement' of the law, but it\nmust be apparent that the Federal\nGovernment should share the responsibility for the conduct of these fanatics, because not only did it bring\nthese people to Canada, but in 1898 it\nbonused them to come. In 1919 the\ngovernment put a ban on entry cf\nDoukhobors and in 1926 lt lifted the\nban and permitted further entry.\n\"The first party of Doukhobore entered Canada ln 1899 and (33,000 was\nhanded to a committee of the new arrivals by way of bonus; in addition to\nwhich 100,000 was loaned them.\n'.'By an order in council dated De-\ncamber 6, 1898 the Federal Government gave each member of this sect\nfullest assurance of absolute immunity from military service, which assurance had been denied them by the\nRussian Government and so they\ncame to Canada.\"\nThese facts, said Mr. Esling, would\njustify the placing of a share of tbe\nresponsibility for the conduct of these\npeople upon the Federal Government.\nOne difficulty is that many of them\nwere born here, and another Is that\nthey cannot be deported because Soviet Russia will not receive them.\nFanatics Wire\n| Premier King\nyesterday and supplies from there are Doukhobor encampment threatened to\nreported scarce. However, we see sam- create a grave health menace, and de-\nple stocks on hand from Washington, manding that action be taken to rec-\nFlums are dragging on sale, the tity the situation,\ncheap Italian prunes are popular and Mr. Pooley dictated replies suggest-\nare preferred to plums. Flemish Beau- log that the Nelson people should not\nty pears are arriving and meeting with become prematurely alarmed and add\ngood demand. Bartletts that are being ing that the government would give\nshipped now are overripe, but other- immediate attention to the opm-\nwlse good stock. We notice plums ai- plaint 8.\nriving from the lower Mainland by ex- At the attorney general's depairt-\npress. We fear that the shipper will ment there is a feeling that the city\nnot get the price of the transportation of Nelson is \"passing the buck' to the\nfor them. government in Its present protests. It\nAll kinds of vegetables used for is understood here that the Doukho-\npickies are ln good demand. Some job- bors originally were encamped with-\nbers here are hesitating to buy their in the Nelson city limits, but were\nwinter potatoes from lower Mainland gradually edged into provincial ter-\nnow. We can assure them that these ritory. Now, Mr. Pooley said today,\npotatoes are ripe and lt is digging Nelson is demanding that the govern-\ntime in British Columbia;,, Potatoes ment take full responissibility for the\ncoming in now are usually sold before condition of their encampment,\narrival and few, if any, are seen on So far no action has been taken to\nthe wholesale floors. There is a plen- disband the encampment, but provin-\ntiful supply of vegetables on hand, cial officials believe that lt will quick-\nOnions are now ln line with Yakima ly disappear with the first fall frost,\nquotations, the margin in price exist- when, it is expected, the Doukhobors\n-   --J '\u2014\u25a0'- \u2022\u2022 \u00bb--  will seek the shelter of their homes\nagain.\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 19\u2014Eight Doukhobor children, seven girls and a\nbay, ranging in ages from 8 to 16, escaped this morning from the Ghil-\n ,   dren's Aid home on Wall street and\nGravenstein, Cee   2.25 set out to join their parents in Oakal-\n\u201e. ,  Wealthy and Alexander,       | la jail.\nhousehold  1.85     In response to an alarm sounded by\nApples, Wealthy, fancy $2.40 to.. 2.50 the- matron, a search party was or-\nCrabapples, Transcendent, fancy, ganized.\n$1.65 to  1.75     Corporal    Robert    Sims, provincial\nCrabapples,    Transcendents,  ll's,       I police, located the Doukhobor .young-\nfancy\nKELOWNA, Sept 9.\u2014Total shipments of Wealthies up to and includ-\n' ing 7th September, as reported to the\nInterior Committee of direction, are\n131,956 boxes. Export may amount to\n50,000 or more, so that approximately\ntwo-thirds of the crop has been already taken care of. There are now\nenough of tbe Fancy Grade to meet\nthe demand for wrapped stock. The\nplan of moving Household Grade, containing not over ten per cent Extra\nFancy and Fancy, appear popular\nwith, the trade.\nClaims\nOne of the representatives of the In\nterior Committee on the prairie sends\nin the following summary of the\nclaims passed in the district under his\nsupervision. Tomatoes, $630.00; cukes,\n$364.00; cots, $325.00; Cherries, $187.00\na considerable expansion of the apple\nmarket, particularly in the cities.\nSimilar companies are being formed\nfor Calgary, Winnipeg, etc. The Vancouver territory hag been allocated to\nthe first company, which wlll be comprised largely of Penticton fruit\ngrowers and business men.\nThe great \"kick\" of the grower ln\nthe past has been about the small\nshare he received of the consumer's\ndollars. This direct method of sale,\nsupplementing aa lt does the marketing through ordinary trade channels,\nshould greatly increase consumption,\nit ls believed, and will therefore aid\norchardists ln general as well as\nstockholder.\nthe\nGranby Will\nGet Increased\nPower Supply\nConfident\nGrowers Will\nGet Relief\nThat the application of the British\nColumbia fruit interests for a reduction of railway rates on fruit has\nnever been judicially dealt witb by the\nDominion board of railway commissioners was the Interesting statement\nmade by Leon Ladner, M.P. for South\nVancouver, at a roundtable conference at Vernon last week, convened by\nthe special committee representing\ngrowers named some weeks ago to\npush the flght for more favorable\ntreatment of British Columbia commodities by tbe transportation companies.\nAccording to Mr. Ladner, who explained the present situation in regard to the push for better rates, all\nthe railway board dii in reference to\nthe fruit rates when it heard the case\ning ls unsafe and some trade ls being lost to Yakima.\nCALGARY  WHOLESALE  PRICES\nTO RETAIL\nBritish Columbia\nApples, Gravenstein, fancy, $2.40\nto $2.50\nApples,\nApples,\n\u25a0\u25a0.--.        PRINCETON\u2014Increased Dower sun-' wle lru\"' rBMJS wnen it neara ine case\napples, $158.00; plums, $102.00; peach- ply for the growing local demand was: ,or equalization of rate* was to OK\nes. $72.00; pears, $46.00; onions, $15.00;1 the reason for a visit here last week-  a reP\u00b0rt on\nlettuce, $12.00; total, $1,914.00 He also end  by Lome A.  Campbell   general\nCrabapples, Hyslop, fancy,$1.85\nPears, Bartlett, box, fancy\t\nPears, Bartlett, box, Cee\t\nPears.. Flemish, box, fancy.\t\nPears, Flemish, box, Cee.\n1:00\n2.00\n3.75\n3.50\n.3,00\n. 2.75\nVICTORIA Sept. 17.\u2014British Columbia will claim compensation from\nthe Federal Government for the cost\nof handling the recent outbreak\namong fanatical Doukhobors around\nNelson, it was learned today.\nAs Saskatchewan has recently arrested large numbers of Doukhobors\nand ls understood to hold the federal\nauthorities responsible for the ex\npense Involved, a substantial bill,\nrunning into many thousands of doi\nlars, will be submitted to the Dominion shortly, lt is expected. The total\ncost in he case of this province is\nmade up of the expense of hiring special constables to quell the recent disturbances called the \"Battle of Nelson,\" of bringing 104 arrested Doukhobors to the Coast, and of keeping\nthem ln Oakalla jail for their term of\nsix months' imprisonment.\nThe provincial claim \u25a0 against tht\nDominion, officials here believe, is\nwell founded. The Doukhobors, lt\nwas explained, were brought here by\nthe Federal Government under a ape\ncial contract, and still remain wards\nof the Dominion. The province feels\nthat the responsibility for maintaining law among them rests squarely\nwith the federal authorities. This\nview, lt ls understood, ls shared ln\nSaskatchewan, where similar Doukhobor colonies exist.\nDOUKS WIRE KINO\nNELSON, Sept. 17\u2014Members of the\nSons of Freedom, fanatical Doukhobor sect encamped at the city limits,\nyesterday sent a telegram to Premier\nKing at Ottawa, requesting that the\nDominion Government look into their\ncase. Following is a copy of the wire:\n\"Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King, Premier of\nCanada, Ottawa, Ont.:\n\"Our progress based on love, teach\nIngs of Christ . Authorities of B.C. I\ncommit inclement mutilation, not\nconsidering the cause. Beat us brutally to unconscious state. After all, deliver us to custody. Children left alone\nwithout parents' care. Over 200 now\nunder police guard encamped near\nNelson limits. Investigate the matter\nsoon. Do not leave lt to the Provincial\ngovernment. Don't let disgrace exist\nln country. The time has come for\nfreedom and set free the mother land.\nWe cannot stop our deeds ln progressing the teachings of Christ. We sacrifice our lives. Unchangeable. (Signed)\nC C U B, SONS OF FREEDOM.\"\n\" Prairie Fruit and\nVegetable Market\nCALGARY, Sept. 18.\u2014The weather\nthis week varied this week from cool\nto warm, with intermittent showers,\nnot wet enough, to delay harvesting\noperations very much, Crops are\nyielding more than was at first expected. Business is good.\nThe movement to country points\n-appears greater than a year ago.\nWholesalers are getting' by, but retailers complain of unfair competi-\nBeets, per lb. '8c to. \u00bb.03H\nCucumbers, field, peach box, 90c... 1.00\nCarrots, per lb, 3c to. .03*4\nPlums, Ponds Seedling, Quacken-\nbos, No. 2 and Greengage,$1.25.. 1.50\nPlums, Ponds Seedling, Quacken-\nbos, No. 1 and Greengage,$1.75.. 2.00\nGherkins, 6's 1.50\nOnions, Silverskin, peach box 1.65\nOnions,   Yellow,   cwt, ungraded,\n$2.76 to 3.00\nTomatoes, field, No. 1 and No. 2,\n$1.50 to 1.60\nTomatoes, green, per box  1.25\nTomatoes, green, ll's  85\nPotatoes, per lb     .03\nPeppers, green, peach box, $1.25.. 1.50\nCorn, Golden Bantam, per'doz    .40\nCorn, per lb  03V4\nCantaloupes, standards   2.75\nCelery, per lb, 7c to 08\nVegetable marrow, per lb, 3c to.... .03%\nPeaches, Hales, No. 1, $1.45 to 1.50\nPeaches.Crawford, No. 1, $1.35 to.. 1.40\nPeaches, Elberta, No. 1 1.40\nPumpkin,  squash, per lb    .03\nCasabas, per lb      *\u2022\nGrapes, Moore's Early, 6's, 75c to.\nTurnips, per lb, 3c to\t\nEggplant,  per  lb  \t\nGrapes, Campbell's Early, 6's\t\nAlberta\nCauliflower, per dozen  2.00\nHead lettuce, per case  4.00\nCabbage, .per lb, 3c to  04\nCelery, per lb, 7c to  08\nCorn, per dozen  35\nImported\nGrapes,   Campbell' 's   Early, 6's,\nWash., Warden, 65c to\t\nPeaches, Elberta, Wash., $1.35 to.. 1.40\nPears, Bartlett, fancy, $3.75 to 4.00\nPears, Bartlett, ex. fancy, $3.75\nOnions, Yellow, $3.00 to\t\nOnions,  Spanish,  per  case\t\nSpanish, half case \t\nGrapes, Tokay, lugs, $4.50 to\t\nPrunes, Italian, 75c to \t\nPotatoes, sweet, per lb\t\nsters a sthey were walking to meet\ntheir mothers and fathers In the\nprison at Oakalla. The Doukhobor\nchildren have been returned to the\nChildren's Aid home. _ .., _\nWhy Deport\nPeter Veregin?\n.03\n.   .80\n.03%\n. .16\n.   .65\n70\n4.00\n3.50\n8.75\n4.50\n4.75\n.80\n.08\nMembers of a fanatical Doukhobor\nsect known as the Sons of Freedom\nhave been keeping things stirred up\nin BritlshOolumbla and Saskatchewan\nduring the past few weeks. In order\nto emphasize their unwillingness to\nobey Canadian laws, many of them\nhave gone on nude parades, and, as a\nresult, now find themselves working\noff jail sentences. They havo been\nherded Into the jails in droves and\nconstitute a real problem, for it costs\nmoney to house and keep 200 people\nfor six months or so.\nJust now there is a clamor for the\ndeportation of Peter Veregin, leader\nof the Doukhobors. If press reports\nare correct, this man has been extremely active lately in trying,to control the Sons of Freedom. We read\nthat he exhausted his powers of persuasion ln trying to prevent one of\nthe nude parades, and finally resorted to his fists. If these things are\ntrue, lt ls difficult to understand why\nso many people are crying for Vere\ngin's scalp.\nPersons dentinding Verefjlrf's de\nportation cuold no doubt prove that\nhe has, at one time or another, made\nuncomplimentary 'remarks about the\nking or the government or the school\nsystem. His action durlgn the recent\nunpleasantness should, however, speak\nlouder than any worrds he has uttered ln the past. For, after all, Veregin\nis a Doukhobor, and must be sympathetic to the Doukhobor point of view\non various questions. As one Vancouver man who has recently been studying the Doukhobor situation pput lt:\n\"Veregin has to make a crack now\nand then to keep in with his own peo\npie.\"\nProperly treated, Veregin should\nprove a very valuable man both to\nCanada and the Doukhobors. Persons\nwho know him say that he is up-to-\ndate ln his views and has a very human personality. It would seem that\nhe is ideally suited to the task of reconciling his people to the laws and\ncustoms of their adopted country.\nThe hue and cry about the Doukhobors has aroused a great deal of popular feeling, one evidence of which is\nthe demand for Veregin's deportation.\nThere may be sound reasons for such\na demand. We have not heard of\nthem.\u2014Western Tribune.\nPenticton Growers\nWill Combat the\nJonathan Breakdown\nMaking a definite move to fight the\nJonathan breakdown, the Penticton\nCo-operative Growers decided recently upon a new basis of handling this\ntroublesome apple crop. After consultation with Mr. R. C. Palmer, of the\nSummerland Experimental Station, lt\nhas been decided to divide the 1920\ncrop Into two sections, the light bearing trees and those heavily loaded. It\nhas been found by experimentation\nand observation that the trees bearing\na Ugh crop -must be picked early to\navoid breakdown. The date on which\nlightly loaded trees must be picked\nwill be somewhere between September\n28 and October 1,  while  the  heavily.    ,\u201e\nladen Jonathan trees must be   picked; ya;_,   , ,. ._,    i^HMRI\nabout two weeks later. The Penticton     J\u2122* tlme, youve ^!eti a car?   \u201e\nCo-operative Growers feel that if this  .   Don\\t \"j?   me   that'    brother\u2014I\nruling is adhered to losses from break-  Know P6\u2122-\ndown of   h\u00ab   Jonathan apple   will be1     Just wots\nadds: \"Our chief difficulty has been\nwith over-ripe tomatoes and this was\ndue in large part, I think, to the use\nof ventilated refrigerators instead of\nstock cars. The same cause has greatly increased other claims as well.\"\nThe Committee has made some investigations into the cause of the\ntrouble with tomatoes this year and\nfinds that the frul has in some areas\ndeveloped a watery spot which has\nbroken easily on handling, The cause\nof this has been hard to determine\nbut it may arise from the combination\nof very hot days and cool\u2014if not cold\n\u2014nights which have been prevalent\nthroughout the summer. Mr. Wm.\nFleming, of the Dominion Experimental Station, is engaged on some\nspecial investigations to determine\nthe facts which doubtless will be\navailable later for the guidance of\ngrowers.\nColor Requirements On Apples\nSome misconception appears to exist as to the Interior Committee of\nDirestion setting color requirements\non the various grades of apples. On\nonly one occasion did the Committee\nspecify color apart from the requirements of the Fruit Branch of the\nDominion Department of Agriculture\nThat was on the Transcendent crabapples, when the Committee ruled\nthat the Fancy Grade thereof should\nshow.a tinge of the color characteristic of the matured Transcendent. It\nwas done to correct conditions which\nbrought about shipping of immature\ncrabapples in previous years.  .\nColor on apples other than on Cee\nGrade is as set by the Dominion Department of Agriculture under the\nFruit Act.\nCertain specifications on C Grade\nof red apples were issued by the Committee, on the inltiave of the Fruit\nBranch, to the effect that the Mcintosh Red, Delicious, Jonathan, King,\nStayman, Winesap and all other solid\nred varieties should carry 20 per cent\ntinge of color and that other striped\nred varieties should carry a ten per\ncent tinge ot color. The Fruit Branch\nalso specified the color on Extra Fancy and Fancy grades of Mcintosh\nReds which were endorced by the\nCommittee's Circular No. 262.\nIt is largely within the powers of\nthe committee to set such requirements, but action is never taken without conference with the fruit branch\nand with their support. It may be said\nthat the Dominion standards apply\nequally to the whole of Canada, but\nwith the high grade of the fruit produced here it is sometimes possible to\ngive them a better standing by some\nslight additional requirement.\nPrecooling\nRecently the attention of the committee has been directed to what may\nbe termed a self-contained precooling\nunit which has been installed by the\nOliver Cooperative Growers with successful results. The machine consists\nof a battery of four fans operated by\na motor and enclosed in a case of\ngalvanized iron. It fits easily into the\ndoorway of a refrigerator car and is\noperated by electric power. A cable\nwith suitable collections is led into\nthe car from the switch on the loading platform.\nWhen the car is loaded a canvas ls\nspread over the two ends of the load\nand the fans, revolving at highspeed,\ndrive air in each direction which circulates throughout the Ice bunkers, so\nthat a very strong cold blast ls developed. The result ls that after three or\nfour hours' operation the temperature\nof the fruit is reduced to between 40\nand 60 degrees.\nRecent tests made by Mr. Clingan, of\nthe Dominion fruit branch, on a car\ndestined to Vancouver, showed that\nthese low temperatures were well\nmaintained until the car reached its\ndestination.\nThose interested should refer to\nGeorge Brown, manager of the cooperative referred to above, for his experience. The committee understands\nit is very satisfactory.\u2014Interior Committee of Direction.\nthe matter submitted by\nthe chief traffic official of the board.\nUnder these circumstances, Mr. Ladner opined, the outlook for final ac-\n~.m~A. \u201e\u00bb \u00ab.\u201e n.o\u00abi.n \u201e\u201e.>\u201e\u00ab\u201e\u201e\u201e \u201e_j tlon favorable to the fruit industry is\nT?\\t \u00b0l 2? \u2014W taSf!J\u00a3Si better than if fruit rates had been\nof the as yet unsupplied lower valley! rioaIt ^^ ,n th\u201e \u201e\u201e,,., \u201e\u201e\nmanager of the West Kootenay'Power\n& Light company, Rossland. The de-\nare the foremost consideration.\nThe happy settlement of the celebrated rates dispute was officially cemented by the conference between Mr.\nCampbell and H. C. Smith, of Allenby, general manager of the Granby\ncompany's local operations. They discussed additional power supply in consideration of the increased scope of\noperations at the local copper mines\nand concentrating plant.\nDiscussing with President W. A.\nWagenhauser of the Princeton board\nof trade the matter of power and light\nsupply for Keremeos and Cawston, for\nsome time a vexed question in the\neye\u201eof the lower valley, Mr. Campbell\nstated that there was no real reason\nwhy, with a little consideration, this\nterritory could not be looked after.\nLack of initiative among the residents, themselves rather than offish-\nness on the part of the power company was the reason why these communities were without power when\nhigh, power lines passed through their\nlimits, said Mr. Campbell in effect.\nLaying Out\nAn Airport\nm:\nTraffio Officer Is Heard by\nMotorist\n\"Wottdya   think   this   is\u2014a   race\ntrack?\"\n\"Say\u2014are you color blind?\"\n\"You're   from    the   country\u2014alnt\nBy ERWDJ GREER\nPresident Greer College\nANY land-owners,   owning attractive acreage, have written\nme, or personally made a visit\nto inquire   about   laying out\nflying field.   Which   proves that   the\nUnited States   is   fast becoming air-\nminded.\nPerhaps you may be wondering, too\n\u2014where your air-port should be, and\nexactly how large it   ought to be, and\nwhere it should be   located,   and ex\nactly how lt should be laid out.\nFirst of all the Intended air-port\nmust be readily accessible by automobile, bus or street car, and if possible, be near a railroad. This latter\nbecause a spur track may eventually\nbe necessary.\nExperience shows that an air-port\nmust be on a large open tract of\nground\u2014the more level the better, of\ncourse. And lt must be unobstructed\nby houses, trees, wires, marshes and\nrocks\nThe field itself must be or firm\nfoundation, especially the runways,\nfor in rainy weather there must be no\nmud to hinder take-offs o Handings.\nThen, too, the field's foundation must\naccommodate the hangars and other\nbuildings necessary to the upkeep and\nhousing of planes.\nHow large should the field be? Well,\nfiguring from present day facts no\ncontemplated air-port should be less\nthan 1800 to 2000 feet in each direction, and preferably, 3000 feet or more\nIn any case at the end of the runway\nthe neighboring buildings and trees\nshould be low enough not to interfere\nwith a rise of one foot ln seven.\nThe field does not necessarily have\nto he square. It can be L-shaped or\nT-shaped, provided there ls a full-\nlength runway available in each of\ntwo directions at approximately right\nangles with each other. Today fields\nare being laid out with hangar lines\nthe predominating wind, so that the\nship can be rolled out of the. hangar\ntaxi up the runway ln front of the\n\"line,\" then rise ln the air at one end\nof the line and alight at the other.\nBut all buildings should be Isolated as\nto prevent conflagration.\nAir-ports today are real estate investments par excellence. And to own\na going field puts one in the way of\nother investments. For flying has\ncome to stay.\ndealt with in the regular way.\nThe major part of Mr. Ladner's address, which preceded a general discussion of the rates problem, related\nto the steps taken to secure unity of\naction on the part of Saskatchewan,\nAlberta and British Columbia in the\npreparation of the equalization of\nrates brief to be submitted before the\ngovernment at Ottawa on October 15.\nTlie details of this brief have been\npublished.\nMr. Ladner prpfessed to be confident that the Dominion ministers,\nafter hearing the representations of\nthe three provinces concerned, will\nask the board of railway commissioners t ogive further considerration to\nthe matter of fruit rates with a view\nto having them placed on a parity\nwith rates prevailing ln eastern Canada. Pending the 1-earing of the appeal from the railway board's findings by the privy council and the\njudgment of that body, Mr. Ladner\nthought that anything ln the nature\nof public clamor should be avoided.\nIf relief was not forthcoming, however, he felt sure that the provincial\nI government, which he represented in\nI the capacity of counsel, would be prepared to vigorously carry on the fight\nuntil relief was secured.\nSanford Evans, who also spoke\nbriefly, intimated that in view of the\nrepresentation of the rates case by\nMr. Ladner, his inquiry into the\ntransportation aspects of the fruit\ngrowers' problems would probably be\nmore restricted. He invited growers\nand shippers, however, to give him\nall information available in regard\nto the matter of service rendered by\nthe transportation companies.\nBefore the conference, Mr. Ladner\nwas tendered a luncheon by the Vernon members of the special committee on freight rates, which proved to\nbe an enjoyable function. Those present at the luncheon and conference\nIncluded: A. T. Howe, Vernon, chairman; Sanford Evans; F. M. Black,\nchairman of the committee of direction; E. J. Chambers, general manager of the Associated Growers Limited; Thomas Bulman, Vernon; Mr.\nStephens, traffic manager of the\nGrowers' Sales Service; Mr. Ewer,\ntraffic manager for the Associated\nGrowers; S. W. Dafoc, Pentlcton; Mr.\nThompson, Vlvtoria, assistant to Mr.\nEvans; Mr. Galbraith, Vernon; Capt.\nCoombes, Vernon, and others.\nApple Vending\nMachine May\nBenefit Growers\n    he   Jonathan apple\ngreatly reduced. \u25a0 wf\nKing Henry VIII, who was proud of\nhis own broad   shoulders,   set the fashion ln garments to accentuate this\nbreadth. You will see this indicated in  _\u201e:\u201e;,,, \"ftt Tn   . _,\nthe many portraits of him by Holbein. XtUm.\"\n   the idea?\"\n\"Now don't get funny with me.\"\n\"Well, wot's it this time\u2014going for\na doctor?\"\n\"Now,   now,   now\u2014I   drive   a car\nmyself.\"\n\"The judge is   receiving guests tor\nHere's   your   in-\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 19.\u2014The Eden-\napple Vendors (Vancouver) Limited\nis now in process of formation here\nfor the purpose of vending apples in\nVancouver in 200 machines of various\nIn-thUto!1 vartetT ^ \u00b0f \"* W'\"  tory'and\"6olorado east of the Rockies.\nThis method of selling apples 1s a magazine writer says a dog fills\nbelieved to have a considerable future an empty place in a man's life This\nahead of it and will probably lead to i9 particularly true of the hot dog,\nLouisiana Purchase\nIn the treaty providing for Louisiana Purchase there was no definition of the boundaries of the territory\nWhen the American commissioners insisted upon a definition of the extent,\nthey were Informed that the boundaries were the same as they had been\nwhen the land was in the hands of\nthe French, that is, according to Bar-\nthier's original treaty of retrocession.\nIt included Loulsian west of the Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa,\nMinnesota west of the Mississippi, the\nDakotas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Montana, most   of   Kansas, Indian Terrl\nMac Apples\nNow Rolling\nVERNON, Sept. 17\u2014The big push of\nthe 1929 Mcintosh Red apple army\ncommences on the morning of Saturday September 21.\nThe stocks will go out on the first\nregular trains which have Kelowna as\ntheir starting point after the midniglu\nhour. Needless to Hay, the night of\nFriday-Saturday September 20-21 will\nbe a busy one for railway train crews.\nBy that time the gangs in the packing houses will be taking a breather,\nfor the initial push is generally so\nforceful that for a few days thereafter there ls a lull. Between now and\nthen the activity will be centred in\nin the orchards, where the packers\nwill turn their attentions from the\nWealthies to the Macs and to the\npacking houses, where this apple,\nwhich time and again has won the\ndessert championship of the British\nEmpire, will he the guest of honor.\nThe initial bookings are heavy. The\nprice has not yet been announced, but\nit is anticipated that the price for\nfancy will be between $1.85 and $2.25;\nC grade will be between $1.65 and\n$1.75, with household between $1.40\nand $1.50. Last year at the opening\nthe fancy was $1.75 with C grade\n$1.35 and household $1.25. It ls understood the Shippers' Federation will\nbring in a recommendation in regard\nto the price today for sanction by the\nCommittee of Direction. The Committee of Direction has, for the present,\nprohibited the shipment of brown\ncore Macs.\nBarracks are being replaced by new\nbuildings in the central part of Bergen, Norway, which was destroyed by\nfire in 1916. Shopkeepers and business\nmen have used the temporary structures, while residents have been\nforced by the thousands is use some\nsort of improvised shelter for living\nplaces.\n THE BUN: ORAND FOBKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n>^& forks Bun\nG. A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER\nSubscription .Rates,  Payable  in  Advance\nOne Year, In Canada and Great Britain $1.00\nOne Year, ia the United States _ 1.50\nAddress all communications to\nThe Grand Forks Sun,\nPHONE 101 Grand Forks, B. C.\nOffice:    Columbia Avenue  and  Lake  Street\nFRIDAY. 8EPTEMBLK 20, 1929\nNOTES, NOTIONS & NOTABLES\nTHAT a Frenchman In a new country will open a cafe,\na German a general store, and a Briton a bank, has\nlong ic-'-ii an axiom regarding the men of those races ln\nforeign lundr,. That regarding the Briton might be amended '-\" -' hV nlong with the bank goes the Church\nilio, says a correspondent, which ls\na city ui churches, on English church has been the meeting place for the English community for 110 years.\nwhen the glut suddenly flew out and Stoneman found\nhimself caught half way to the elbow. He shouted for help\nuntil he was hoarse, but no one heard him in that isolated\nspot. Hunger and thirst were eclipsed by the unbearable\nnam, which increased with the swelling, as hour after hour\nof daylight passed and darkness came on. Fortunately it\nwas not a cold night or he would have frozen to death.\nBefore midnight the moon rose. Soon after a moving\nblack and white object caught his eye and he saw that a\nskunk was in his trap. It was nearly noon the next day\nwhen the sound of a horse's hoofs came to Stoneman's\nears, the most welcome sound he had ever heard. He wondered how he would feel If he were a wild creature instead\nof a human a tsound of those approaching steps. Ic was\na mountain cattle man, searching for stray animals. A\nshout brought help and the trapper was soon at liberty.\nBut from henceforth he ceased to be a trapper. Let lt be\nsaid to his credit that his first act was to release the skunk.\nThat same day he \"pulled\" all of his traps, twenty ln number, put them Into a bag and sunk them ta the river. He\na fair-minded man.\nfpHE greatest discoveries of benefit to the human race\nX have been the result of accident. Columbus, seeking for\na short cut to India, stumbled on America. Perkln, .searching for a means to produce artificial quinine, hit upon\naniline dyes. When Japan and Russia were ln the throes\nof a death struggle for supremacy, Japan's navy was being decimated by beri-beri. Laboring to find a preventative for a disease that was making the Japanese panic-\nstricken, some one remembered that a Dutch scientist\ndiscovered in 1897 that pigeons fed on polished rice developed a disease which had all the characteristics of\nberi-beri. Orders were Issued forthwith to stop feeding\nthe sailors with polished rice and to substitute the whole\ngrain; Promptly and without delay, the beri-beri disappeared. Scientists, ln their efforts to discover the\n\"why,\" as a famous author expressed lt, found the missing\nlink that binds food to health, happiness and achievement\n\u2014they found the vitamine. It was this discovery that enables the human family to keep from starving on a full\nstomach.\n\u00bbIT F YOU want to be healthy sing as often as you possl-\n\u25a0*\u2022 ble,\" advises a French- doctor, who has experimented\nwith cases of everexcitement and sympathetic nerves.-He\nsays that when patients were kept ln a cheerful mood,\nsinging gay music, the equilibrium of the nervous system\nwas restored in a few weeks, and badlydamaged appe-\ntitse began to reappear with full force.\nAUTOSUGGESTION ls a powerful force. Several times\nI have seen people grow colder immediately when they\nfound no heat ln a radiator after touching lt, when, ta\nfact, they had been fairly comfortable before that discovery. Likewise, I have been comfortable ta a room myself until I discovered that all the windows were closed\ntight. I was too hot to do anything until I had opened one\nor two of them. All this reminds me of a story tbat perhaps\nmany of you have heard. It is about a novelist who. while\ndescribing ta one of his stories an Arctic snowstorm, grew\nabout as cold as the make-believe characters who were\nfighting the blizzard. It was ta the middle of summer,\nbut he was so cold that he built a fire ta the grate to\ni warm his room. It ls possible to become cooler in the sum-\n| mer by having pictures suggestive of winter hanging on\ni the wall\u2014pictures of snow scenes, polar bears, frozen\nstreams, winter sports, icy peaks of snowclad mountains-\nall will help to make an impression. One should read a\nstory of the Far North and imagine that he ls the ci ar-\nacter in the book, whose ears and nose are freezing from\na biting northern blast and that his hands are blue with\nthe cold and teeth are chattering. If one takes ln the details and shudders as though with the cold. It won't be\nlong before he ls feeling decidedly cooler. That's the effect of mind over matter.\nALTHOUGH the automobile is steadily gaining in popularity in the Fiji islands it encountered great fear and\nsuperstition on the part of the natives when first introduced. The first self-propelled vehicle was used ta the\ncolony in 1905 by an American who was touring the islands\nThis car was viewed with awe by the inhabitants, being\nconsidered the contraption of a madman, and conservative residents suggested that the owner be deported as a\ndangerous character. The second car made its appearance in 1907, destined for the wife of the mayor of Suva.\nA liveried chauffeur was provided, and it is not known\nwhich created the greater stir, the vehicle or its driver.\nOne day the owner found under the machine several bush-\nmen, poking about and exploring the mysteries. Explanations revealed that the Fljlans had held a conference\nabout the new vehicle that lacked visible means of locomotion and. had concluded that the affair was nothing\nless than a devil wagon; therefore, partly out of kindness\nto the owner and partly to prevent the escape of the devil\nInto 'v! *  In.1.! 'he villages, the \"devil doctors\"\no study this weird\n ;   ....  -\u25a0 '.-J, monster.\nIT appears certain that the ancient peoples who used\ncopper or bronze tools were unable to harden or temper\nthem as well as we harden or temper 'steel today. The\nBronze age is considered to have begun as early as 3500\nB. O. among the ancient Egyptians and Mesopotamians. A\nchemical analysis of ancient copper or bronze tools has\nshown that copper was hardened by alloying with other\nmetals, just as it is done today. Other methods of hardening copper are hammering, rolling and drawing the metal.\nOf course there is no such thing as a lost art of temper-\ntag copper and there is no mystery about the processes,\nwhich are ta actual use at the present time. Watson Davis'\nbook, \"The Story of Copper,\" makes reference to this,\nstating \"The fact is that there never was known to ancient men any art of mysterious copper hardening \u00abo be\nlost.\" ,\nSUNSHINE\nThe Big Executive\nThe Big Executives are men\nWho go to work\nAt half-past ten;\nThey live on charts\nAnd wear plus-fours;\nThey cut down costs\nAnd golfling scores.\n\u2022 \u2022    a\nBill,\" the poet gasped to his friend,\n\"I wrote a poem about my little boy\nand began the first verse with these\nwords: i   >\n'\"My son, my pigmy counterpart.'\",\n\"Yes, yes.\" I\nThe poet drew a newspaper from his\npocket. i\n\"Read,\", he blazed. \"See what the\ncompositor did to my opening line.\"   ,\nThe friend read aloud: \"My son, my\npig, my counterpart.\" ,'\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWife\u2014How did you get into this\nstate? i\nHubby\u2014Bad company, m'dear.\nWife\u2014What do you mean by bad\ncompany?\nHubby\u2014Well, there were five of us!\nto one bottle of whiskey, and the'\nother four were teetotallers. I\n\u2022 \u2022    a -\nAh, Indeed!       - | ~\nMinister    (treating   small   boy to (f5\nsoda)\u2014Now what do you say, my little man? i\nSmall Boy\u2014A-a-a-h-hl\nMinister\u2014Is that the proper way to\nthank a person for a gift? i\nSmall Boy\u2014That's what dad Says\nwhen Uncle Jim gives him a drink.   I\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 I\nThe Voice of Experience\nThose who have had experience\nwith a certain type of \"Good-Samaritan', will appreciate this colored\npreacher's version of the well-known\nparable: \"Dere was a traveler on a\nlonely road, robbed an' left wounded\nan' helpless by a roadside. As he lay\ndere, various pussons passed him, but\nnone ob dem offered him any 'slst-:\nance. By an' by, howaOmever, a pore\nSamaritan come along, an' taking'\npity on de wounded man, helped him'\non his mule an' took him to a tavern!\nwhere he ordered food and raiment\nfo' de man, an' tells de tavern keeper\nto send de bill to him. Now, breddem\nan' sistahs, dls am a true story,\" con-!\neluded the preacher, \"fo' de tavern\nam standta' to dis day, an' ta de doorway ls standta' de skeleton ob de tavern keeper, waitin' fo' de good Samaritan to come back an' pay de bill.\"\n\"C^VERY day at noon a large, luxuriously fitted passen-\n\u25a0L-'ger plane leaves Paris for Berlin and a similar plane\nleaves Berlin for Paris, covering the distance in five and\none-half hours to the express train's seventeen. A full\ncourse hot luncheon is served on board the plane as soon\nas you leave\u2014if you feel like eating. Its what you might\ncall high living.\nTHE \"Pearl of the Desert\" the Arabs call Damascus, and\nthe name is well chosen. The thousand and one domes\nof mosques, the towers and spires, around which cluter\nUke grapes white painted houses surrounded by orchards\nand gardens, seem like so many necklaces of pearls, one\nwithin another, rippling out to the ancient walls that\ncircle th? city. The not-too-distant Mediterranean softens the dry, harsh air blown from the desert. At night\nthe blue sky is divided ta two; golden from the reflection\nof the yellow sands of the desert and deep blue where the\nsea mirrors itself. The Pharaonic founders of Damascus\nmust have had a vision when they looked down from the\nheights of the Gebal Salahiya on the Anti-Lebanon into\nthe valley ta which the city is set.\n\u25a0p\u00bb ISHING with nets and pails in a brook blackened by\nX thousands of flsh, and on property through which the\nowner offers to trundle the fishermen In his \"barrow\" is\nthe privilege enjoyed by a throng of sportsmen who come\nto Wolfboro, N.H., evenjngs from many miles around to\nenjoy teal thrill of fresh water fishing. And here's how:\nThe smelting season is on and for a few deys each spring\nthese small fish rush into the brooks around Lake Went-\nworth to spawn. After dark, like a well-drilled army, thousands of them darken the brook in their flight into shallow water. Then the fun begins. The brook is allowed to\nbecome filled witli the little fish and hen at a signal all\nrush ta w<th their dip nets and in a short time fill\ntheir pails. Cy Jcnncss, who owns the property nearest\nthe Willey brook, which is one of the chief Drooks visited\nby '<\u2022\u2022':' \"\u2022\u2022 hiri a notice in the local paper\n' \u00bb'r\u00ab!d 'hat\n...  the  .'isiwrs Co uie brook\nin his \"baivow\" if they eoiilc'n't got there any other way.\nYORK\u2014The following announcement appears ln a newspaper published at Firies: \"A concert will be held on\nSunday at Fries, door opening 7:30 p.m. Admittance fee ls\nLadies who haven't their hair bobbed will be admitted\nfor half fare, but since our womanfolk started wearing\nmen's clothes lt is not easy to tell wether Jim is Mary or\nMary is Jim, so girls attending the concert will be expected\nto hand ta their names to the collectors. Of course, only\nladies who have their hair bobbed or shingled will be\nasked to follow this course.\"\nPOEMS FROM THE FAR EAST\nINDIA\n\"I\nMUST confess that I have arrived at the time of life\nWhen I do nut like to be asked how old I am,\" says\nour friend, the old-timer. \"What ln the dickens do the\nnumber of years matter? Many of us old old-stagers are\nreally as young as the lads in the air force. At least that's\nthe way we feel. Youth is not a time of life. It is a state\nof mind. It is determined by how you think and how you\nfeel, Recently, I met a young man of twenty-eight who\nwas full of fears. His brain hod become static. He seemed\nto be vaccinated. against new ideas. I am twice his age,\nbut I cotnned that I am younger than ho is. A few gray\nhairs don't matter, especially if they arc around the eyes,\nand not around the mouth. The main thing is not to have\nwrinkles on your brain. Nor your heart. Nor your soul.\nAs long as a man keeps going and jumps out of bed every\nmorning with a smile, he is young.\"\nWhat but for their vassals,\nElephant and man-\nSwing of golden tassels,\nWave of silken fan-\nBut for regal manner\n.That the \"Chattra\"* brings,\nHorse, and foot, and banner\u2014\nWhat would come of kings?\niij white umbrella borne above the heads of Indian\nrajahs.\nANCIENT HISTORY\nTWENTY YEARS AGO IN QRAND PORKS\nA tract of 6,000 acres of timber limits, nineteen miles\nnorth of this city on the North Fork, was purchased\nthis week by a minnesota syndicate composed of O. E.\nReed, H. L. Sumption and Irving Todd of Hastings, Minn.\nThere was really no miracle about Lot's wife turning\ninto a pillar of salt. Lot of men in Grand Forks look back\nand then turn into a saloon.\nWhen your   neighbor's chickens destroy your garden\npatch you are entitled to an occasional chicken dinner.\nSTONEMAN ttapped because he liked to trap. He\ncould have made more money at anything else, writes\nOwen C. Paul, in Our Dumb Animals. He ran his trap-\nline every third day. That meant that any ltttle, wild\nthing that chanced to step into one of his traps would\nhave to remain from one to three days and nights, with\nits foot between the steel jaws, until Stoneman came to\nend its suffering with death. One day he was making cedor\nposts only a few yards away from where he had se1: a\ntrap for skunk. He had driven a \"glut\" into the tough\nlog and was reaching into the cleft to draw out a wedge,\nJ. R. McDonald states that some one kindly dug ten\nrows of potatoes for him one dark night last week. Mr.\nMcDonald wouldn't kick if the perpetrator had left the\ntubers on the ground instead of bis footprints.\nMiss Marjorie Kerman has gone to Chicago, where she\nwill take an advanced course in violin instruction.\nJX>. Honsberger has received two carloads of material\nfor fruit boxes.\nA. D. Morrison has purchased the brick block on Bridge\nstreet ln which he is at present carrying on his business.\nAn old farmer made a trip to the\ncity and decided to startle the wife\nby appearing in brand new raiment.\nTo save wear on the new suit he\nplaced it tn the back of the wagon.\nA few miles from home he took off his ]\nold clothes and tossed them off a\nbridge into the river.\nHe was surprised to see that the,\nnew clothes had dropped out of the\nwagon. I\n\"Giddap, Maude,\" yeUed the Old!\nman, pulling down his shirt tall aa he\nrealized his plight. \"We'll surprise her\nanyhow I\"\n,  \u2022  *\nEvery time one man puts a new idea\nacross he finds ten men who have\nthought of lt before he did. But they\nonly thought\n* a,    *\nDoctoring Doctors\nWhen a doctor is ill and another\ndoctor doctors him, does the doctor's\ndootor doctor the doctor the way the\ndoctor wants to be doctored, or does\nthe doctor's doctor doctor the doctor\nthe way he wants to doctor the doctor?\na    a    a\nAdmonition\nAn old-stager was taking a youth\nto task for betting all he had on a\nhorse race. He pointed out the many\ni mishaps that may occur between post\nand finish and called a long roll of\nsure things that had gone wrong.\n\"Now think, son,\" he wound up.\n\"how long does it take to run the\naverage horse race?\"\n\"Less than two minutes.\"\n\"There's the point. It may be all\nright to try to get rich quick, but\nthat's too quick.\"\nn   *    t '\nEntirely Too Healthy\nLittle nine year old Jo Ann came\nhome from school one day looking\nvery much disgusted. Her mother inquire das to the cause and Jo Ann\nsaid: O we had election of officers today and I was elected vice president.\"\n\"Well that's fine; why the downcast countenance?\" asked' mother.\n\"It would be fine,\" said Jo Ann,!\n\"but John, the healthiest boy ln our\nroom, was elected president and he's\nnever sick, so what chance has the\nvice president?\"\na    a    a\nNlrhts Filled With Music\nI strive to be a radio fan,\nMy admiration deep\nIs not so powerful that I oan\nSurvive the loss of sleep,\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nBadges of Courage\nWifey\u2014If I   were   you   I   wouldn't\nboost   of  my  courage by continually\nshowing off tUt   medal of   valor on\nyour chest.\nHubby\u2014Then perhaps I had better\nremove my wedding ring also!\nDangerous\nWe are told of the good mother who\nwas disturbed over her son who had\nbeen studying ta Italy for three years.\n\"I am afraid he'll get so italicized\nhe won't come home.\"\nHard to figure\nClerk\u2014I'm taking a correspondence\ncourse to get more money.\nBoss\u2014That's terrible. I'm taking\none to reduce expenses.\nCITY REAL  ESTATE\nFOR SALE\nAmplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nnnd Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPri jest\u2014From $25.01) per lot upwards.\nTerms:\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may he seen at the\nCity]Onice-\nJOHN A. IIII'ITON.\nC:ty Clerk.\nTelephone still holds\nspeed tecord\nOn September 10, Squadron Leader\nA. H. Oriebar, captain of the British\nSshnelder cup team, set a world's\nspee record for aeroplanes. His mark\nwas 353 miles per hour. The automobile record Is 831.36 miles per hour,\nheld by Major H. O. D. Segrave.\nBut the telephone Is still monarch\nof them all with a record of 178,000\nmiles per second.\nWhile you are seated comfortably ta\nyour offlc e orhome, you may travel by\ntelephone to almost any distant point,\nfaster by far than any means of trans\nporlatlon known to mankind.\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO\nFlying Fingers and Flying Heels\nHelen McGregor, of Winnipeg, \"The Flying Pianist\" whose \"flying\nntttl\" earned her unofficial title, and Myrtle Cook, whose flying\nheeli won her the official title Of Amateur Lady Champion of the World\nat to* Olympic Meet last year, take a lesson in navigation from Captain\nDott hi the Canadian Pacific liner \"Montrose.\"\n* Miss Cook, who now covers women's sports for the Montreal Star\nIs not unfamiliar with the air, having flown the English Channel on\nseveral occasions when on the other side at athletic events. Miss\nMcGregor is one of the few women familiar with the controls of tri-\nmotored 'planes. She travelled west as a passenger in the Junkers plane\nwhich was landed at Montreal from the Canadian Pacific freighter\n\"Beaverbrae\" for the Western Canada Airways, Ti^fr^ by wktmJft\nwill be uaad in air mail and express service^ -liri '. ^^?*\n THE SUN: GRAND FOBKS, BBIITSH OOLUMB1I\nWhy not drink the\nfinest tea that ie grown?\n\"SALADA'\n11\nTEA\n'Fresh from ths gardens*\ness\nSEEING CyPCIJ\/\nBUN'S WEEKLY TRAVELOGUE\nr>\n'YPRUS, lying ahnost at the\nV\/northeast corner of the Mediterranean sea, once famed for the\ncopper which bears its name, was an\nisland stepping-ston? and exchange\nfor ancient elvUl*atlo-.M.\nThe traveler. If he takes the barren\nride from the port of Lurnaka to the\ncapital, Nicosia; through a chalky\nwilderness, is likely to jump to the\nconclusion that Cyprus ls drab and\nwholly uninteresting. But half-oriental Cyprus viels her charms, modestly\nmasking her beauty in remote mountain valleys and. along the northern\nshore, where no steamer stops except\nfor carob beans, destined as provender\nfor Spanish calvary horses.\nThe best way to reach Cyprus is to\nsteam from Beirut into the sunset\nglow, and dock at dawn ln Famagusta\nharbor, beside Othello's Tower, where\nthe dark-skinned Moor, inflamed by:\nlago, smothered his Desdemona. {\nOnce Famagusta, rich and wicked,'\nhad a church or chapel for every day\nin the year. It Is a graveyard of old\nchurches now\u2014some sunk ln ruin,\none or two still used to house the glittering panolpy of worship, one changed Into a mosque starkly simple as a\nprison cell but with a Mecca-ward mi-\nrob pointing the soul to paradise.\nThe walls of Famagusta are massive and high, with moats cut from\nthe native rock on which the bastions\nrise; and with gun platforms, or cavaliers, overlooking them from within.\nAt the Land Gate there was an almost unique\" ravelin, or outworks,\nwhich' was useless and at another corner the masterly Martinengo bastion\nwhich was merely-futile.\nLooking northward one \u25a0 sees the\niite of Salamis, six miles away. When\nPaul and Barnabas landed in Cyprus,\nSalamis waa a Roman capital. Little\nby little its various forums and market place are being rescued from the\ndrifting sands and' viper-infested\nbrush. Salamis enthusiasts would use\nits Byzantine name gladly, Constantia\nfor lt is disconcerting, while trying to\nhang a splendid past onto a lot of\nsadly fallen columns to have visitors\nexolanm that they have always wanted to see the site of the battle of Salamis, which occurred 600 miles away I\nOreat Treeless Plain\nFrom Salamis westward to the American copper-ore docks at Karavost\nail there stretches the great \"treeless\nplain\" of the Mesaorla, with however,\na miniature forest at Syncrasi and\norchards surrounding many of the villages.\nAt places, as. around Lefkoniko,\nthis plain is rich, with waving grain\nor dotted with golden threshing floors\nwhere the driver sits in an. easy chair\natop the ox-drawn threshing sledge.\nElsewhere rock strata, tiptilted toward the sky, discourage agriculture,\nbut rare is the view in which some\nleaden-footed animal is not dragging\na plow.\nAlong the north run the Kyrenia\nmountains, which one labels mere hills\nuntil he has climbed to Buffavento\ncastle or to St. Hilarion and looked\ndown with , awe oh plain and sea.\nStrung out in a well-defined and\ncraggy ridge, they guard the pleasant\nnorthern slope from the central plain.\nBrtong sea-winds, sweeping south,\nblow the   trees lopsided   toward the\nSouth of   the Mesaorla are massed\nTMEVER wait to see if a headache\nA^ will \"wear off.\" Why suffer\nwhen there's always Aspirin? The\nmillions of men and women who\nuse it in increasing quantities every\nyear prove that it does relieve, such\npain. The medical profession pronounces it without effect off the\nheart, so use it as often as it can\nspare you any pain. Every druggist\nalwavs has genuine Aspirin tablets\nfor the prompt relief of a headache,\ncolds, neuralgia, lumbago, etc. Familiarize yourself with the proven\ndirections in every package.\nSPIRIN\nAafUa la a Tntauik BnHtml at OmmIs\nthe mountains * that culminate ln\nTroodos, the Cypriote Olympus. Cutting the northern face of that mass\nare neighborly valleys traversed by\nshrunken streams\u2014the most charming blst of the whole Island.\nNorth of Salamis one of the prominent perches is occupied by Kantara\ncastle\u2014the Hundred Chambers,\nz The men of Cyprus have a distinctive costume\u2014a straw hat with a\nroom brim, a plain shirt sometimes\nwith a jacket, voluminous Turkish\ntrousers whose seats are tucked Into\ntheir belts for cross-country walking\nand heavy boots with their tops turned down and tied above the calf.\nThe women do little to keep alive\nthe Aphrodite tradition. One of their\nsex says of them: \"They are rarely\npretty or even good-looking, being\nheavyz of feature and clumsy of form,\nand their voices are harsh and shrill.\nBut how could any woman be beautiful who works from sunrise till dark\nfor a few plasters a day?\"\nKyrenia a Resort Place\nIn the spring tho prize resort ot\nCyprus ls Kyrenia. Almost overhanging the town, St. Hilarion, castle of\n\u00a3ros, clings to a crude crag.\nBeyond the horseshoe harbor, miniature of Corsican Bastia's there is\nthe golden mass of Kyrenia castle,\nset on a green slope between gray\nmountains and blue sea. Across the\nwaters to the north the snowy heights\nof the Cilician Taurus hang like\nclouds.\nPeople come to Kyrenia to see the\ncastles, the monastery, and the pleasant slopes planted with gram and\ndotted with olive and carob trees.\nI'hey remain until the castles are old\nstories, the Phoenician rock-cuttings\nhave lost their first mysterious challenge, and the harbor has become a\nmere incident.\nThe climb to St. Hilarion begins\nthrough green grain fields, passes under dusty and shiny, heaven-sent carob trees, whose sweetish, dark brown\npods the prodigal son fain would have\neaten, zigzags toward a rusty cliff,\ntops the pass behind; and comes to\nthe plain from which rises the rock\npedestal for this romantic ruin.\nBut when one has scrambled among\nthe evergreens whose roots are split-\ntinv medieval battlements apart, the\nromantic castle, high and Inaccessible,\nhas disappeared, and there are only\nsome decrepit walls, forgotten by the\nTitans who tossed them there.\nBella Paise Abbey, a mere picnic\njaunt from Kyrenia, is the finest rum\nin Cyprus. The cloisters, from whose\ngraceful archways vandals have torn\naway stone traceries, are still beautiful. The refectorp, with its swallow-\nnest wall-pulpit, from which lectures\nonce droned to eating monks, is al\nmost intact. The abbey stands in a\npleasant hillside town, bowered in\nfruit trees.\nAmerica owes its Incomparable col-\nections of Cypriote art to Cesnola,\nwho lived at a time when an American consul could defy the Turks and\nboast of outwitting' them. His book\nmakes spicy reading in these days. In\nthe widespread site of Lambousa to\nthe west of Kyrenia, another famous\nous treasure was found, smuggled out\nof the island and sold by an Armenian\nto the late J. Plerpont Morgan for a\nsum that still makes Cyprolte mouths\nwater. For treasures' found, one-third\nof the Intrinsic value goes to the\nfisder, one third to the owner of the\nland, and a third to the government.\nTiptilted Lapithos owes its green\nfreshness to a periennial stream which\nemerges from a barred cavern in the\nmountain side. In Lapithos the current price of big juicy lemons ls 450\nfor a shilling. The juice ls expressed,\nbottled without sugar, and kept for a\nyear or two without fermenting. It\nmakes a most refreshing drink, but at\n18 for a cent, lemons arc hardly worth\npicking and the ground is often covered with decaying fruit.\nWILLOW CANE TOOK ROOT\nSixty years ago Increase Kendall\nthrust a willow stick he had cut for a\ncane into the ground at Fairfield, Me.,\nand forgot it. That was back iu the\ndays when Fairfield was known as\nKendall's Mills and sawmills were its\nchief industry. The willow stick took\nroot and today has grown to a tree\nwhich is twenty-four feet in circumference near its base.\n\/)\\\u00bb\nWord comes from abroad of the invention of a non-asphyxiating, harmless gas to replace that now used for\nheating, cooking and illuminating\npurposes. Also a refrigerator stove, capable of both heating a house in the\nwinter and cooling it in summer, is\nbeing developed.\nOdd Hiding Place for Money\nWhile cleaning old rubber tires before they went into a regenerator at\na Hanover (Germany) factory, a worn\nan employee discovered in one of the\ntires a small package, neatly tied, containing $269. Both the woman and\nthe factory, owned claimed it. The\njudge decided in favor If the finder,\nunless the American who, to judge\nfrom the wrapping of the package,\nlost lt, should turn up to claim lt.\n\"The speaker seems to weigh every\nword before he speaks.\"\n\"But you could never accuse him of\ngiving short weight\"\nB. C. INTERIOR EGG-LAYING CONTEST\nGRAND PORKS. B. C.\nThe following is the result of the Grand   Forks egg-laying contest up\nto last Wednesday night*.\nTotal\nfor\nweek.\n7\nName and Address. Breed.\n1\u2014John Virgo, Fritvale  -White Rocks  \t\n2\u2014Robert Kidd, Fruitvale  Barred Rocks  5\n3\u2014B.O. Lands Dev. Co., Orand Frks..Bsrred Rocks   14\n4\u2014A. D. Morrison, Grand Forks Barred  Rocks   0\n6\u2014William  McAlpine,   Creston. Barred  Rocks   18\n6\u2014John Moston, Arrow Park. White Wyandottes   19\n7\u2014Andrew Cant,  Appledale... _ White Wyandottes   .25\n8\u2014A. C. Webster, Fruitvale  -White Wyandottes   7\n8\u2014F. J. Powell, Perry \u2014 _ White Wyandottes   14\n10\u2014Villers Bros., Duncan -. - Light Sussex  15\n11\u2014McKim Poultry Farm, Nelson s C W Leghorns        5\n12\u2014John Virgo, Fruitvale   ..s C W Leghorns\n13\u2014P. W. Green, Winlaw  S C W Leghorns\n14\u2014N. V. Moxham, E. Arrow Park. s\t\n15\u2014R. H. Baird, Nakusp\n^mmmmmmmm_mmmmmmmmMmmmmmmmmm....tmmm     -S\n16\u2014Paul Guidon, Burton  S\n17\u2014Peter Finch,  Fruitvale..\n18\u2014H.  L. HoweNelson\nW Leghorns\nW Leghorns\nW Leghorns\nSOW Leghorns\nSOW Leghorns\n19 -James Gartside, Cranbrook s O W Leghorns  8\n2i>\u2014Wm. Liddlcoat, Grand Forks s C W Leghorns  14\n21\u2014John Graham, Grand Forks s C W Leghorns  la\n22\u2014A. D. Morrison, Grand Forks s C W Leghorns  an\n23-K. R. Wood, Grand Forks s O W Leghorns  i?\n24-W. J. Cook, Wycllffe, B. 0 R c W Leghorns  \u2014\"\n25\u2014R. W. Chalmers, Thrums, B. C s \u2014   \"\n26\u2014Jean Mante, Burton, B. C S\n27\u2014Peter Smith, New Westminster s\n28\u2014Farrlngton Bros., Burnaby, B.C S\n29\u2014W. M. Fairweather, P. Hammonds\n30\u2014Joseph Hall, New Westminster. ...s\n31\u2014Hodgson Sc Bushby, Mission City..s\n32\u2014Maple Leaf FarmN- Westminster .s\n33\u2014W. Forsyth, New Westminster:. s\n34\u2014F. W. Appleby, Mission City s\n35\u2014A. A. Adams, Lake Hill P.O..V.I..S\nLeghorns        n\nLeghorns           m\nLeghorns ....       17\nLeghorns jA\nLeghorns        i\nLeghorns       \"m\nLeghorns        \u2022\u2014.\u25a0\u25a0..\nLeghorns     5\nLeghorns ......       u\nLeghorns      i8\nLeghorns X5\n36\u2014A. D. McRae, Mission Oity .'. Excheouer\"r\u00abh^\" l8\n37-F. C. Evans, Abbotsford, B. C. s ^---Leghoriw  6\nMl\n38\u2014Bolivar Leghorn Farm, Cloverdales C\n39\u2014Mark Harrington, N. Westminsters C\n40\u2014Brown's Fine  Feather,  Kelowna.s c\n41\u2014John Chalmers, Haney, B. O s C\n42\u2014C. 8. Coultier, Penticton, B. C s C\n43\u2014F. J. Dysart, Grindrod, B. C s C\n44\u2014Bramef Poultry Farm, Kelowna..s c\n45\u2014Jesse Tompkinson, Grinrod S C\n46\u2014Wm. Ridley, Grand Forks R o\t\n47\u2014Mrs. J. L. Manly, Orand Forks...... r c Anconas is\n48\u2014Villers Bros., Duncan, B.C s C w Leghorns a\nLeghorns   5\nLeghorns .\u201e 18\nLeghorns    g\nLeghorns -.. .\"\". 17\nLeghorns     10\nLeghorns       jo\nLeghorns  4\nLeghorns 1S\nLeghorns ._     17\nAnconas ...... \"   e\n49\u2014M. S. Scofleld, Vancouver S C W L\u00bbw\u2122\n50-W. J. Kidman, Crawford Bay Kiwis ..._\u201e\n..17\n4\nTotal\nto\ndate.\n515\n211\n519\n492\n729\n377\n538\n278\n434\n494\n623\n475\n.583\n449\n583\n577\n500\n613\n414\n634\n569\n729\n765\n497\n554\n766\n649\n645\n350\n763\n457\n692\n695\n714\n429\n449\n422\n435\n575\n666\n443\n775\n445\n813\n658\n435\n482\n482\n649\n133\nGeneral  News\n\"The greatest apple crop ln the\nhistory of Nova Scotia,\" is the almost unanimous opinion expressed\nby prominent fruit growers and\nGovernment experts of the province. It ls estimated the crop\nwill reach 2,500,000 barrels, at least\nhalf a million barrels more than\nany other crop ever raised in Nova\nScotia.\nIn preparation for the opening of\nthe 1929 big game hunting season\nin New Brunswick, 26,000 hunting\nlicenses have been sent out from\nthe Department of Lands and\nMines to 300 vendors in all parte ot\nthe province.\nE. W. Beatty, chairman and president of the Canadian Pacific Rail'-\nway, accompanied by a group of\ndirectors ot the company, is now\non his annual tour of inspection of\ncompany's properties and conditions ln the west. Resorts, agricultural centres, experimental\nfarms, mines and smelting plants,\nas well as the system itself was inspected during the tour which\nstarted September 5 from Montreal\nand closes at Winnipeg October 2.\n\"I am watching with the greatest\ninterest the progress being achieved in the United States where railways are experimenting in the use\nof aeroplanes as adjuncts to their\nrailway services,\" said E. W.\nBeatty, chairman and president of\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway, Interviewed at Toronto recently.\n\"There they are using planes by day\nin certain places and rail travel by\nnight and Uie experiments are very\nInteresting to me,\" the president\nadded.\nTwo first prizes, three seconds,\nand a third award were won by the\nCanadian Pacifio Railway supply\nfarms championship Holsteln herd\nfrom Strathmore, Alta., at the 60th\nannual provincial exhibition at\nNew Westminster recently. This\nls a follow-up to the Vancouver\nShow where the herd led all others.\nUp to the end of August, says\nColonel J. S. Dennis, chief commissioner of the railway's department\nof -colonization and development,\nthe Canadian Pacific brought to\nCanada 1792 boys for placement in\nagricultural employment under the\ndistributive schemes of the company. \"This ls the largest number\not British boys brought out to the\nDominion by any. one organisation,\" says the Colonel.\nBaek from a month's wanderings\nalong the line of the Dominion Atlantic Railway In Nova Scotia, Miss\nJuliette Gaultler de la Verendrye,\nnoted folksong artist, stated that\nshe had discovered 300 folksongs\nthat were either quite unknown\nhitherto or else were Interesting\nvariants ln melody and tune to\nsimilar songs in vogue among the\nFrench-Canadian habitants. She\nwill sing some of them at forthcoming concerts.\nDuring the first five months of\nthe year 5,389 homesteads representing 862,240 acres of land were\ntaken out ln Alberta, settlement being mainly 19 the Edmonton,\nGrande- Prairie, Peace River snd\nPrince Albert districts.\nA man who understands men can\ngive you good advice about one without being able.to explain lt.\nThe highest and most lofty trees\nhave the most reason to dread the\nthunder.\nIt's the alimony that   enables some\nmen to figure In a divorce suit.\nHealth Service\nOF THE CANADIAN MEDICAL\nASSOCIATION\nAGE  INCIDENCE  OF\nTUBERCULOSIS\nTHE importance   of   protecting\nyoung children    against tuberculosis    has     been    frequently\npointed  out.    Perhaps    because\nof this,   if   we may   judge from the\nopinion expressed by   various people,\nquite a number of   adults are under\nthe impression   that   they need not\ntake any particular   care,   and that\nwhen   they   pass the   fortieth year,\nthey run no further danger of incurring tuberculosis.   In   order to correct this   false   idea,   we are giving\nthe age of   death for   this disease in\nCanada, in the year 1926:\nUnder one year, 233\nOne to four years, 443\nFive to nine years, 236\nTen to fourteen years, 386\nFifteen to nineteen years, 859\nTwenty to twenty-nine years, 1970\nThirty  to   thirty-rune  years,  1423\nForty to forty-nine years, 1011\nFifty to fifty-nine years, 630\nSixty to sixty-nine years, 450\nSeventy years and over, 273\nFrom these figures it will be evident that, while tuberculisis takes its\nchief   toll   during   early   adult life,\ncausing   a   high   percentage   of   all\ndeaths from twenty to forty years of\nage, 1 tis not by any means confined\nto any period of life.\nA large percentage of all people\ntake into their bodies, some time during their lives, the germs of tubercu-\nISell\nyourself\nChevrolet\nCIBVROLBT owners sell themselves on\nChevrolet. They learn, behind the wheel of\nthe New Chevrolet, just what it means to d-.ve u\nreal six .. a six with a high-compression vnlve-in-\nhead engine, with staunch and stylish Body by\nFisher . . yet a Six at tho price of a four.\nThey taste the joys of six-cylinder power and\nsmoothness . . she-cylinder snap and acceleration.\nThey experience Chevrolet's marvelous comfort\nand handling ease. They discover that this amoving\nnew Chevrolet gives them every modern convenience feature . . such as twin-beam, foot-controlled\nheadlights) finely upholstered, deep luxurious\ncushions; high-speed window regulators; Ternstedt\nquality hardware; completely equipped, indirectly\nlighted instrument panel, including electric temper*\nature indicator and theft-proof Electrolodc.\nWhen you are considering the purchase of \u2022 ear\n$ell yourself on the car you want. Get behind the\nwheel of the New Chevrolet and make your own\ntests. Then decide on Chevrolet only after you\nhave proved to yourself that it offers you mora\nfor your money than any other car in the low-\npriced field.\nc-u-t-2*e\nAsk about the GMAC Deferred Payment Plant\nPRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA, UaDTBD\nGrand Forks Garage\nB. J. Mooyboer, Prop.   Grand Forks*   B\nB EJTT Ii R RECAUSn     IT'S     CANADIAN\nlosis. In most cases these germs are\nheld at bay and the disease never actually develops. The germs are there,\nhowever, and are a constant threat.\nThey are most apt to get their chance\nto cause disease If the body is weakened through the attack of some disease, such as influenza, or even a common cold ordiseased teeth. Overfatigue,' worry and exposure also lower\nthe resistance of the body. If additional heavy doses of the germs of tuberculosis are taken in, they may\ncause actual disease at any age.\nFor all these reasons, it ls evident\nthat, throughout life, care should be\ntaken to keep the body fit and to\navoid infection.\nelation,  184 College Street, Toronto,\nwill be answered personally by letter\nReal Life Romance\nTho Squire\u2014I   want   you   for   my\nVillage Maid\u2014Oh Bir\nThe Squire\u2014She needs a   new parlor maid.\nQuestions   concerning   health,   addressed to the Canadian Medical asso-\nWORLD USING OLD TRUTHS\nThe modern world is using, and using up, the truths that remain to it\nout of the old treasury of Christendom; including, of course, many\ntruths known to pagan antiquity but\ncrystalized in Christendom. But lt ls\nnot really starting new enthusiasms\nof its own. The novelty of modern\nideas is merely a matter of names\nand labels, like modern advertisements; in almost every other way lt\nis negative.\nThe Shortest\nThing in the\nWorld\nNO, NOT A GNAT'S EYELA8H NOR A MOSQUITO'S\nWHISKERS\u2014PUBLIC MEMORY.\nYOU MAY HAVE BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR FIFTY\nYEARS AND THE PEOPLE KNOW ABOUT IT. BUT\nTHEY FORGET\u2014NEW CUSTOMERS ARE BEING BORN\nEVERY MINUTE AND THEY GROW UP AND HAVE\nTO BE TOLD.\nA Note to Merchants\nUNLE8S YOU KEEP TELLING THEM BY ADVERTISING WHAT YOU HAVE TO OFFER THEM, THE FELLOW WHO HAS ONLY BEEN IN BU8INESS FIFTY\nWEEKS, AND WHO ADVERTISES INTELLIGENTLY,\nWILL PROVE TO YOU THE TRUTH OF IT.\nYou Must Tell Them to Sell Then\n THB8UN: GRAND FOBKS, BBITIBH COLUMBIA\nTHE CITY\nA quiet wedding took place at the\nresidence of the officiating minister,\nRev. Walker, in Greenwood, at seven\no'clock on Saturday, when Alice Maud\nCooke, of this city, became the bride\nof Clarence Earl Mason, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Mason, of the West\nend. The happy couple -will make\ntheir home on the Sclinavely ranch\nsouth of the city limits.\nHarold Eddins, accompanied by\nGeorge Wilson, both of Kellogg, Idaho\nspent Sunday at the Union Mine as\nthe guests of the former's brother, L.\nS. Eddins. On their way back to the\ncity, then- car turned completely over,\nbut neither occupant was hurt. They\nliad the car brought to town, and were\nable to resume their homeward Journey about noon Monday.\nR. G. Ritchie, Cascade merchant,\nwas in the city Wednesday evening.\nT. D. Pattullo, leader of the opposition in the provincial legislature, who\nis making a tour through the Southern interior will be ln Grand Forks\nnext Wednesing evening, September\n25. Arrangements for his reception\nand entertainment were made at a\nmeeting of the executive of the local\nLiberal association in the Yale hotel\non Wednesday evening.\nClarence Donaldson returned to his\nhome ln this city on Wednesday from\nKimberley. He will visit for a days\ndays before going to the University of\nBritish-Columbia at the coast.\nHarry Burke, who passed through,\nGrand Forks a couple of weeks ago,\nand who drove from Cobalt, Ontario,\nto Vancouver chained to his automobile, was released from voluntary bondage last Friday morning in Vancouver by Aid. E. W. Dean, who acted for\nMayor W. H. Malkin. Burke appeared\nremarkably free from fatigue after his\nlong Journey and greeted the alderman with a broad smile. The driver\nwho lost an arm working in a mine\nsome time ago, made the trip to the\nCoast as the result of a wager. The\nprincipal condition of the bet was\nthat he should be fastened by a 200-\nfoot chain to his car. He reached Vancouver Friday morning.\nAt a meeting of the Canadian Horticultural Council, ln Vancouver, the\nofficial record number 102 was grant\ned to a new pear bearing the name of\n\"Stirling.\" This variety is the product\nof a scion from a Beurre d'Anjou\ngrafted on a French seedling. The\ntree is a very heavy cropper, bearing\nfruit inclined to be round, with a deep\npurple blush. It was originated by J.\nH. Baker of Vernon.\nRev. A. L. Mclntyre has as his\nguests this week, his brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Mclntyre of San Francisco, Cal., where\nMr. Mclntyre is a lieutenant in the\npolice department. They have been on\na holiday trip, passing through the\ncities of Seattle, Vancouver, and Calgary, as well as stopping at Banff and\nLake Louise.\nReginald Hull left Saturday for\nBurke, Idaho, where he will be employed by the Hecla Mining Company.\nReverend Mr. Dewar   spent Saturday iasl, in ivlidway.\nThe forest fires have been very successful this week in throwing a\nsmoke screen around the city.\nMr. Gilbert, inspector of barber\nshops, spent Friday with Peter A. Z.\nPare. Mr. Gilbert is employed by the\nProvincial Barbers'  association.\nMiss Helen Talbot of the Grand\nForks Hotel is spending her holidays\nat the home of her parents in Trail,\nMiss Mayme Carlson of Nelson, who\nhas been visiting with Miss Alta De-\nporter returned to her home Friday.\nHenry Reid left Wedneday for Nelson where he will visit his father for\na day or two.\nMiss S. L. Rowel of the E. W. Gil-\nlett Co., Toronto, ls demonstrating\ncooking with Magic Baking Powder.\nShe will be in MnKinnon's Store until\nthe end of the week.\nThe Grand Master of the I.O.O.F.\nlodge, was entertained by the local\nlodge Thursday evening, after his official visit. The Rebeccas Were invited\nto the ( as   well as th,;\n\u25a0 i: \u25a0 from Repub\nlic, A       ..       . ,-.-.. ^.o...*.0  ..uj iw*a\nby these present.\nWaluT Mansfield, formerly of the\nCassette, now of the Cranbrook Courier, was in town during the past week,\nleaving for his home on Wednesday.\nThe funeral of Mrs. Nancy Graham\ntook place on Sunday afternoon, from\nthe family residence, at 2:30. The\nlarge number of people present, and\nthe many floral offerings, showed the\nesteem and frcudship that had been\nhers.\nR. Lee of Beaverdell was a visitor\nin town on Tuesday.\nMyrtle Johuuon of Christina Lake,\nls visiting for a few days with her\nsister, Mrs. L. Frankovitch.\nAlbert Dodd went to the Rock Candy on Thursday moning, where he will\nduring the winter.\nCASCADE NOTES\nBy the Son's Correspondent\nTeddy Bertois left for Regina Sunday, after spending two weeks hoUday\nwith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A.\nBertois.\nMrs. Tom Jones and Mrs. Hill returned from Trail Sunday morning.\nThey had been visiting Mrs. Jones'\ndaughter, Mrs. Jack Hand for the\npast two weeks.\nJ. A. Bertois returned from Halcyon\nHot Springs Saturday morning.\nMiss Dorothy Corcoran is visiting\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew\nWilley at Bonnington Falls.\nThere was a fab' sized crowd at the\ndance at the Silver Birch Auto Camp\non Saturday evening and all reported\na good time. There will be a dance\nfor the fire fighters at the Camp this\nSaturday evening.\nMrs. Seth Owen left for Trail Friday evening where she will visit her\nsister, Mrs. Steve Wally.\nSwanhilde Helmer has gone to Vancouver where she will attend high\nschool this year.\nBill Twells came from Kootenay\nLanding to spend the weekend at his\nhome here.\nBill Twells, accompanied by Mrs.\nFred Wilmot, her daughter Marguerite, and her son George, motored to\nColville and returned Monday.\nFIFE NEWS\nBy The Sun's Correspondent\nMrs.   H.   R.   Wilkinson\nweekend in Grand Forks.\nLEADER garage\n^^      \u2014\u25a0-\u2014^   -nax-m ^.m. Grand Forks, B. C.\nSAM TALARICO, Proprietor\nWE ARE EQUIPPED TO RECONDITION\nMOTORS, INCLUDING IIORE1NG CYLINDERS AND INSTALLING N BEARINGS\nFOR ANY MOTOR. A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU.\nA FULL LINE OF  MOTOlt   OILS  AND GREASE\nFREE CRANK CASE SERVICE\nAnnual Meeting\nThe Annual General Meeting of\nthe Grand Forks Liberal Association\nwill be held In the Davis Hall on\nBridge Street on Wednesday evening,\nSeptember 25, at 7:45 o'clock, sharp.\nBusiness: Annual election of officers\nand the transaction of any other business that may come before the meeting.\nHon. T. D. Pattullo, leader of the\nOpposition In the provincial House,\nwill be present in the hall after the\nbusiness session, and it is expected\nthat he will give an interesting address on the political situation in the\nProvince at the present time.\nAH Liberals are requested to attend\nthe meeting.\nH. H. HENDERSON, Secretary.\nMr. R, Cecconi accompanied by his\nbrother, Alexander, motored to Trail\non Sunday.\nspent u,e|EXpect Better English\nMarket for Canadian\nApples This Season\nMr. and Mrs. John Nyberg of Hilltop motored to Trail on Wednesday\nwhere they are visiting relatives.\nI\nMr. and   Mrs. Frank   Talarico and\nfamily   moved   to   Boundary   Falls,\nwhere they will reside for the winter.\nMr. Talarico has a timber limit there.\nVirginia Campolieto returned to her\nhome in Greenwood Wednesday after\nspending a few days with friends here.\n\"Mark\"\" Anthony of Trail ls spending a few days here hunting.\nIt takes two to make a quarrel, but\none can end it.\nThe course of true love never runs\nsmooth, and in later years the bachelor is often glad of that.\nWhile th legend of Cinderella may\nbe the story of one stepmother, lt does\nnot even symbolize the story of many\nanother.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17\u2014Canadian apples will probably be ln greater demand throughout the North of England this year, owing to the fact that\ngrowers in the states of Washington,\nOregon and California, England's\nchief source of supply, are suffering\nfrom a short crop.\nThe Canadian crop of apples, on\nthe other hand, according to the Commercial Intelligence Journal, shows\nan improvement of 11 per cent, over\nthat of last year.\nIf the Canadian growers and deaers\ncan meet the requirements of the\nEnglish market, the'Journal says,\nthere is a prospect that they may be\nable to capture a good share of the\nmarket.\nCrows Unaffected by Oas\nCrows have no fear of toxic gas\nThe chemical division of the army at\nWashington experimented with crows\nand gas. The crows were gassed but\nimmediately flew high ln the air and\nescaped the fumes which clung to\nthe earth. During the war pigeons returned to their cages safely when liberated in a gas cloud. This mystery\nwas solved when the birds were seen\nto rise quickly above the gas. Tests\nshow that crows fly out of gas clouds\nin much the same manner.\nSome people   seem to  make, a speciality of thinking second-hand thots.\nGrade crossings, It should be remembered, average no safer this year\nthan last.\nTook Indian Appellation\nPerth Amboy was settled in 1683 and\nwas expected soon' to outstrip Its\nneighbors and become the London of\nAmerica. It was named Perth, but\nAmboy, the original Indian name for\nthe place, was soon added. It was the\ncapital of the province from 1684 almost continuously up to the time of\nthe Revolution. William Franklin, the\nlast royal govenor, was captured\nthere in 1776. Perth Amboy was In\ncorporated a city to 1718.\nPeople who care nothing for tree\nspeech haven't anything to say, per-\nhaps.\nNo man approves of flirting\u2014unless\nhe is in on the deal.\n\"The World's Mine Oyster\/' Said Falstaff\nBill Henniger left Monday for Vancouver, where he will continue his\nstudies at U.B.C.\n\"I   went   out   with a   professional\nmind reader last night.\"\n\"How did she enjoy her holiday?\"    ,\nIrate Father\u2014What is that Btuff on\nmy new car? Where have you been?\nCalm Son\u2014That's only traffic Jam.\nRadio Dealer\u2014You want a radio?\nCustomer\u2014Yes,   but   ze   machine,\nshe mus' speak French.\nrVAMNeStX QHNGNC, C\/\u00ab3i-\n'Why, then the world's mine\noyster which I with sword will\nopen,\" said a famous character of\nShakespeare, but the modern version relates to going around the\nworld in a big and comfortable\nsteamship with no sword to open\nthe oyster. \u2022 These are days of\npeace and world travelers now\nplanning their tours will be interested to know that one globe-\ngirdling liner will call at ports\nhitherto omitted from her itinerary\u2014ports rarely touched by\ncruising steamers. The \"Empress\nof Australia,\" a 21,850 gross ton\nvessel, long a favorite v.ith globe\ntrotters, will sail from New York\nDecember 1, 1929, on the seventh\nannual   Canadian   Pacific World\nCruise. Besides making her\nregular visits to the highlights of\nthe Mediterranean, to India, Japan,\nChina, Hawaii and other fascinating places, her itinerary this time\nhas been extended to include\nAthens in Greece, Paknam and\nBangkok in Siam, with further\ncalls at Keelung for Taikoku, in\nFormosa. She will be gone 187\ndays, visiting 81 ports and places\nin 24 countries.\nAthens is really three towns in\none\u2014the twisted lanes of the\nAthenB that was little more than a\nTurkish village before the Greek\nWar of Independence, the broad\nstraight streets of the modern\ncapital and the interesting ruins\nclustering round the Acropolis\nrepresenting \"the Glory that was\nGreece.\" The Parthenon, one of\nthe most interesting ruins here,\nwas chief among the buildings with\nwhich Pericles adorned the Acropolis about 600 B.C.\nBangkok, the capital of Siam,\nwas  originally built on  floating\npontoons or piles on the river's\nedge, but nowadays well-planned\nroads and streets radiate from tho\ncity in all directions, beautiful\nBuddist temples are scattered all\nover the town, and the Royal\nPalace is one of the show places of\nBangkok.\nKeelung, the chief port of the\nIsland of Formosa, is a hive ol industry. Formosa is half the size of\nIreland and is governed by the\nJapanese. In its northern fastnesses, still largely unexplored,\nlived the headhunted. The\nJapanese campaign of subjugation,\nhowever, has all but wiped out\nthese barbarous people.! The seat\nof government at Formosa is\nTaihoku. Here fleets of jinrikishas,\nmanned by coolies, transport the\nvisitors around the town, one of\nthe chief attractions of which ta\nthe Governor-General's garden,\nwhere the world's most beautiful\ntropical plants bloom in exotic\nprofusion.  \u2022 \u25a0   -\nGet Your\nGroceries\nat the\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25\n\"Service and Quality\nity\" |||\n\/DOf T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFORFINE PRINTING\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPHONE 80\n\u25a0s\nTRY OUR SPECIAL TEA\nat... 65c per  Ib.\n8HOE8, 8HIRTS, OVERALLS\nGOOD VALUES POR YOUR\nMONEY\nCALL AND 8EE US BEFORE\nPURCHASING\nJOHN  DONALDSON\nOENERAL MERCHANT\nJ.\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retell\nTORACCONIST\nDealer In\nHAVANA CIGARS, PIPE8\nSONFECTIONERY\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGRAND FORKS, 8. C.\nPalaceliarber Shop\nRAZOR HONING A SPECIALTY\nE.G, Henniger Co.\nGRAIN, HAY\nFLOUR AND PUD\nLIME AND SALT\nCEMENT AND PIASTER\nPOULTRY SUPPLIES\ni\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nQRAND FORK8\nTransfer Go.\nOAVI8 * HANSEN, PROPS.\nCITY   BAGGAGE   AND   GENERAL\nTRANSFER\nCOAL, WOOD AND ICE\nFOR 8ALE\nOffice   at   R.   R. PETftlE'S   STORE\nPHONE 64\n,\nOUR\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nFIRST ST, NEXT P. BURNS'\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nAgent\nDominion Monumental  Works\nAsbestos Produots Co. Roofing\nJESTIMATESFUBNISNED\nBOX 33$ ORAND FORKS, B. G\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Order,\nAlao Rrepalrlng of All Kinds,\nUphol taring Neatly Done\nII. G. MoCDTOBBON\nWINNIPEG AVENUE\n\/\/Hobby\nGood\nPrinting\nTHE VALUE OF WELL-\nPRINTED, NEAT Al*.\nPEARING STATIONERV\nA8 A MEAN8 OF GETTINr\nAND HOLDING DESIRABLE\nBU8INE8S HAS BEEN AM\nPLY DEMONSTRATED. CONSULT U8 BEFORE GOINr\nELSEWHERE\nWE PRINT-\nWEDDING INVITATIONS\nDANCE PROGRAMS\nBUSINESS CARDS\nVISITING CARDS\nSHIPPING TAGS\nLETTERHEADS\nSTATEMENTS\nNOTEHEADS\nBULLHEADS\nPAMPHLETS\nPRICE LISTS\nENVELOPES\nCIRCULARS .\nDODGERS\nPOSTERS\nMENUS\nETC.\nLATE8T STYLES OF TYPE\nSWIFT PRES8E8\nTHE SUN\nCOLUMBIA AVENUE AND\nLAKE 8TREET\nTELEPHONE 101\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1929_09_20","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\/1.0380124","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":"1929-09-20 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":"1929-09-20 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Grand Forks Sun","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":""}]}