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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Vovineia.-uauvf Mar. 3l-si\nFORKS SUN\n31st Year*=No. 13\n\"Tell' me what you Know is true,\nI can guess as wen aa you.\"\nFriday, February 5, 1932\nGrand Forks\nPublic School\nAttendance\n$1.00 PER YEAE\nThe following Is a list of those having perfect  attendance  in  the  Central ochool for the month of January:\nDIVISION   I.\nDouglas Archibald, Lois Dlnsmore,\nShirley Docksteader, iKoger Dondale,\nDoris Kg,;, Jean Glanvllle, John\nGowans, James Graham, Veronica\nKuva, Catherine MacDonald, Francis\nsVicDougull, Audrey Markell, Crystal\nMason, ltulph Meakes, Aulay iM.ller,\nWiliium Ogloff, Wiiiniufred O'Keefe,\nJoe i avis, Annie Ronald, Oeorge\nitonalil, I' ranees Sanduer, .Mae Thompson, David Tonks, Wlnnifred Wiykes.\nDIVISION II.\nCbarl otte Cagnon, Gladys Clark,\n.Margaret Cookson, Jean Dlnsmore,\nAudrey Donaldson, Helen Darner,\nJumes Foote, Barney Hlady, Kuth\nKidd, Alfred Knowles, Klleen Markell\nDor.s Mattocks, Sadie McDonald, Walter Meakes, Peter palek, Eda Bella,\nGerda Sather, John Vatkin, Ruby Wilkinson, Glen Willis.\nDiyiSMN  III\nDorothy Chambers, Kddle Clmbbers,\nMike Harkoff, Viola Hughes, Albert\nJepson, Al.ce Starchuk, George Murray, Daniel MueDcnald, Wilfred Mac-\nLauchl.an, Jessie McPherson, Leslie\nMcParlon, Catherine, McPherson, J.\"red\nPlaskin, Percy Poulton, Emma Rella,\n'\" Moronce Ridley, Val iliizicka, George\nShuratolf, Arthur Topp, Andy Pavlis.\nDIVISION IV\nPete Boyko, Nora Chapman, Alen\nDonaldson, Roma Donaldson, iHoury\nDorner, Sandy Gray, Catherine Kuva\nJames Lawrence, Hazel McParlon,\nBernard McPherson, Alfred Petersen,\nTannie Plaskin, Victoria Rltco, Wind-;!\nsor Rooke, Leonard Stephenson, Albert\nTalarico, Irene Tedesco, Virginia\nVant, Jock Wilkinson, John Zebroff\nMabel Klnakln.\nDIVISION  V\n. Charles Cook, Bernlce Cooksou.Nick\n.   I        . - DaUsh.rt, Wesley    Docksteader,   Jean\nI   Dominie,   Addle Evens, Juanlta Pee,\nSandford Fee, alike Harkoff, Gertrude\nHutton,  Alice Kinakin,  Fred  .Massie,\nGlads  Meakes,   Celia  Palek,  Patrick\nPavlis,  Jean  Pennoyer.Maimle' Peterson, Polly Plask.n, Lily Roper, Thomas\nScheer, Rocco Talarlco, Claus Thoem\nAnnie  Vatkin,   Frank  Wolfram,  Bill\nZebroff, Geraldine McKay.\n, DIVISION   VI\nSonny Allan, Glendine Fee, Robert\nGalloway, Allendao Harrison, Grace\nHull, , Elva Kidd, Rosie Lavla, Mary\nLavla, Beryl Love, Wilfred McDonald,\nDonald . McNev.n, Mike Ogloff, Dolly\nSkilling, Alvera Talarico, Derrald\nTkompspn, Freddy Wilkinson, Eifreda\nWolfe. \"\nDIVISION VII\nElla Andrew, Leslie Andrew, Stella\nBoyko,   Vera .Brown,   Mary Danshin,\nWilliam DeWllde,    B.liy   Donaldson,\n,       Harry Euerby, Manfred Freeman, Eve-\n\u2022  lyn Galloway, 'Freddy Hull, Mac Hutton, Mabel Kinakin, Frank Kuva, Emil\nLarsen,  Patricia Markell,  Bernadette\nMcDonald,    Harold    McParlon, Nick\n\"'.. \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 Pavlls, i Jessie   Ridley,   Doris Ritco,\nJohnny Rooke, Aubrey Smith, Ralph\nvi Tledesco.\nDIVISION VIII\nJack Argotoff, Irene Andrew, Dorothy tityepg', Walter Graser, Margaret\nGalloway, James .Markln, Ross Pennoyer, Albert Rella, Gerhard Roloff,\nBuster Skilling, Bill Deroka, Ron\nThompson, Edith Talarico, Geraldine\nVant, Lucie Danshin.\ndence of the Interest taken, at a\nmeeting at Mission to which only 15\nwere invited over 150 appeared. Efforts'are being directed tp co-ordinating the marketing of greenhouse\nproducts and | early vegetables so\nthat by getting together growers\ncan ship in carlots Instead of in\nseparate small consignment^ thua\neconomising ,n freight charges and\nat the same time securing more\nsatisfactory sales.\n 1\u2014o\t\nIce Carnival\nWas a Success\nBy popular acclaim, the Ice carnival held at the iikatlng rink on Wednesday night was declared to be an\nartistic triumph. Tho Ice was well\ncovered with merrymakers In fancy\nand comic costumes. Good music\nwas furnished by the City band.\nThe prize winners were:\nLadies' Fancy\u2014\"Winter,\" Miss\nFlorence Spraggett.\nLadies' Comic\u2014\"Old Maid of 1932,\"\n'Mrs.  H. Sutherland.\nMen's Fancy\u2014Ed Stuart.\n(Men's Comic\u2014\"Spanish Gen\/' Aulay Miller.\nGirls' Fancy\u2014Old-fash.oned Lady,\nGrace Hull.\nGirls' Comic\u2014\"Aunt Jemlmah.Joan\nPetersonfl\nBoys' Fancy\u2014\"Uncle \"Sam,\" J.\nThompson.\n\u25a0Boys' Comic\u2014\"Indian, In mauve\nand wh.te,\" Freddie Hull.\nMost Original\u2014\"Snowman,\" Lillian\nHansen.\nBest Comic\u2014\"Day and Night,\" E.\nand D. Kidd.\n o\t\nMINING NOTES OF\nLOCAL INTEREST\nThe Pathfinder mine near this city,\nis being steadily and consistently developed by the Pathfinder Development company.. In the tunnel which\n;s now being driven, although it has\nnot yet reached the objective point,\nPenticton,\u2014 \"Freight business on\nthe Kettle Valley branch of the Canadian Pacific Railway has been good\nseveral strikes of rich ore have late-\nbeen made.\nIFrom iFranklin camp comes the report that tlie Union mine is running\nsome high grade ore over the plates\nat Its mill at present.\nThe Maple Leaf mine in Franklin\ncamp waas reported laj\/t week as\nhaving been bonded bythe Hecla\ncompany. This report ia not strictly\ncorrect, lihe property has been sold\nto the the Hecla Mining & Smelting\ncompany on a royalty basis. Tbe\ncompany is to pay a certain percentage on all ore taken out up to $80,-\n000. \u2014--\nFormer B.C. Fruit\nMarket Investigator\nGets'JN\u00ab_ Position\nWlNNiPl!l(>>-49aBtord   Evans,  whe\n- recently Joined tho Mamltoba Advisory \u2022 board' of tlie Huron & Erie\nMortgage ^Corporation and tthtet Canada Trust company, is a well known\nresident of Winnipeg. He commenced\n\"\"'\"Tils career In newspaper work 1n 1897,\n\u25a0    wus edltorof the Winnipeg Telegram\nfrom 1*01 to 1905, Mr. Evans was\n-\u2022mayor of-Winnipeg from 1909 to 1911,\nchairman of the Georgian Bay canal\n- commission, Ottawa, 1914, and was\npresident of tho first Canadian club\nof Canada formed in Hamilton, Ont.\nMr. Evans is'a director of the Sovereign Life Assurance company and\na member of the Manlaoba legislature.' In TM7 he was chairman of the\nDominion commission investigating\nsalmon canneries in northern British\nOoHimbia.\nIn April,\"mi, he was appointed a\nmember of the commission to inves-\nttigate grain marketing under the\nchairmanship of Sir Joshla Stamp.\n'\u2022Mrt-EveiiB'- business now is tho <W.\nSaOfbrd Kvens Statistical Servsce wltl\nheadquarters at Winnipeg.\n o\t\nCOOPERATIVE MARKETING\n. . . The services of J A. ;Grant, former\nmarkets commissioner for the prairies, have been, made available by\nthe department of agriculture to\ngrowers equiring assistance in marketing and othejr problems. Mr.\nGrant has been working recently in\ntae tower trwa Valley, and as evi-\nVancouver Man\nHas Experienced\nSwimming Mate\nV\/iNCOUVER-*^ seal aad\u25a0\u00bb P\u00b0l!u'\nbear swam side by side in the. waters\nof English Bay, to the left of the pier,\noaUrday.\nThe polar bear was Peter Pantages,\nirienioer of the Polar Bear club, but\ntne seal was an honest-to-goodnssa\noeal.\nNeither was at first;aware of the\nother's  presence.\nA lady walking along the pier saw\nthe strungo sight and screamed. Hearing her wain.ng calls, iMr. Pantages\nlooked around and observed the au.-\n111..I.\n\"Neither of us were the least concerned,\" he said, commenting on tho\nincident this morning. .        .\n'\"ilao seal didn't bite me . . . and\nI didn't bite hlm.\"\nCities of B.C,\nWant More\nJobless Relief\nNBW WESTMINSTER.\u2014Following\na meeting with the provincial cabinet\nTuesday, the Un.on of British Columbia Municipalities executive decided\nto telegraph the authorities asking\nthem to live up lo agreements made\nwith municipalltie., last fall In regard\nto  unemployment  rel.ef. i\nAcceptance of the request by the\nfeilural government uvuld mean an\nnihl'tionnl $2,5uU,0O0 for unemployment rel.ef work in this province,\nMajor A. Wells Gray, secretory of the\nUnion of British Columbia municipal-\nilles, said.\nMow Westminster's original program !\nwas reduced from {..00,000 to $l')-t,-'\nOlio, he said. i\nMayor Gray stated the Victoria;\ncabinet was emphatic In Its Intention'\nto reduce municipal and school board\ngrants. |\n\"The time has arrived when the\ngovernment i-hou.ii lay .13 cards on\nthe tube and Rive the public a clear\nstatement r.J.arding the linancltaJ\nslato of the province,\" he declared.\n\"If thc bovernment is broke it\nshould say so. At present, not know-|\ninK what funds are available, we are!\nrunning around In e'reies, and n.t get-'\nUhB auyv.liera,\" ho added.\nRegarding, proposed grant reduc-\nt.oiis, the executive was told that the\ngovernment is budgeting and the mu-'\nnlciiialities would have to budget too.,\nHon.' J. Hlnchliffo, minister of edu- i\ncation, told the executive that thej\n.oqvorim.ont according to statute is\non.'y responsible, for educating children up to 15 years of age.\nTh.s was taken as an intimation,\nMayor Gray ta'd, that if municipalities wished to continue to operate\niiogh schools, they might not get assistance from the government.\nMayor Gray pointed out to the cabinet that Senator Robertson had dictated a letter in the presence of himself and Hon. R. H. Bruhn authoring New Westminster's $200,000 program.\nBusiness Good\nOn K. V, Line\nPENTICTON. -\/\"Freight business\non the Kettle Valley branch of the\nCanadian Pacific railway has beon\"\ngood lately,\" said C. A. Cotteroll,\ngeneral superintendent for British\nColumbia, to the Herald Wednesday\nmorning when he visited Penticton\non his inspection tour.\nIShipmeents of metal and Fertilizer from Trail smelters have aided\nmater.ally ln keeping the train crews\nIn action,\" according to the visitor.\n\"If it was not for the freight at the\npresent time, the railways would be\ndoing very Uttle business,\" he stated,\nindicating  that  passenger  traffic  ls\nquite slack.\nOn being asked as to the prospects\nof business on the Oliver branch\nline this summer, Mr. Cotterell replied that the officials are hoping\nthat there will be some business.\nLast year Jack Frost gave the railway a \"bang on the nose\" In Uie\nsouth, but this season If the Oliver\ncrop Is a bumper one, Mr. Cotterell\nIs hoping that the branch line will\ndo a good business. e\n\"There ls no prospect at present of\nany cliage in the t metable to elimi-\nInate the overnight stop at Nelson,\nThe Herald was Informed, litis Is nol\nthe season to change running times,\nMr. Cotterell spent the day In Penticton In conference with Superintendent T, H. Crump, Assistant Superintendent G. E. Pratt, and other\nKettle Valley lino afflclals In Penticton.        .\n_ . 0\t\nConspiracy Charge\nLaid Against Veregin,\nDoukhobor Leader\nYORKTON, Sask.. Feb. 3.\u2014Peter P.\nKabotoff, Veregin district Doukhobor\ntansies', 's near death here today, his\nthroat slashed by a knife in the second Sensational Inc.dent following a\ncourt enso nere last week In wnicn\nDoukhobors were  concerned.\nFc'lce found Kabotoff lying on the\nground betwoen two buildings In the\nd 'v.ntcwn business section early this\nmorn'ng. His clothes were saturated\nwith blood and he was unconscious\nfrom a five-Inch gash across his\nthroat.\nHe held a pocket knife in his hand.\nSaturday afternoon Peter Veregin,\nleader of the 15,000 members of the\nChr>ctlan Community of Universal\nBrotherhood, Doukhobors, in Canada\nwas arrested as he walked from the\ncourthouse after testifying at the preliminary hearing of George Chutskoff\non a perjry charge.\nVeregln ls charged with unlawfully\nattempting to dissuade Wesyl F. Kon-\nkin, complanant, from giving evidence in a civil case In which the\ncomplainant was a witness, by\nthreats.\nKonkin, who laid the information\nresulting in arrest of the Doukhobor\nchieftain, is a nephew of Kabotoff.\nKabotoff arrived here Thursday, to\ngive evidence in' the Chutskoff hearing. He had been rooming with Wasyl\nLubschenolT, another Doukhobor, close\nto the downtown section,\nApparently In a highly nervous\nstate, he almost fainted Saturday\nwh'Ie giving evidence from the witness stand and in the evening com-\nplaned of feeling ill.\nHe has a slight chance for recovery.\n 0\t\niSAFPOHD, ARIZ.\u2014Thomas Cosper\nlearned that crossing a shallow spot\nof the Gila river, near Sunnyslde, is\nnet as simple as it looks. He was\ncaught In qulksand and burled to the\nshoulders when passersby rescued\nhim.\n 0\nCooks are the leading ladies in\nmany domestic dramas.\nRelief Plans\nAre Critizsed\nBy Labor\nVANCOUVER, \u2014 The Dominion\ngovernment seems to be encouraging\ndirect relief; Vancouver's unemployment plan Is inferior to other cities,\nund provincial authorities - \"bave\nsquander.!' money fitting relief\ncuinps with an over-supply of tools-\ntut no work.\nThese were observations of Percy\nl.iiigoiui, general secretary, Van-\ncnuver Trades and Labor Council, at\nthe lil-monthly meeting Tuesday of\nVancouver, New Westminster and\nDistrict 'I rades and Labor Council.\nHi- bated his statements regarding\ncamp, on Inspections mede between\nhere und Kamloops while en route\nfrom Ottawa, where he attendedthe\nexecutive council of the Trades and\nLabor Cogress of Canada.\nHe cons'dered efforts should be renewed toward a bettor method of local unemployment relief,\n\u2022Mr. Peng.ugh stated that ln Winnipeg food is provided unemployed ln\nrented hotels at 9.5 cents a meal and\nis served by hired help reoetvinsr\nunion wages.\nMeal and bed tickets are Issued on\nany restaurant or rooming house, he\nstated. Two meals a day are provided\nsimilarly as in Edmonton, where, he\ndeclared, two 40-cent meals a day\nare  provided unemployed.\n.Mr. Beugough und a delegate wi,U\nattend a meeting of Vancouver business organizations, on invitation of\nProf. w. A. Carrothers, University\nof British Column'*, to protest reduction in university funds to $250,-\n000     year.\nA public meeting will be called\nunder ausplces of the Trades and\nLabor Councoil regarding legislation\nsatlon Board and activities, It was\ngoverning the Workmen's compen\ndecided.\nSHIPPER8  MAY  OPEN\n1    WHOLESALE   HOU8E8  IN\nVANCOUVER  NEXT SUMMER\nVjBJRiNONi \u2014 Independent shippers\nwho are not getting what they consider \"a break\" in the Water street\ndeal in Vancouver, are considering\nopening a wholesale house there so\nas to crash ln.\nFollowing the meeting of the Shippers' Council in Kelowna, on Wednesday, a group of shippers outside\nthe Sales Service and Associated\ngroups d.Scussed the situation. They\ndeclare that there Is one buyer for\nthe pool in Water street and thoy\ncan't get an order With a sniali\nhouse operating entirely on its own\nand handling nothing but British\nColumb.a products they believe they\ncan get into a market which is now\nclosed. Three or four of the larger\nshippers are considering the proposition and there will be some developments before long.\nCruises Around World After First Season\nSTRAITS  SETTLEMENTS\nExtremes in All\nDepartments Meet\nIn Russia Today\nKMromes .ii all departments ac-1\ncount for the varied pictures of presently Russia given to Canada by returning visiters, it wag claimed hy\nGoo; go II. Willsums, former president\nof the Saskatchewan Un.ted Farmers,\nlu an address' in Moose hall, Vancou- j\nVs!.-, Friday evening. J\nThe impression one gains of the 1\nne'.v Russia depends largely upon the j\nvisitor's state of mind, he said. There's !\ncleanl.ness and filth, ignorance and.,\nculture, religion and agnosticism,\niiclpntlfie agriculture and old-fashion- . ,\ned forming.\nWhile government propaganda is\ndirected against religion, the majority\nof the churches remain open, reported\n\u25a0Mr. W.iliams ln describing his trip\nthrougli Russia. Speaking 142 , lan-\nguages, 182 different nationalises are\nworking there towards a common\nideal, he stated. \"     .\nA scientist confirms the theory\nthat the pull of the moon-and sun on\nthe earth operates to determine the\ntime of earthqoakea. .\nTired, like any debutante after the hectic gaieties\nof her first season, the young lady who, immediately after her presentation at thc Court of King\nNeptune last May, became a leader of society, leaves\nshortly for a leisurely cruise around the world.\nThe young lady in question, the 42,500 ton Canadian Pacific liner \"Empress of Britain\" haa just\nconcluded her first Atlantic season during which her\nparties, amongst tho most brilliant ever neld on the\nWestern Ocean, have been attended by more\nrepresentatives of rank and fashion than Ward McAllister dreamed of.      *     ,   ... .    \u201e        .  \u2022\nPrinces, Ambassadors, Earls, Viscounts, Baronets,\nKnights of many of the highest orders cf chivalry\nand their ladies have vied for her favour; and the\nhighest aristocracy of North America, thc noble\nIroquois Indians, paid their noma\"* when they conferred Chieftainship upon Captain R. G. Lattn\n(inset) commander of the Empress of Britain, and\nCommodore of the Canadian Pacific feet.\n11 Regaining the Blue Ribband of the Atlantic fer\nth* Britaah Empire on bar second voyage by making\nthe crossing to Father Point, Quebec, in four dayi\n12 houni, 30 minutes, thus breaking the previous\ncontinent to continent record by four hours and 36\nminutes, the Empress of Britain did not rest on her,\nlaurels, and since that date has broken her own\nrecord on fiveotlier occasions. On her final voyage of\nthe season she crossed in seven hours and 49 minutes\nless than the best record between Cherbourg and\nNow York.\nStarting December 3rd, from New York, the\nEmcrer:-! will visit 30 ports before, after a complete\ncircle of the world, r.he returns to tlio Atlantic. I.'er\nguesla will brin',' back with them when they reach\nNow York agar . April 8lh, 1932. frssr.int memoriiq\nof Madeira, Gl;>ra!t?.r, Algeria, Monaco, Frettce,\nItaly,   Greece,  Palestine    Pgypt,   India,   (>: Ion,\nSumatria Java, f-tr\nStntea, Sian^tnePhii\nPanamn and'Cul)\ncruise, arqund the world.\nevni   .., Federated i.i \"lay\n1. China, .l.-.pan, Hc^ali,\n..v.! fa.--i.-i3t vc.\\ -1 i.\"..' to\nSome of our exchanges seem to almost gloat over the possibility that a\nbig war in the Orient would bring\nprosperity to this province. The man\nwho would welcome prosperity at the\nprice price of murder, rapine and\nplunder is still a barbarian.\n\u2014u\u2014\nOliver and Cranbrook want their'\nunemplojment camps probed. Why\nlimit the number to two? There are\na great many more camps in the\nprovince.\n\u20140\u2014\nSuppose that you allowed one of\nyoury neighbors to store part of his\ngoods in a building of yours, and then,\nafter he bud got them nicely Installed,\nhe came to you nnd asked you to insure bis wares ut your expense, you\nwould naturally go to a warmer climate. Thoro is a great deal of similarity between this supposition and\nthe claims of the Japanese In Manchuria.\n\u20140\u2014\nThe Sun regrets to notice that Premier Tolmie Is uga.'n on the \"sick\n1st.\" We believe that his illness is\ngenuine.and we tender Mt\\ Ttolmie\nour sjmuathy. We do not belong to\nthat coterie whj affect to believe\nthat these spells of Indisposition, because they come coincident with the\nmeeting cf the legislature, aru caused\nby fear of the premier to meet\nthe bouse.\n\u20140\u2014\nThe occurrence of the father or\nmother at the head of a househuld\nmurderingthelr children and then committing suicide i3 becoming too common. If these misguided people are\ntoo cowardly tto fight the battles of\nlife, nnd insist on gonng out of the\nworld prematurely, the least they\ncould do would be to allow their families, who might become honorable\nmembers of of society to live their\nnatural lives.\nSummary of\nFruit Market\nA Political\nRumor That\nMay Happen\nVICIOHUA.-Hon. W. A. 'McKensie,\nminister of mines and labor, is birt-\ning with a Victoria nomination for\nthe nextproviiiclal election. Mr. Mc-\n.venule represents Similkameen and\nhas done so since his election to succeed the lute Senator W. T. Sbatfonl\nin 1918.\nSimilkameen lias long been regarded as one of th,, safest Conservative\nscats In the province. But It is no\nlonger safe ror Mr. McKensie. Patronage troubles have created a svllt between the Conservatives of eimllka-\nmoeii and Mr. McKenzie. It ls openly\nstated that he could not get his own\nrty's nomination.\n-Mi), .McKeuitse has made, himself\nthe champion of no reduction In the\n' ;gislature, whicb it lB calculated\nmay make him popular In Victoria,\nt whose representation of four tbe\neconom-'zers  are shooting heavily.\nSo far none of the present Victoria\nmembers has intimated any intention\nif relrlng, but Ii would occasion llt-\nle surprise If .1. II, Beatty decided\nto withdraw at the next election.\nMr. .MoKenzie's candidature in Victoria would give the lower end of\nancouver island strong representa-\nlon in the cabinet Of the seven\nlower   Island   seats   three are now\n\u2022presented by ministers .and two of\n(lie other members houl official posts\nMr. McKenzie would make one more.\nThe present Jine-up Is: Victoria\nCity,   Hon.  Joshua   llinchliffc,   minis-\nir of education; H. D. Twigg, deputy speaker; Saanich, 'Hon. S. F. Tolmie, premier; Esquimau, Hon. R. If.\nPooley, attorney general; Cowlchan-\n.^eWcastle, lion. C. F. Uavle, speaker. R. 'H. -Hayward and J. H. Beatty\nnon-office holding members from Victoria, are the only two^privutes and\none of them would be replaced by\nthe minister of mines if Mr. McKou-\nzie's  scheme were  to go through.\nVICTORIA, Feb. 5.\u2014Cables from\ntbe markets representative in London shdicate that apple prices are\nholding steady, Winesaps are selling\nfrom $2.85 to $,'1.30 a box; Jonathans\nfi to $3.n0; Newtowns 3.35 to $3.80\nllhese are private treaty prices. Auc-\nlios of American apples show them\naelllng at one or two shillings a box\nlower. ,\nThe cheapness of eggs Is reflected\non the Britsh emaerket, where\nprices run from 111 cents a dozen for\nthe cheapest Polish to .18 cents for\nthe best Dutch. Those prices are for\neggs selling wholesale in 10-dozen\nlots. Iu Seattle tbe cheapness of eggs\nis blamed on unprecedented warm\nweather, the prices being the lowest\nIn 38 years.\nCal.fornia shipped 1887 crates of\nlettuce, 1158 cratesof crates of cauliflower, 643 crates of celery, und 385\ncrates ot spinach Into Vancouver and\nVictoc.ria last week. Parsley, green\npeas and sweet potatoes were also\noffer -. I  in  good suppi.v.\nMcintosh Reds have reappeareu In\nthe coaBt cities and are selling at\n$2.35 a box wholesalefor fancy\ngrade. Wagners are quoted at $2 a\nbox and Rome Beauty in bulk at I'^o\nper pound. Local Spies of good quality are selling at $1.40 to $1.50 a box.\nIn Victoria, California celery ls\nquoted at $12 per case or $2.50 per\ndozen heads. There are still a few\nhothouse tomatoes on the market,\nquoted at $4.75 a crate. Mexicans repacked are selling at $6 a lug. Rhubarb Is qouted at \u00bbc per pound.\nConsiderable activity prevailed In\nthe cattle market iaBt week. Values\nheld more or less steady with a\nrange in prices from 5.75 to 6.25 for\nchoice steers. The hog markeL was\nslugglsb with prices closing from Vi\nto 14c lower. No change lu lambs.\nCANNiED   LOGANBERRIES\nReports received by \\V. W. Duncan, markets director, shows that\nBritish Columbia has made a good\nbeginning in capturing tlio British\nmarket for British Columbia canned\nloganberries. Starting only Inst September, 8525 cases have been sold.\nIlho United States, which hold the\nmarket previously, last year slid 94,-\n000 cases there. In other words, between Scptembor and the end of the\nyear there was a market for 112,000\ncases In Oreat Britain. With the preference for empire goods now being\nshown in tho old- country there\nsoiius to be no good reason why In\nfuture British Columbia should not\nsecure the lion's share of th.s trade,\nand thus obtain an assured sale for\nall the surplus loganberries.\nVICTORIA.\u2014The body of Joe\nDrinkwatcr, Alberni pioneer and dia-\nA dispatch from New Brunswick\nstates that a man had been seen\ndown there woarlng a straw hat. It\nsounded funny, but a picture was\nmapped 0 a man wearing a straw\ntat on a Toronto street oa January \u00ab.\nOrdered to Camp,\nMen Refuse to Go\nNORTH VANCOUVER.\u2014A request\nfor .'nstructionsregardlng men on d,-\nroot relief who refus eto go to government relief camps was made by\nOeoge S. Shepherd, city clerk.to the\ncity council on Monday night. Sixteen men out of 30 signified the.r\nw;il'jign'ess to go when requested,\nMr. Shepherd reported, but when the\nday of departure arrived not a single\nman put In an appearance. He said\nthe provincial government had taken\nthe stand that .f a man refused to go\na camp, It would not assume responsible for his support, and he would\nbe cut off relief.\nAid. H. E. c Anderson said be did\nnot think ,t wus rlhtg to ask a man\nto go to camp Iwthout explaining\nwhere ho was to go, and the conditions under which he was to live at\nthe camp.\nMayor E. H. Brldgman instructed\n-Mr. Shepherd to telephone Vlctor.a\nauthorities and ask for information\nto pass on to tho men picked for\ncamps, as to the name of the camp to\nwhich thoy are destined, conditions\nat the camp and clotehlng requ,red.\n O ;\t\nRich Ore in\nGold Drop\nA two-foot vein of gold ore running at $105 per ton is reported from\nthuGoId IDrop group near Greenwood.\nfloy Cloth.er, who, with Arthur K\nProcter, c< Vancouver, owns the\nproperties, Is enthusiastic over the\nprospects of the holdings.\nMr. Clothier states that No. 1 tunnel on the Cold Urop claim shows\nthree root or $14 gold ore, while No,\n1 slope lu the North Star claim ,s 30\nfoet long nnd shows two foot of $10;,\non.. This Is u rich find. No. - Btopn\nIn the sumo claim Is un equal length\nand has four und a half feel of $H,\nore.\nMachinery has been Installed on\nthe property and a crow of ton nxvi\nare employed, ho states. F.fty tons\nof ore arc ready for shipment.\nThe claims aro noar the Jewel\nmlno near Jewel lake and about nine\nmiles by road northoast of Greenwood..\ntof. Clotheler anticipates haul.ng\ntp G-reonwood by truck about the\nmiddle of this month. Later in the\nseason Uie hauling will be to Ehol:,\nwhich   s seven miles distant.\nHo considers that the mine can be\nsatisfactorily with $12 ore. lt is his\nintent.-on, he says to produce at the\nrale of 20 tons a day.\n0\t\ncovercr of Delia falls, was f ountl\nWednesday huddied up en the shores\nof Great Central lake. No marks nf\nviolence were visible. Provincial police are, investigating.\n ,:-\u25a0'.:\nun? (kranii JHnrka fsun\nQ. A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER\nSuiissoription   Rates,   Payable   in  Advance\nOne   sear, iu Canada aud Oreat Britain....  \u00bb\nOne year, in tbe United States   \t\nAddress ail communications lu\nThe Grand Forks Sun,\nPHONE  101 Grand   Forks,  b\nOffice:    Columbia  Avenue  and   Lake   Street\nrlUli.Al, FEBKUAKVf 5, li__\ni \">u\nton, brother of George, was unable to capture this port\nby l'oive in 1741. lb ecity, which has a population of 50,-\nOou, still has luch of the \"unspoiled and picturesque.\nnujqii.-l.ke domes and Moorish towers emphasize the.\nskyline. Allhough carnages and automobiles may be lured\nat moderate rates, Cartagena ls a good place to see on\nfoot, ine visitor Ukest to linger In many pieces connected\ni.iiii too city s stoi'.eg of romance and legend.\nGtand Forks Sun\nWOMAN  who  is a great  lover of an.mals recently\ntoid two incidents, or retold them, from the press, to\nstress iis-i- po.ut tisist the wholly commendable.but rather\nlimited tititude of \"love me, love my dog,\"showes hope-\n \u2014\u2014 ; lui signs  of progress.  She says  that this    affection    is\nl, 10 L RES recently compiled by the Brltiili earthquake I rapidly being stretched to .nciude the other fellow's dog.\n* expert, Dr. C. iiavison, and published in the London j fXhejo was that tiny item in tue paper the other day, for\n\u25a0\u2014i\u2014i\u2014,\u2014'\u2014'\u2014^\u2014^\u2014^\u2014^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -um^ie, utiout the dog that belected the middle of a busy\n| street iu isloouisiiurg, 10., for his siesta.\" she said. \"Little)\nnoting lue vast Dumuer of persons who were affected by\n.us d-> criminating Search ior a snady spot, the dog took\nt peaceful nap, wlinu 400 respectful motorists detoured\nputeti  as  4222. In  Japan,  a s.mllar computation  of the j ...ouiid ii.in\nttcctlfb 5\u00abvfce\nOF THE\n>-|il!>,>\nSsUlcO\u2014\nGRANT  FLEMING,  M.P.    ~   ASSOCIATE SECHETAWY\nlimes, are tbus cited by Dr. E. E. Free in Weeks Sd-\nence: \"During the n.neteenth century, there occurred\nsomewhere on earth 364 desructlve earthquakes, uccuiu-\npamed by great loss of life. In Italy, the average number of persons killed  by each  such earthquake  is  com\nmon (here was that oilier dog who had made\ntreat shocks  gives an  average of  DssH. j unused sinp pu.ar with his neighbors over in New Jersey\nuse ol ills IiuijIi of burking at night,\nloss   of  life  in ^^^^^\nFrom tnese dat-i Dr. Davison estimates that about 14,-\nUUO or 15,000 persons are killed by earthquakes somewhere in the world in the average year. .Many times\ntills number of deaths are caused annually by motoring uccidenls. lt is admitted by experts, however, that\nkui'iliquuki.s probibly are becoming increasingly de-\n\u2022 iiiut vs. uud mini becuuse of the growing concentration\nof population, and the fact that modern bul,dings muy be\nr.ri-s;i,eu much more completely and fatally by an earth\nshock than was possible when men lived mostly ln\nsmall, one-storied shucks. A single earthquake centering ln a great modern city like New York or London\n\u25a0tight k.'sl more people than have been killed by such\nskocks elsewhere during the whole past century.\"\nIT WAS  no grisly  bargain with  the  devil   thai  made\nlaust the cenlrai figure of a famous legend, the theme\n\u2022f at least  two p.uys and  three operas,   ln  Main,  Germany, in  tbe fourteenth century, people won a reputa-\ntiua for undue intimacy with the devil very easily;  and\nias.il  turn ni.-, overnight, almost, with a printing press!\nlo.iuiiu    sitsxenuerg    had just    invented  the    process of\nprinting  wiui  movable   i.-i>u.  To commercial  his  invention  he   formed   tin;   first   printing  company\u2014Gutenberg,\nFiiUst & Slioeller\u2014lo which he contributed the idea, and\nFaust tlie cap tai and a tiare for saies promotion. Shoef-\nler was rousts sou-.n-law.  Since  there  were  no  patent\ntaws at tue time, the printing had  to  be done behind\nclosed  doors, oitcii at night,  to prevent the Idea being\numi.l-h. Tha puuuc, ..ecu..touted to slowly and lauoriously\nbunU-pr.nted letters, gased in awe at the lresulyprinted\npages tu. in nl uut so rup.diy lu that mysterious shop, and\nmined   magic.   FuUBt perceived  the  saies   value  of  that\nvcid,   encourage  its   use and   became  popularly  known,\nnot us a printer, Lut u man with some strange allegiance\nuitii  me uus.l!   Old records show  that Faust later won\na law suit against Gulenberg for funds invested and lost\nin the pr.nt.ng ol the lamous Gutenberg Bible, a single\ncop.,   of  which,  perhaps  proving  the1 theory  of magic,\nsoul in 1D26 for $$05,000.\n ^^^^^^^^^^^^^    The local police\nrecorder lu:d been notified, und the aged resident who\nsMvmfti li in wus even tho sud command to dispose of him.\nit iia,.in.ii tl thut tbe owner not only actually depended\non sue u g fur companions!) p, but forrunds at which the\n..ssi.tuio had proved, remarkably dependable. Well, the\nup.hoi ol .t wus,\" suid tm. lad) who loves animals, trluni-\n, iisimy, lii.it 00 persona, icd by the mayor of tbe town.\n.sCsi'd of tlie mutter und testified ln the dog's behalf.\n..iiiiisj of them, muni you, even gave up their vacations so\ni.nt limy might u.u the case. Aud thu dog was ollicially\nforg.ven.i\"\nSilt JOHN PFLHAM is stated to have been the first\nso receive a private letter written in the English language, it wag sent uy nis wile .n l.,aa. Latin was the lun-\ngtisi|l>i .n which Miners auu coiumun.cations of every\ntuiiu w.ciu wiluon to tue time oi the accession of iiid-\n.I.IUI i. sm,itn uouuuueu lu visiii.,iiuiiiste as tue language\nin siOi'i'Umiiunussii^d uut.1 tne re.gu oi iiidwurd ill. An\n..it os pMtsiaiusiiTt then s-suviuuu tuut tue iJn.-,iiaiiluu-\nbuuve sssnu.u .it\ntue 11\nrpllE grea   medieval abbey of Buckfast, which has Iain\n\u25a0*\u25a0 in rums  fur four centuries, soon will stand fully restored us u monument  to the labors of a little\/ group of\nss-uunictino monks. For more than twenty-six years, work-\ning .n rein,-s of s.x, the monks, who live neary in the beautiful ueioiissiiirt valiey, have been rearing the vast mon-\nissiu'y from itn original foundations, laid in the, eighth\ncentury. Virtually uiia.ded, they have rebuilt It in all Its\nformur detail, und next August it is to be consecrated.\ntine abbey Is a mugnivcent gray and yellow stone struc-\nii.n e. only the crumbling central tower and the foundation rema.ncd when in 1005 the monks decided to restore\nit. Although none    o f them had any knowledge of construct-on  work,  Iney   were determined  to do their work\nwituout outside ht-ip. \"There was but one  brother who\n..now- how  to haudie a hammer and  trowel,\" said Dom\nsuiscar, tne smiling gray-haired abbot. '.But we had a firm\nueutu  In Prov .deuce aud great determination. A young\nurotner was appointed to mix mortar   for the   solitary\ns\/uiiuer, am: one uy oue other brothers were assigned to\nWoks.'   At no lime, however, have more than six monks\nusieu available. Since no appeal has ever been made for\nminis and no money  ever paid for wages It has neces-\nsur.iy taken a Ion;; time to build the monastery. As time\nwent  on  the  moults,   work.ng  with  white  aprons  over\nibeir ropes,  became expert masons,  carpenters and decorators. They decided to install an electric lighting system, so one brother studied books on electrical engineer-\n-ug until he was able to build the dynamos and other\neiiupment.\nYOUR   COMPLEXION\n\"Looks healthy\" is a descriptive\npharse which we frequently use, and\nlt is based ontho complexion more\nthan on anything else. Iliere is good\nreason fo saying that the person\nwith a clear skin, which is free from\nblemish, links bealtliy. for ho likely\ns, The skin is an organ of the body,\nand so it reflects the general condlr\nlion of the body, whether this be fa-\nvoable  or  unfavorable.\nBlemishes \"f the i-kln are not serious, but they arc annoying, and they\ncause discomfort and enbarrussmeut\nto those who are afflicted with them,\nlllackhcmls usuull.v develop on the\nface, but the) are seen sometimes on\nIho back of (he chest. It Is ilu.ng\nudolescence thut thoy generally begin   to   show   themselves,   and   they\nSUNSHINE\nWhy  It Was Good\nl.ristow was showing hig neighbor\nover his house.\n\"There Is my equestrian portrait,\"\ne biiid, pointing to a p.cture on the\n..all.\nTlio neignbor ga ed critically at it.\n\"A very line suapsnot.indeed,\" he\nreplied.\n\u2022 But what mukes you think lt is a\ni,in   snapshot?\" asked lirlutow.\n\"Well, you're st.ll ou the horse,'\ncame tho reply.\nMaterial for Baby\nClerk\u2014Did you wish about a yard\nof this muiurlul, madam?\nLady\u2014No,   I'll   need   about   three;\ntend  to  disappear \"as  the  individual 50U see lt'\u00ab \"ut ior m^li'  iVt tov\ngrows  older. !       *\nI ss      *      *\nThe    hluckheuds    are  due  to the\nblocking sif the pores with the secre-! Prepared\ntlons of the gland  which are exces-     Mother-Now, louimy, I'm sure you\nsive. The top of the blackhead is not LU\" oal another cake.\nTommy\u2014-so, thank you, mother; 1\nam full up.\nMother\u2014Well, put one in your\npo. iset lor later on.\nlummy\u20141 cau't; they are full up,\ntoo. I\n9       9       9\nTactless\n\"Well\", said a young lawyer, after\nhearing a client's story, \"your case ap-\ndirt. The white mass whicb is ex-\nsqueezed ls the hardened secretions\nof the gland which have formed u\nplug.\nBlackheads may and generally do\ncause pimples. The blackhead acts\nas a foreign body and Irritates the\nopre. Pus-forming germs may get\ninto this plug of blockedup secretions, and if so, they cause pimples \t\nwhich may  extend  and  cause  boills. | \u00bb\"-'<\"'\" to ue 8\u00b00U' l tMnk we cau se'l\nEdward Feus (left) holds that \"the climbing urge\" Is a heritage of all\nwhite races, be the objective high furniture for an infant; a tree-top\nfor a .schoolboy; \u00bb\u00bb tl-? -innacle of success or the summit of a mountain\nfor an adult, lie ought to know, for he makes his living as a mountain\nguide in the heart of the famous Canadian Rocky Mountains, with\nheadquarters ut thc Canadian Pacific Railway's hotels at Banff and\nLake Louise, und lias more \"first ascents\" to his credit than any other\nman in the country. His brother Ernst (right) is also an experienced\nguide and mountaineer. Both are natives of Interlaken, Switzerland, and\nhave winter-homes in (he littia Swiss guide village of Edelweiss, in the\nColumbia Valley. They arc shown scanning the peaks adjoining tbe\nBanff Springs Hotel.\n-me ue sue saiibUuge uf issgislui.on, uud\nsuiiossuisu, vviiieii had been spusi.cn since the\neuuisuesi,  ceaseu  lo  be  used.\n' I HE bureau of standards says that the fact that auto-\n\u2022 luusiiies ure mi|)|.oiled on rubuer tires vvomd probably iissss: uo appreciative ouect on mu prouauility of tne\nuuumii,.,.,..\u00bb Ue.llg strucn by lighm.ng. Likewise, the\n\u00bb\u00abiuii\u201e ui tiie iiiii'.iusiuiic by ra.n would piwamy pro-\nuuee lio apiireciaoie eneuti uie inclOsure tieeteu uy uie\nauiifuiuoiiefi wen.ii proiiuuiy uuord some degree of pro-\ntoeituu 10 persons wltinn. Persons witn.n a conuuciiug\nue are swe aguiusc agutning. The auiomouiio\nuiiiiungn uie ,ne, sure is in a large measure euec\nt  fci...-.s, approucues  this  condstion.\nllieni.,\nbouy\nten\nAu attack of hiccoughs cun be stopped by the use of an\nordinary paper bag. Dr. L. A. Golden of Boston has cured\neases which have pers.sted as long as two continuous days.\niim opening of ihe bag Is held tightly over the patient's\numuiii and nose. As he breathes, carbon dioxide accumulates und th.s frequently Wrings relief. At any rate the\niiUsiuiiuut cun do no harm unless kept up so long that the\npatient lainis from lack of oxygen.\nWhen a man ls thirty, an investigation has shown,\nhe is at the peak of big physical strength. Woman\npasses the peak u year or two sooner.\nItaly has harneeessed more than 3,000,000 of its water-\nwuys, of which more than 2,700.000 horsepower has been\ns  northern  provinces.\nobtained\nr|t HERE .\u00bb an old story of the late Senator Caraway of\n\u2022\u25a0\u2022 \/nittsUssi'H, ..uu a speech ue Is alleged to have mudu\nlu  tue\nstuiiue, wii.ch muy not be erue; but It ig fair to\nrecu.l ii becuuse it might be true, and lt is illustrative\noi biuue oi ii s ways. Tue siory is that he hud been mildly calieu iu account lor what appeared to be a rather\neseessise assises s-it ma iiitesjiMy ol u ilepuuiican seuu-\ntui. .ss- u..s....0^.eti, says life yarn, soiiieniiat utter tats\nssn ,.uny it anything mat 1 have sUid up\n;u un liie character of my distinguished\nussiei s.de. 1 kuow nothing whatever against\nuu n'.eis wuutever to support any assault\nW..111U go no further than lo say mat\n1 would choose to serve on the board\nu.iecsu.s ut my home town bank.\"\nlii.-uiie, ,\npeais   te   i\nllleUu Ou   s\nl.lils.    i    i(u,,j    au\ntips-n   lliui,    Ulnt   t\nlie ig nut uiie wnoiu\n\u2022I'lin\n\u00ab kHi\nie  world laughed tolerantly at last summer's \"Mon\nd'luaucer\"'\u2014\"\"-'\u25a0 yiUw.tauui boyB t00k to treas in en-\ncontests; and mere could be no better proof\nl.iat times nav- cnaugeu. The luurtu century took sUv-li\nptiiuiiiiaiues more buriousiy. Consider Simeon btyiite.-i.\nHv chained himself to a great rock ou wb.ch he began\ntu ccl a euiuiuu of smaller stones. Aided by hig ad-\nm.i'eis, w.to lap.uij nieieased ln nuuiuera, he raised\nliiu pue, first to ,i iieiani oi o, and nnaiiy to no feet, lu\nturn last and mn.. sitdution, he endured the heat of 30\ntuiiiuieis Unit Uie c.lil of as many w.ntcrs. He sometimes\n(ij.iy.;d in an erect altitude with bis outstretched arms\nlu tue ngd.o of u cross; but nls must familiar practice\nwas luui of bending his meager skeleton from the lore-\nhead to tue foot, uud u curious spectator, after nuni-\nbor.ng j_-1 i repil.lious, ut luuglh desisted from the endless account. Simoon und, wlinuul descending from his\nputar, us ,he result oi un ulcer on his thigh, 'flic ulcer\nowed lis origin to pride. The devil, so tue story goes,\nassumed uu engUlu loriu uuu urow up uusiuo tne pillar\nt-ji ju a Jhiry cfiariot, i-ie invited b.inoon  to ascend, as\nA young man out our way called at a home where he\nwas not wanted ihe other evening. Soon afterward he\nissued from tho door, with the father not far behind;\nund in summ.ng up the experience he said it was\ni    al, but he ceituinly got a great kick out of it.\nuu-\nIn the last religious census 212 sects were listed.\nThere are some which are so small that they are not\ncounted. These would probably bring tho total in the\ni n,ied stateg to about 260.\nANCI&NT Hl.f Jxti7\nLIFE IN GUANO FORKS\nTYVENXY   HEARS   AGO\nThere are  180  telephones In this city,  116 in Greenwood, and 36 in Phoenix.\nhud Llijau, and  -__*, u ue line\nto step ,n, tne devil spunked him cruelly and vanished\nin ii ,in,\u201ei   xh'sS ''Jittstisetment to pride won for the her-\nrss   sis.sl    wl\" -\nuie saint ivus ready, As he nfled his foot\n\u2022'   '' '   \"       i cruelly and\nnit great repute r.nd when, a few\niu u cloud.\nT_,  years later, his bones\nwere borne to Antloch, the patriarch of tbe city, the master-general of the East, six  bishops, 21  counts  or trib-\ni.u.-h and OuOU t mini luiuied tne guard of honor.\nFOUNDED in 15113 by Pedro de Heredia, and besieged\npiundpred during lis existence more times thou one\ncan tiiiiinicnitiraf.e ,n a couple of long breaths, Cartagena,\none of tbe oldesl c.ties on the Spanish main, was the home\nof Columbia's patron saint, San Pedro Claver, Bertram 11.\nLewis writes in the Boston Herald. This Pedro was a\ngodly man. no wero a crown of thorns, let instcts bite him\nand devoted much of h.s time to healing the wounds ol\nslaves Drought over from Africa. He lived in Cartagena\nin Ihe monastery whloh bears his name and his bones re\npose in a glass riuie oeneath the altar there. They are\ncovered by a Silken canopy, from the top of which his\nskuil looks down upon the worshippers, Americans will\nke inteinsUd in ths fact that Captain Lawrence Washing\nSkat.ng operations at the rink, which was Interrupted\nor a few days by the too active interference of old\nol,   were  resumed   on   Tuesday  evening.\nGeorge D. Clark, district deputy of Harmony lodge,\nA. i\\ and A. Al., left yesterday on an official visit to\nthe Vmlr lodge.\nAl Traunweiser, proprietor of the Yale, who was\ncalled to Calgary a few days ago on account of the serious illness of h,s mother, returned home on Monday.\nills mother, although 85 years of age, has regained her\nusual health.\nThe condition is most common\namong those Individuals who have an\noily skin. However, as we stated previously, the skin is affected by the\ncondition of other parts of the body.\nSo It Is that the occurrence of blackheads and p.mples Is favored by digestive turbances, improper diet, constipation and lack of fresh air, exercise and sleep.\nIn general we may say that an unhygienic life may be rekected in\nthese skin conditions, and that where\nattention is given to the simple rules\nof healthy living, they are far less\nlikely to occur. ,\nWhen blackheads and pimples do\noccur, attention is given to the general hab.ts of the patient's life rather than to the skin. The diet must be\nconsidered. Any insufficiency of\ngreen vegetables and of fruits is corrected, and any excessive use of potatoes, pastry and sugar ls cut down.\nThe free use of water for drinking\nIs encouraged.\nSufficient sleep, outdoor exercise,\nfresh air and sunshine are all required if the body\u2014and this includes\nthe skin\u2014is to be healthy.\nCleanliness of the skin is necessary if tbe skin ig to be healthy. The\nface is to be washed regularly with\na nun-irritating soap and water. The\nidea that soap and water are harmful to the complexion, and that the\nface should be cleansed with creams\nonly, is all wrong. Frease mechanically plug up the pores, thug helping\nblackheads to form; what is needed\nis washing to cleun the skin.\nA good complexion comes from\nwithin and is an expression of personal health. It cannot be bought and\napplied on the outside.\nUuesilous cuncciuiiig Health, addressed to the Cauadiau Medical As-.\nMiciution, 134 College Street, Toronto,\nwill be auswerel personally by letter.\n'Ihe groundhoi;  had  to get close to an  electric light\niu order to see his shadow this morning.\nThe  Vancouver  Morning  Sun  will  rise  for  tho  first\ntune on Monday, February 12.\nCommercial   travellers   have   been   very   numerous  In\nthe city during tho pust week. This is an Indication that\nuslness  conditions are improving.\nSeveral carloads of ice were shipped from this city\nlo ilincnu ou Saturday. It will probably come back in\nthe form of beer at a greatly enhanced price.\nPOEMS  FROM THE FAR EAST\nCHINA\n\t\nGENEROUS  NEPHEW\n1 escorted my uncle to Tain,\nTill  the  Wei  crossed on  the  way.\nThen I gave as I left\nFdrhis carriage a gift\nFour steeds, and each steed was a bay.\nI escorted my uncle to Tsln,\nAnd1   I thought of him much in my heart,\nPendent stones, and with them\nOf] fine jasper a gem,\nI gave, and then saw him depart.\n\u2014From Tha Shi-King.\nFACTS THAT YOU\nMA^ NOT KNOW\nFruit Salad\nTo make a delicious fruit salad,\npeel und slice one dozen bananas;\npeel one dozeu oranges, then remove\npulp from euch section; slice oue can\nof pineapple; peel und remove the\nseeds from oue-liull pound grapes..\nCoinb.ne the fruits, mix with French\ndressing, and serve ou lettuce.\n\u2022JBMSseio\nAlways   rinse   glassware   thut   has\ncunitilnud milk in cold water before\nIt Ig washed in hot water, in order\nlo make the gluss clear and sparkling.\ncure a 1'ci'dict Wsthout much trouble.'\n'\"that's ivuut I told my wife,\" said\nthe man, \"and yet she insisted at first\ntuut wo ought to engage a lirst-ciass\nlawyer.\"\n*     #     9\nNot Bad Business\nMrs. sNewbride\u2014Have you any faith\niu life insurance'.'\nHis. Oldbride\u2014Yes, Indeed. I've\nrem.zed sluu.ouu from my two husbands, and tuey weren't especially\ngood onus at that.\nss       \u2022       \u2022\nDangerous  Pastime\n\".Mother,  I don't want my picture\ntaken.\"\n\"Why not, dear?\"\n\"I've   been   looking  at  the  family\nttiuum.\"\n\u2022 *   *\nErrors  of Affluence\nNeighbor\u2014Er\u2014.His.  Brown,   you've\ngot  oud  stockings on.\nsvirs. sJiown\u2014 les, dearie, tbat often 'appena to ladies wuat 'ave got\ninure  tuuu  one pair,\n\u2022 \u25a0 *      9\nHis Technique  Won\nShe\u2014Do you th.ua you did right\nli.sa.ng  me?\nHe\u2014Weil, I can't be blamed for\nmy technique. I'm young.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHigh  Cost of Oxygen\n\"Did you take my advice and sleep\nin in ihe window open to cure your\ncold.\"\n\"Yes.\n\"Did  you lose  your  cold?\"\n\"No, 1 lost my watch and my pock-\nctbook.\"\n9*9\nMattresses  Come  Cheaper\nHost\u2014When f  was a young man I\nui ways suid Id never be satisfied till\nTd smotliered my wife in diamonds\nGuest\u2014iHust laudable.  But why in\ndiamonds?\nCITY REAL ES i ATE FOR SALE\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots and\nAcreage owned by the City, within the Municipality, are\ninvited.\nPrices:\u2014From $25.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms:\u2014Cash and  approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be aeen at the City Office.\nJOHN A. BUTTON,\nCity Clerk.\n\/T\nTHE COisoOLIDATEO MINING & SMELTING\nmm, OF CANADA, LIMITED\nT.t..IL, ItlUTlSII COLUMBIA\nManufacturers uf\nELEPHANT\nlilt wo\nt'hem cat Fertilizers\nAm muni urn Phuspliate\nSuLpLiate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nD. C. AGENTS BURNS st CO,\nl'sCs>ducJi's& sio.iaeDsS of\nTADANAC\nLTD.\n.lltlNIl\nIi cctrolytic\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\n^=\nf       Whitewash J\nWhitewash  Ib  a valuable disinlec-f\ntant;   lt  also   preserves   plaster   and\nwood,    and    if proporly prepared  it\nacts as a lire retardment. Use plenty\nof it.\nWashing' Dress Shields\nr-o  lukewarm  so^py   sirl^r  and\nte.ia-yoonful   of   buidiiii    s.du     when\nw.'o'.ing    dress   shields.      lilnse    in\nwater the same lex-iperature and dry\nin ti shady, airy place.\nShe Wants to Know\n\"draco, can you keep a secret?\"\n\"yes.\"\n\"Mow I'll blame you if it gets out'\n\"Hold   on,  Clara. How  many  are\nhelping keep this gecret?\"\n* '- s).    \u00ab\nWhile the Male Sleeps\nWif&\u2014John, what Is the difference\nbetween direct and Indirect taxation\n\u25a0Husband\u2014Why, the difference between you asking me for money and\ngoing through my trousers pockets\nwhile I'm asleep.\n* \u2022   \u00ab\nThen She Can Name the Day\nDinai,\u2014Is you made all yo' 'runge-\nmc nis foh yo' weddln\".'\n\u2022sMaudi\u2014 .\\ut quite, l'se got to buy\ntrooso, an' rent a house an' get my\nin is bund a job, an' get some regulax\nwashln' work to do. An' when them's\ndone, Ah kin name the happy day.\n* \u2022   *\nSoft Remarks\nMummie\u2014Have    you    been  putting water In the Ink, Joan?\nJoan\u2014Yes, mummie. I've been\nwilting to daddy, and I wanted to\nwli.'sper something to him.\nCheese\nA decided improvement can be\ngiven to the taste of cauliflower by\nadding a cup of grated cheese to Ihe\nwhite   sauee.\nGrapefruit\nA russet grapefruit, with a spotted:\nskin, usually has a fine flavor. Mostf\nother  russet  fruits  are  not  of  the\nfinest quality. .      >\nThe   European   Workman\n<jount Kurolyl, about to set off on\nu  lecture  tour, said in an interview I\nin  Now  York:\n\"The way Europe works, in comparison with the way America works\n\u2014well, I'll tell you a story.\n\"A naturalized Frenchman from\nChicago was visiting his home town\nin Normandy.\n\" 'Aha,' he said to the mayor, a boyhood friend\u2014'aha, we have come on.\nWhat are those statues on the roof\nof the town hall?'\n\" 'Those are not statues\/ said the\nmayor. 'They, are\nWhat the Rural Weekly\nPress of B. G. Can\nOffer\nTHERE are fifty-five regular weekly newspapers ln British Columbia. They are published in a widely scattered\nfield In communities with populations of from 300 to 400 to\none of 10,000. Sixteen are published in communities of leas\nthan 1000 population; fifteen in communities of 1000 to 2000\npopulation; seven In communities of 4000 to 5000; four in\ncommunities over 5000 to 10,000. Then weeklies appeal to\n145,000 of British Columbia's population. The news in these\nnewspapers Is mostly all local, because tbat is what interests the readers, and the advertisements for the most part\ntell what local merchants are doing. The country editor\nknows the people he serves; they are farmers, lumbermen, miners, fishermen, prospectors, laborers, all. It is estimated that the average farm family spends $2000 every\nyear for things which are not necessary to raise crops. Tht\ntotal sum that is spent by farmers ln the United States for\nthose things with which to live well la the appaling stun of\nthirteen billion dollars. Seventy-two per cent, of all automobiles sold go to people living ln towns and comunitles of\nless than 5001) population. Using the same proportionate\nfigures to estimate the buying power of the rural population of British Columbia served by the weekly newspapers\nof the province, and we have something like 10,000 automobiles purchased by residents of the province ln towns and\ncommunities of less than 5000 population, and $6,000,000\nspent every year by these rural families for things which\nare not necessary to raise cops. If one is inclined to think\nthat only a few people, and an insignificant few at that,\nlive in country communities served by the weekly newspapers let him study these, figures or consult the last census statistics.\nCloser Cooperation  Between Rural and\nIndustrial British Columbia\nli ..  J  .   J      Mill.      . .11    l\n V\ni\nOutstanding Value\u2014Always\n\"SAIAM\nTEA\n\"Fr\u00abh from thc Gardens\"\nGENERAL NEWS\ndrain shipments tnrough the\nport of Halifax were nearly 400,-\nOWi binlipls s r oaf or In 1931 than\nIn J Ulio. Plgures for the two years\nure: 11)30. Til,005 bushels; 1931,\n1.12H.7S7 bushels.\nGold production from Northern\nOniurio mines In 1931 Is estimated to bai.. a value of S 13.000,000.\nSince mining began 25 years ago,\nthese mines have produced to a\nvalue of $395,000,000 worth of\ngold\nexecutive, C. E. Cox,- Kelowna; A.\nH. Stevens, Summerland; H. C. Old-\nfield, Victoria; Robert Lyon, lJentlc\nton.\nThe Mountain comes to Maho-\nmei these days. University of\nAlberta glv.-r educational courses\nby radio four times a week, enabling those unable to attend in\nperson to have the university\ntaken to them.\nTotal value of all field crops\nproduced in Canada in 1931 Is\nestimated at $431,251,000, of\nwhich wheal accounts for 1108,-\n786,000. Hay and clover is the\nnext most in! liable crop, being\nput  at  $113,961,000.\nA solid block of blue granite\nhewn from the side of Mt. Sir\nDonald, in the Canadian Rockies,\nbas been shipped to New Haven,\nConnecticut, to be Incorporated\nin the new Strathcona Memorial\nBuilding now being built at Yale\nUniversity.\nThe five great branches of\nprimary industry In Canada, as\nmeasured by the latest available\nstatistics of value of production\nwere agriculture, forestry, mining, electric power and fisheries,\nwith the first having a production\ngreater than all the four others\ncombined.\nOut for the B. W. Beatty midwinter golf championship trophy\nto be fought for over the links of\nthe Royal Colwood Golf Course,\nFebruary 22-27, leading amateurs\nfrom Seattle have notified their\nintention to compete. t_st year's\ncup winners from Victoria will\nalso tee off and there will be\nstrong contingents from Vancouver and the Prnlrie Provinces as\nfar east as Winnipeg.\nWho is the Canadian Pacific\npensioner with the longest service record? A controversy recently raging has been ended by\nthe official statement that John\nCaesar, of Vancouver, Is the\n\"grand otd man\" of the company,\nwith 48 years of service, closely\nfollowed hy W. J. Grant, of Hamilton, with 47. They are respectively 81 and 78 years of age.\nHighly pleased with their first\nexperience ot Canadian skl-ing\ncountry, delighted with Canadian\nhospitality and looking forward\nto future visits to the Dominion,\nthe Oxford-Cambridge skiers sailed recently from Saint John to\nLiverpool aboard the Duchess of\nYork. Matches between Canadian\nand British university ski teams\nwill probably be a result of the\nvisit.\nScience Makes\nPlants Work\n24-Hour Oay\nIVliiVV     1sj.ss.1V..\u2014sN6W    Ways    (U    Ulssjssi\ntnuUsb giow luster and uioie views usss,\n,y are ue.ng UesssiupeU uj t,s.sssucs*.\nsue   L.ojCe   iiiinisiouis   iuos.lussj   sit\nS USlssCl'S    IS    UUIllfc,    iUl*    SllssUS    lllsi     VV sSsSS\ntue  isocsscitiiies   lUos-iusc ,b uusue tot\nsstlsssssUlsy. sssisss a.sj  .iUsi.sj Ul ssssl sssssla0\nsssssy   ss.iVSI   1UUUU.\n1. iiovv 10 siat 1 em csssse auu na.si\nsi 100    wim uony nees.\n2. Tue viuj to govern \"attei'-ripsiu-\n.11s' 01 seed.\n4. now   tiie yellows\" disease Is car-\n4. masting plants worn a)4 notiio a\nuuy mm powerful artificial ngnt.\nin clsiiistiea wus>ie itoitj giowiu is\nnuiiieu, tiie inutnuie nag louuu tuut\niiuliy can ue grown ii'uiii cuti.uga 111\neas'tueu puis, ana uiuii tsujuuu unit\nwants 10 cau isi'ouus-e ins uwu noisy\nwnu.n a year.\nAuei-ripening of seeUs to luuiie\nineiu nt tor gei'imntition, sometimes\ntaisea years, owing to varying itetu-\niiuruiure \\sutcii Keeps went tatei-\nuuituy waKenuU auu put to s.eess. 111c\nuistiiuie uas louuu tuai tiue per.ou\n, can ue greatly reduced w.iu a cuu-\n[sunt tempeiaitue oi 41 uegreeu run-\nisstiheit.\n\"ine Yellows,\" or Mosaic Disease,\nuiucks peacu trees,  touacco, cucuui-\nnci'o,   potatoes,     tomatoes,     lettuce.\nopuiuuii,    corn,    sugar  oeeui, asieis.\nuuiu.uj and muuy outers,  sue carrier\nnus oueu louuu to ue a smuil leuiuop-\nper. lis guilt ig proved Uy a wire niesu,\n14 to tne iucu, wii.cu on tet,t Kepi, uut\nI the    ietuhopper    and  preserved  tue\ncrop, since tne leuiuoppur uies omj\n: two or three feet auove tile giouuu,\nthe fence to stop it need net ue inure\n; tnuu lour feet.\ni    slants workmg 21 hours a day ure\nI the spectacles one sees under eiecinc\nI bulus of louu watts. These lighis uie\ncarried    on   a   crone wnicn cau ue\nmoved about as desired. In addition,\none  basement has    lights    of    low\nwatts.\nSome plants, lske humans, will keep\n.,11 working. Others, like humans, go\non strike, barley, cauuage and clover\nkeep on working, but tomatoeB draw\nthe line at 17 to 19 hours a day.\nShanghai Is\nFifth City of\nThe World\nShanghai, China, on which the\neye oi tue wond are at present nv-\ne.ed owing to the attack   on   lt   by\n\u2022isiijaucoe Wur.sii.ps and airp.anes,\niias oeen ended the fifth greatest\ncit, .n the world, and world trade\n.siiidtnis have predicted that it will\n\u2014is censuiy be tii3 greatest.\nit present pupuiau n has been\n..a.ou at over two m Illoils. It .s tbe\n..iiu-ipa. iiort for uhli:.ss li, Qnullion\n..eiijilo    una    Is    the gateway to the\n-JllUlt.\nIt is s\/Uilt on the banks of a muddy\nJtreau    called     Uu   v,nutigpoo   and\nunus about fliteen uiiies oil the fa-\niiiuu.. 1 un\u201et..e-kiung. It includes s.x\nareas; tho uld C.ty, is'untaeo (SjUtb-\nern buuurs,,, chapel iriorthern sub-\n.it's.,, . outung (eastern suburb!, the\nreach cuiicu.sion and tile Interna\n.1,11m.   settlement.\ni'i.i; list lour amaigamated in 1925\n3 isieuter Shanguai.\nBnangbai is me commercial, uianu-\nlactiir ng und ranking center of tho\n.ar is..t. t. li houses the Ch.nese\n.sran-iies of uuge br.tlsb, American,\nlierzuun, Japanese and French firms\nwuo.e u..mes are Household w..rds\nthroughout the world. Besides, there\nare tue great banking institutions\nand the largo Chinese hongs (factor}\nor trade establishments,) to say noth\nlug of the thousands of small shups.\nXb# QyaojJ hjxks Sun\nmm\nbia for 1931 is estimated at a value\nof $233,874. There are 2934 apiaries\nn tbe province containing 21,409\nuives, which returned last sear 1,140-\nuuo pounds of honey. This Is an Increase of about 20,000 pounds over\ntiie previous year, and provides an\naverage of about oue and two thirds\nof a pound for ever; inhab.tant of\ndie province. It Is estimated that the\nconuumpt.on could with advantage\n.-e ten times that amount.\nSCIATICA?\nHere is a never-failing\nform of relief from\nsciatic pain:\nj They are strongly object'nf le\nBRITISH CILUMBIA\nJAM FOR THE ORIENT\nA shipment of uo cases of jam for\nHongkong and Shanghai went out on\ntha last Empress l.uer from \\ancou-\nrejr, i'hs preserve Is specially prepared for tue Chinese trade, and Is\nintended as a lri..l siiipnient for that\nmarket, It comprises strawberry, raspberry and loganberry, and if it sells\nsuccessfully should be the means of\nclearing out surplus supplies of these\nIru.ts still on hand.\nWHAT INSANITY COSTS\nIn tlie mental hospitals of Uritish\nColiimj.u there aro approx.mutely\noiiou patients under treatment. The\ncost of maintenance is statu.I to average $1.10 a day for each, and as\nthlt covers cloth.ng and all supplies,\nIt .'s said to compare favorably with\nany other province. Dur.tig 1830\nmere were 324 pul.euts discharged\neither ns recovered or sufficiently improved to be liberated. Tthe nationality of Inmates is div.ded fairly\nevenly in proportion to their number.\nIn previous occupations of patients\nhousew.ves predominated with 135.\nfollowed closely by laborers with 127\nThere were 76 given as having no occupation, 37 were farmers, 28 were\nloggers; thei'o were 13 clerks, 10 car-\npunuirs,  10 miners and 13 salesmen.\nSERVES FROZEN CORN\nI'ollowing experiments in the pre-\ntiarvati.n of fruits advocated by the\nmarkets branch of the British Columbia department of agriculture, a V.c-\ntori.', restaurant keeper bas solved\nma problem of suppl; ing his custom\nuio with fresu corn throughout the\nyear. He simply ji.acos thc cobs in\nlis refrigerator und keeps them\nthere till ready to u.;e. By keeping\nshorn constantly chilied and using at\nnee he is able retaiu u taste of freshness after long keeping.\nTake Aspirin tablets and youll avoid\nneedless suffering from iciatica \u2014 lumbago\u2014 and similar excruciating pains.\nThey do relieve; they don't do any harm.\nJust make sure it is genuine.\nASPIRIN\nTSAOBHARKRCQ.\nMADE   IN   CANADA\n\\_\/liver CQlrrobep,a ,i\",-i\"r iu ^ui- tur\u00b0u\u00ab* \u00ab**\u2022* *\u00bb\nSystem of Dole\nDriving Cb miles from home, sleeping in a cornshuck bed, eatina\nstrange food and goint; back next day\nli an \"outing\" If you call it so.\norder to keep some of thase people\nduring the winter. They say that\nother winters, either from choice or\nnecessity, a number of these people\ndid not v.ork, and i.vcd well without\nbecom ng a public charge, and thk\u00bb\nwinter should not be any dlverent\nTj offset tiie somewhat ritortar\nfruit sea. on, ow ing to bulk \u2022hlB-\nments and shorter crops, there WW\nihe relief work on roads, etc., which\nthese men were employed on after\nUr-- packing season was over, so that\nthey really entered the winter season In aas K\" 1! condition tm ever.\nHow keen the resentment is towards\nthose whom the growers are eccus-\n\u25a0t; of \"gettin:: while the getting is\ngood\" can be judged by the reported\nagitation to shut them out from employment in the packing house for\nthe future.\nRADIO CROONING IMBECILE\nSLUSH, SAY8 CARDINAL\nORE  SHIPMENTS T\nSMELTER  AT  TADANAC\nFollowing is theee shipment of\nore received at the Trail smelter for\nthe period January 16 to 21, 1932, inclusive :\nBell, Beaverdell, 49 tons; Perrler,\nNelson, 103; Union, Lynch Creek, 61,\nYankee Girl, Ymlr, 66; company\nm.nes,  7726;   total,  7984.\n13OST0N,\u2014Cardinal O'Coinell yesterday took to task \"crooners\" and\npagan plays, in his address to 3000\nmen of the Holy Name society at the\nCathedral of tbe Holy Cross.\nHe said; \"I desire to speak earnestly about a degenerate form of sing.ng\nwhich is called crooning. No true man\nwould practce this base art.\n\"I like to use my radio, when weary,\nnut I can't turn the dials without getting these whlners, crying vapid words\ntj impossible tunes.\n\"If you w.ll listen closely when you\nare unfortunate enough to get one of\nthese, you will discern the basest ap-\n. peal to sex emotions in tbe young.\nI They ure not true love songs, they\nprofane the name. 1 hey are ribald and\nrevolting to true men.\n\"If you will have music, have good\nmusic, not this immoral and imbecile\nslush.'\nHONEY PRODUCTION UP\nThe honey crop of British Colum-\nPlain Fruit Salads\nA dressing for plain fruit salads\ncan be made by adding to lemon\nJuice dressing one-fourth cup ot\norange Juice and one teasp..on powdered sugar. A good add.tirn 10 1\nfruit salad Is a light spr.iu.sjiijj .:\nfinely chopped nuts.\nIgnorance is darkness, education\nlllight.\nDID YOU EVER\nSTOP TO THINK\nThat advertising through the printed page has tho necessary uttr.icti.d-\nucss and elliciencp of performance\nthat  brings  profitable results.\nHistory hus shown that continuous\nadvertisers have found success, while\nnun advertisers have always been\ntagging behind.\nLack of advertising is killing ma.ny\na business that should show increasing business instead of decreasing\nuusiness.\nl'eple have been educated to the\ntact that well advertised products a.e\nshe quality kind and thep won't buy\nany other.\nContinuous advertising of quality\ncreates u, buying demand which assures the advertiser quicker turnover.\nAnp business iu tins day and time\ncannot stand still- Progress and competition demand Unit it uinve ahead\nor go out of business.\nContinuous advertising of quality\nand service builds aud keeps the ion-\nndence of the public. Without tbe con\ntidence of tho puulic, no bus.ness can\nmove ahe.d.\nContinuous advertising Is the \"nJd-\nern way of building better business.\nIt proves to the public that the advertisers are proud of what they have\nfor sale.\nAnything wodth selling is worth\nadvertising.\nAdvertising Ig the most egective\n\u2022ell.ng help that can be found, because continuous advertising pave*\nthe wap to bigger sales.\nEvery business having something to\nshould advertise continuously so\n\u2022 \u2022 -l\"c may know who they are,\n*\u00ab\u2022'\u2022\u25a0   'fisjj are, and what they nave\nOLIViaR.\u2014Searching investigation\nof ah tlie circumstances of all persons accepting direct unemployment\nrelief lia^ been ordered and will proceed at once in an effort to find out\nto what extent the system Is being\nabused, to el.m.nato the abuses If\nany, and tu bring the guilty oues to\naccount.\nA considerable portion of the Oliver ranchers and taxpayers are far\nfrom satisfied that all receiving tbe\n\"do.e\" are entitled to it, and are In-\nsi it ng that each ca3e be thoroughly\ns fted. If some of the reports be true,\nit would appear that there is cause\nfor complaint and action. These re-\n. ports concern people with well-\ni btocked cellars, flocks of poultry, a\ncow and other revenue, and food-producing animals, with sufficient feed\nfor them; others with stucks of hay\nand other produce which they refuse\nto put on the market while the direct\nrel.ef  i5 available.\nThe fruit grower centends that the\nseasonal worker In the packing house still Waiting\nreceived considerably more from thej I'eck\u2014My wife keeps telllaf \u25a0\u2022\npacking homes than those whose i that I should have a mission ia life.\npr:duc0 made employment possible, J lleck\u2014Then apparently your sub\nIn  some  cases the grower going  in | mission does not satisfy her.\ndebt and incurring a loss while pay- \t\n.ng  1 ooii   wages to their employees. |    Why are  there no saints\nLet Him Have His VVsy\n\"livery man is entitled to his ewa\nopinion,\" said Uncle Eben, \"bat der\niiln' any use o' your puttin' yob. ewa\nidea of what de t me o' day ought te\nbe agin' dot of de gemmam dat'a rue-\nnits' de railroad train.\"\nContributed Huge Sum\nTo Assist Employment\nP-P.R. Spent more than $11,000,000 on new Branch Lines\nand station buildings and provided 351,000 days\nwork for men otherwise unemployed.   Cooperated by doing work years ahead.\nEyes of winter sport enthusiasts\nare now being focussed on the big\nevent of the season on this continent, tbe 11th annual Eastern\nInternational Dos Sled Derby to\nbe held February 22-24 at Quebec over a course of 123 miles,,\ntcrminatiti-r with the no? Derby\nBall a't the Chateau Kronlenac.\nOutstanding dog mushcrs are entered for the event.\nVICTORIA EVERGREEN\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   PRUIT\nGROWERS'   ASSOCIATION\nELECT OFFICERS FOR  1932\nVERNON.\u2014-Oflicers and executive\nof the British Columbia Fruit Grow\nera' association for 1932 are; President, B. H. Macdonald, Vernon; vice\npresident,   Fred   Cox,   Salmon   Arm;\nFRUIT IMPORT8 LAST YEAR\nIn spite of dumping duties importation., of fruits and vegetables from\nthe  United  States and other points\nlast >ear were fairly heavy. A check\nshows that there were brought into\nVancouver and Victoria from outside\npoints    approximately   14,020    boxes\nof apples and 16,000 of apricots, DBOO\nof pears, 17,000 of plums and 46,000\nof peaches.    Vegetables Imported included 108,000 sacks of   onions   and\n468,000 pounds of potatoes.    Among\nother big imports were 22,000 cases\nof cantaloupes, 36,000 boxes of grapes,\nach, tomatoes, corn and otherproducts\nof wh\/ch everyone can be well grown\nin British Columbia.\n33.000 crates of lettuce, and numerous shipments of strawberries, spin-\n4,000 miles away\n\u2014but just\n\"next door\" by\ntelephone\nTelephoning to a friend In Eastern Canada is Just\nlike dropping Ir. for \u25a0 friendly ehet with a nexMoer\nneighbor now.\nThe telephone Is ready st thls minute to carry your\nvoice across the continent, over all-Canadian lines. You\ncan put calls through to the other provinces easily, quickly, .without fuss or bother.\nYour best friend may be 4,000 miles away, but he's\njust \"next door\"  by telephone.\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO\n\u2022\"\u2022ince the commencement of the\n\u2022 1 existing economic situation the\nCanadian Pacific Railway has\nupent a matter of eleven to twelve\nmillion dollars in providing work\nfor unemployed Canadians. When\nit was apparent in the late summer\nof 1930, that certain areas of\nsouthern Saskatchewan were to\nsuffer from almost complete crop\nfailure, the Company took upon\nitself to assist the people in that\nterritory by beginning the construction of a branch line between\nVanguard\nand May-\nronne. This\nlino would\nnot, in the\nordinary\ncourse of\nevents, have\nbeen built for\nsome time,\nand certainly\nnot at a time\nwhen there\nwas no crop\navailable in\nthat particular territory.\n..    \u201e   .,   \u201e liuttheCom-\n..nasbanPaciScKy.        pany   ^^j\nto give employment to the farmers\ni-\u00bbd their teams in thc drought\nirea. The total cost of the line is\nEstimated to be approximately\n(.1,000,000, and this work is still\nl*oceeding.\n~he Dominion Government subsequently undertook considerable\n<h ->rk for the unemployment relief,\n11 id the Canadian Pacific was\n1 lied upon to cooperate. This\ns*io Company did lo the limit of its\nability by anticipating works\nVsiich would, normally, not have\nH ;en started for a number of years.\nThese works included a number of\nr.jw branch lines, the building of a\nnow station at Ilogira, some grade\nllr. E. W. Beatty\nCVairuian and President\nrevision in British Columbia, anti\nijso the application  on  various\nsubdivisions of new rail and ne?,\nrock and gravel ballast. Tbe lots':\ncost of these works were estimated\nat $11,511,000 and, according to\nagreement with the Government\nare to be completed at the end ef\nthe current year. It is true th\u00abf\nthe Dominion agreed lo pay interest for a limited period or! this\ncapital cost, but after receipt of\ntiiis interest, tlie Canadian Paciflr\nwill still have expended over\n$10,fi00,000 from its own Treasury\nin order to'improve the situation\nin tha country generally. This expenditure has been made at a time\nwhen the Company's revenues ar*\nsufTering severely as a result ol\nbusiness depression. This programme of work, undertaken in\norder to cooperate with thc\nGovernment, had given 361,000\ndays work to individuals otherwise\nunemployed u p to August 31 st last,\nand at September 14th it was estimated that approximately 100,-\n000 more working days would bt\nfurnished before the works were\ncompleted.\nAlthough tbe Company has succeeded in making substantial reductions in operating costs, it has\nhesitated to pursue its policy of\neconomy to tbe limit out of regard\nfor tho serious obligation which\nrests upon all corporations to giv\u00bb\nas much employment as possible.\nWhile protecting the Interest of\nshareholders ni. i.:r n\u00ab is consistent\nwith its duty to tl i- country, the\nCanadian Pacific lias been conservative in its application of\nmeasures which would increase ths\nnumber of unemployed in Canada.\nOnly recently, after experiencing\nvery severe decreases i:1 earnings,\nhave thoy pared d >wn their forces\nto the bare essential* necessary\nfor operation.\nPower if The Rural\nWeekly Press\nListen to what John H. Perry, President ot\nthe c American Press -^Association, has to\nsay on the influence of tha country   weekly:\n\"The force that controls this country uf ours, In the long\nrun, is the rural editor, in his capacity as spokesman for\nhundreds of thousands who live und eurn their living ou\nthe farms and in the villages and towns.\n\"It is nut necessary to take the writer's word for it Ask\nany politician whom you know. Ue will tell you the truth.\nAsk any representative nf thu Interests\u2014big city bunkers,\nfor institute, or presidents of great railroad or Industrial\ncorporation. I j\n\"The politician, if he Is above peanut size, will tell you\nthat he worries' little about what the city papers say; but\nlet even half a dozen country weeklies in bis home state\nor district open on him, and he pulls down the lid of his\ndesk at the state capital and takes the next train h me tu\nsec what it Is he has dune to make thc farmer sure.\n\"The big Businessman, if he is big enough su be entitled to the designation, will tell ynu that his businesa\nIs gaid or bad depending on how thc country people ukt\nthe way it is run, and that what llmsc country people .ire\nthinking he finds out by read ug ur having others rrsad iui\nliim. what the country papers are suyiug.'\nI*\u00ae\u00a9 Home-Town Newspaper is always\nready to Cooperate in giving Serviw*\n XHE GIlUND fokks sjlin\nI\n(Died   Oi\nat ,\u00bbsijji th\nelctasq\nJill!     t\u00abi\nin  so.'otlo  m \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u2022Iuo\u00bb<j  \u00bbit\u00bbd;\nluo-'Uh\n^rjj   boa\njasis- rl\ntsitods\nq'.i-   (I\ne*w  we  \u25a0\ndaitfi\n-ia!'-.\nisi'i\n\u2022m*\n-II   Bl    |l\n||\nIII    -..\nbeJr \u25a0.\n\u2022ra* i\nI\nteii n\nO!   Idlf\n-sin \u00ab'ii-\nBetter Business Ahead Says Beatty\nAnd Canada ia Ready to Move Forward\n.. \u25a0.- i)\nCanadian Pacific President Issues His Annual Review of Economic Conditions and\nthe Outlook for Future Development and Progress in this Country.     '\"-j-\nTown Topics\nj     ,,; .    x     \u2022\nJudge and -Mrs. J. R.   Brown   are\nvisiting ln Victoria for a few -weeks.\nMr. E. W. Beauty\nChairman and Ptaaiifcnt\nCanadian 1'acilic Ry,\n\u00bb\u00ab    Ml\n\u2022 ii al\n\u2022ilia   _\n\u25a0\u25a0  '\nBETTER business this year,\nsays E. W. Beatty, chairman\nand president of the Canadian\nPacific Railway, ln his annual review of Canadian business for 1931.\nA condensed report of the review\nis as follows:\ny \"Seriously affected by world\nconditions as\nCanada may\nappear to be,\nthere is no\ncountry of the\nsome or anything like the\nsame comparative importance in world\naffairs tbat ls\nless affected\nb a s 1 cally by\nthe conditions\nthat have\nbrought financial disaster to\ntho great nations of Europe and\nlo the United States.\n\"Economic depression has reached Its most pronounced stages in\nthose countries moie highly Industrialized. Therein lies one of\ntho reasons why Canada has experienced less dislocation than\nsome others, and is in a better\n1-osllion to legister a rapid return to normal conditions. Raving Its economic basis still very\nlargely In the development of raw\nmaterials, Canada has less distance to travel along the road to\nre-establlslrment, and there are\ncredible reasons for believing we\nhave gone some distance ln that\ndirection. Thus we say that to\nCanada the year 1931 has been ono\nof re-organization and reconstruction.\n\"The railway situation has moved into recognition as Canada's\nmost Imperative domestic problem. Its causes, complexities and\npossible solution are now being\n\u2022 probed by a most competent tribunal tl appointment of which\nat this time was an act of common\nsense and courage. The Canadian\npeople will present to an interested world renewed evidence of those\nfinalities if they give their confidence to- that tribunal and meet Its\nsuggested solutions with considerations of economic value unbiased\nby political color or pteconceived\nprejudice.\n\"The nation, Its various communities, many of Its business Institutions and no small number\nnr its individuals have in the past\nordered their affairs as though the\nway to enduring prosperity lay\nthrough extravagant oxpendltu-e\nwith lillie cr no thought of stability of lave:ti.ieut or profitable return thftrepr, -  Tims as a nation\nwe are faced with debts tbat must\nbe paid. I know of no way of\nmeeting them other than by hard\nwork and strict economy. Of\nwise expenditure leading to tbe\ncpening up of undeveloped business or lowerlng'-of production\ncobIs there can be \u00abiO Just criticism at any time, nor should the\nrailways be blamed too carelessly\nfor having looked ahead and prepared their facilites so' that future\nbusiness reasonably assured might\nbe adequately taken care of.\n\"The Canadian Pacific, for Instance, has no apologies to offer\nfor any of tbe more recent important additions and improvements it has made to Its services.\nThe \"Empress of Britain\", built\nlargely to develop a new class of\nde luxe American trade for the\nCanadian route to Europe has justified our best expectations, and\nup to the end of the world-cruise\nln April next a reasonably good\nprofit on her operations ls assured. The Royal York Hotel at Tor\nonto has also done very well considering existing conditions and\nthe need for such a convenience\nfor the traveling public ln tbat\ncity la just as great now as when\nthe announcement of its building\nwas so enthusiastically hailed. It\nIs upon such forward moves\nas these that Canadian development must ever be predicated. If\nthe original building of the Canadian Pacific had been held up until existing traffic justified Its operation Canadian national development would now be decades behind\nIts present position.\n\"Over the past year railways\nhave been more adversely affected\nby the general trade contraction\nthan has any other branch of Industry. A 22.1 p\u00ab,r cent, decrease\nln Canadian Pacific gross revenue\nfor the first ten months of tbe year\nis symptomatic of these conditions.\nThe fact that we were able to effect a 19.1 per cent saving ln\noperating costs over the same period is an evidence of the high\nstandard of efficiency at which the\nproperty has been maintained.\nOne direction ln which we were\nnot able to make reductions was\nIn that of taxes which will run\nthis wear to $7,500,000. Since its\nincorporation the company has\ncontributed over $121,000,000 to\nCanada's tax collections. Under\nadverse conditions of which an unreasonably forced standard of competition was not a small part, the\ncompany carried on Its services\nIn a manner calculated to retain\nthe confidence of the Canadian\npeople. This ls shown by the fact\nthat since September, 1930, the\nnumber of its Canadian shareholders   bas   grown   from 26,185   to\n35,775, an Increase of 9,590, bring-:\ning.the Canadian holdings up to\nover 46 per cent- of tbe total number of shareholders.\n- \"It was recently a most encouraging experience to me to go\nthrough Western Canada and witness the courageous manner ln\nwhich westerners are facing the\nsituation. Any idea that tbe West\nis giving itself up to self-pity on\nthe score tbat its future as an\nagricultural country is doomed\nshould be abandoned forthwith.\nAs a whole tbat country is not\ndoing too budly, and its people are\nfirm in their well justified knowledge that tbey are going to do as\nwell as ever ln the not too distant future. The most seriously\naffected area comprises but 20 to\n25 per cent of the West, and over\nthe remainder tbe conditions are\nat least fair to good. Great encouragement has resulted from recent advances In wheat prices, and\nsince the statistical position of\ntbat grain tn world markets ls\nundoubtedly strong, higher prices\nand a reasonably good demand\nare not unlikely over the coming\nyear. Intelligent Interest In Improved methods and lower cost of\nproduction aB well as ln the all-\nImportant matter of future diversification of farming Is general.\nThis and tbe fact tbat Western\nCanada has again shown that it\ncan produce the world's best in\nboth grain and live-stock is\nenough guarantee of that conn-\ntry's future. Eastern Canada has\nno less reason to view Its agricultural destiny with confidence.\nProduction and export of livestock and dairy products have increased and the fruit crops of Ontario and Nova Scotia are meeting\nwith excellent markets abroad.\n\"An Important Increase ln gold\nproduction, some Improvement ln\ntbe demand for lumber, an increase over the year ln the voir\nume of tourist traffic, a more satisfactory balance of foreign trade,\nand latterly a noticeable betterment ln many lines of retail business are most encouraging factors ln the general situation.\n\"He would ibe a bold man who\nwould make any prophesy as to\nwhat Is going to happen during\nthe coming year, And yet I think\nlt requires neither boldness nor\nsecond sight to justify the assumption that 1932 will, as it progresses, show marked Improvement upon its predecessor...-.\n\"It is an old saying, of recent\nyears brought much Into mind,\nthat one thing greatly to be desired ls more business ln government and less government ln bus!\nness. The period of economic\nstress has done more to prove the\ntruth of that statement than anything else could have done, and I\nfind that a large and growing\nnumber of the Canadian people\nare .accepting that fact as being\nabundantly established -by the\ncourse of economic events through\nwhich we are passing. Under\nstress of war necessities it became\nthe government's job to supervise\npractically everything economic\nthat was carried on. In many\ncases supervision became actual\noperation. The natural result was\ntbat people and institutions began\nto look to jtovernment for the Inspiration and direction which they\nthemselves could have given mucb\nbetter had they carried forward\ntheir enterprises on business principles the efficiency of which\nhave been proven through Ages of\nstress nnd strain.\n\"The success which attonded the\nflotation of tlio National Servico\nLoan should be as reassuring to\nCanadians of tlie sound basis upon\nwhich their economic affulrs stand\nas It has been to the world at\nlarge. Readiness with-which our\nipeople were ublo to absorb tho\nnew bond issue established the\nfact that a surprisingly large\namount of Canada's wealth was in\nliquid form and that the Canadian\npeople had no heslliition in placing\nit at the country's service. The\nCanadian dollar has gone considerably below par In raoat of the\nworld's money markets, tin c!'--'\not world conditions which parries\nits.own remedy In that it is calculated to encourage a more favorable balance of foreign trade. It\nhaB also contributed as an Inducement to manufacturers from\nother countries to establish factories within our borders. Since\nAugust, 1930, approximately 125\nnew Industries from Great Britain\nand the United States have been\norganized or are now ln the process of organization.\n\"Ultimate results following upon the recent British elections are\nlikely to be far-reaching in their\nrelation to Canadian economic affairs. Important extension of our\ntrade with Great Britain seems assured, and lt may 'be expected that\nthe holding of, the forthcoming\nImperial Conference ln this country will profoundly Influence the\ncourse 6f Canadian economics\nover the next few years. Tho\nEmpire will be brought to a new\nrealization of what Canada has to\noffer In the way of natural-resources and opportunity for profitable investment, \u25a0 and the country ,wi)l step once again into tho\nforefront as a land towards which\nthe most desirable class of immigration and settlement should\nproperly flow.\"\nMrs. J.  A.  Brown,\nvisiting  relatives   In\nnumber of weeks, will rffiffi ti^er\nhome in Vancouver on Sunday morning.    -\nwlu>  has  been\nthe <dtjy  tor  a\nThe Spokane Adanacs played the\nGreenwood hockey team on the Greenwood ice this' evening, the game, resulting in a victory for Greenwood by\na score of 8 to 1.     ; \"\nI    \u25a0     \u25a0   . i\nRaymond Dlnsmore bf this city is\nspending a few dayi with his cousins\nn Trail this week, j\n\u2014o\u2014 :        is   j\nTiter Hansen tuiil'Jl. H. Burn's\nwore two of the good Scotchmen, who\nattended the Burns banquet last\ni>. - i. whose names were \"hot sricluded\nIn the lin the list of names as being\npresent. We have a'aiukjialoB thkt';\nthere were half a dozen others who\nfulled to bo recorded owing to their\ntimidity\nCITY GKOCEKY\nY     .\nFor Staple and Fancy Groceries.\n>     \u2022     Prices Right.\nTry our Bulk Teas and Coffees.\nVHStieZS\nnV\n\"Service and Quaiii v\"|\nn   \u2022\nA VG-si'AGf\nREGULATOR\nWill keep your. Receiver' operating, at . the- correct voltage aud\nstive you tsuvai'al limes its cost\niu tubes. If your receiver is oui of\ndate I can put you iu u new nine-\ntube screeu-^grid Siiperhetrodyue\nIn your own cabinet. 'I hla Is the\nla Uadip.nnd fully guaawtead!1\n' : 'FRANK MOOBU\nRegistered Radio Sendee Engineer\nP. O. Box 393 Phone 181R\nAlbert  Isiizlcltu spuut\nu Nelson  this  week.\na few  days\nFrank Harttiiger mudo a business\ntrip  lo  Xolson  on   Wednesday.\n\u2014o\u2014 ;        \u25a0\u2022\nTlie Spokane Adauaes will play tlio\nGrand Forks Junior hockey team a\nmatch game on the local Ice tomor-\nl'.v nig'il.\n\u2014o\u2014\nTlio    ln-1,.1.,     and    II\".    \" Bcav.irs\nplayed a ho-tlmy game at the rlnkon\nWednesday evening. Indians 5, Beuv-\ners 2.\n.! W. Pyrah returned home on Saturday from it trsp to the coast.\nMr, and Mrs. Percy Jones of Seattle were visitors in the city the first\nof the week.\nTnonias A. Temple of Tjrall was\nin the city on Tuesday.\n\u2022 Si',\nM. L. Lindsay of Nelson was a\nGrand Forks visitor on Monday.\nDOiALOSiJ\nS:\nGROCKltY\nPHONE N\n'\n1\n\u25a0\n\u00a3. G. Henniger 0\n\u00abar!A,l\\   HAt\nFLOUR  AND  FEED\nUME AND SALT\nCEMENT AND PLASTER'\nPOUs-TRY   SUPPLIES\n.\nj\n' .\n\u25a0\n\u25a0 :\nTRY OUR SPECIAL TEA\nat\u2122 Wo\nSHOES, SHIRT8,\nGOOD VALUES\nMONEY\nOVERALLS\nTOR   YOUR\nORAND FORKS, B. C.\n, ,, IPBOIJG!\n0]1Tl,3TflTAJ3JjlL]\nCALL AND SEE US BEFORE\nPURCHASING\nAgent\nDominion  Monumental\nAsbestos Products Co.\nWorks\nRoofing I\nBERLIN\u2014A Roman Catholic church\nnow nearlng completion at Stettin\nstands in the middle of tlie harbor,\nand the loading and unloading wharf\nfor freight ships lies at Its very steps\nA seaman's home will be connected\nwith tbe church, lt has been planned.\nBEAVERDELL\nii-,'\nTommy Crowe wus severely burned about the chest, neck and hands\non Monday morning when his clothing, on which he hud spilled gasoline, caught lire from u torch he was\ncarrying. The occurred at the Bell\nmine, where he is employed as engineer.\n\u2014o\u2014\n.Eugene Saunter of Carmi was a\nvisitor to camp during the week.\nA. J. Morrison was a week-end visitor to Greenwood, attending to his\nduties as mayor of that city.\nJohn Nordman, who has been employed by the Bell and Wellington\nmines loading ore for past few years,\nig leaving shortly to reside in Sweden. Sam Mulhern has taken over\nhis duties.\n-o-\nR. B. Staples has returned to Kelowna, after spending a few days at\nhis   property  on   Wallace   mountain.\n\u2014o\u2014\nR. TVott, who has been watchman\nat the local station for the past four\ni months, has. been transferred to Summerland.\n\u2014o\u2014\nWilliam     Youngson     returned     to\ncamp    n  Wednesday,    ofter   an ab-\nsence of t..o ..ear.:, and will be employed at the Wellington mine.\n o  \t\nMunitions Order for\nJapan Contradicted\nVANCOUVER.\u2014Placing of a huge\norder for war munitions by the Japanese government with the Consol.-\ndated Mining & Smelting company,\nTrail, B. C, was a report clrcula.nl\nIn the Vancouver business district on\nSaturday.\nTlie order, it was reported, was for\n60,000    tonsof    material, presumably\nchemicals and copper, the latter for\nuse in manufacture of shells and\nshell cases.\nVancouver offices of Consolidted\nsaid they had no knowledge of such\nan order.\nMANAGER BLAYLOCK KNOWS\nNOTHING OF SUCH AN ORDER\nTRAIL.\u2014S. G. Bias lock, manager\nof the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company, Limited, stated that be\nhad heard nothing about a rumored\norder for 60,000 tons of war munitions from the Japanese government.\nThe Consolidated plants here are\nequipped to turn out vast quantities\nof chemicals and metals that are\nused in time of war.\nNEW TRADE  COMMISSIONER\nV. it!. Duclos, newly appoin ed\ntrade commissioner at Hongkong,\nvisited Victoria this week on his way\nto the Orient He succeeds Paul\nSykes, who has been delegated to\nopen a new office at Dairec. Mr.\nDuclos was accompanied by J. Ps\nManion, son pf Hon. Dr. Manion, who\nis on his way to take the post ion of\nassistant . trade commissioner at Tokyo. While .n Victoria they consulted with the director of markets and\nother ofvcials as to the best means\nof extqnd.ng Oriental trada Afterwards they left on the Empress of\nJapan.\n_ i o\t\nTemptation has a mus.c for all ears.\nTho word \"attic\" is geographical.\nThe architects of Attica, of which'\nAthens was tbe ancient capital,\nplanned such a storey, rising above\nan architrave or cornice, because it\nwas especially suited to their type of\nbuilding. In modern times such an\nAttica or Attic storey has been called\nan attic.\nHOLY TRINITY CHUKCH\nREV. W. J. SILVERWOOD\nRector\nPhone    - \u2014\t\n117\nHoly Communion\u2014\n1st, ISrd. 4Lb and Stli    Sundays    at\n8 a.m\n2nd Sundavs ln month at. 11 a.m.\nMorning Praver ana sermon\u2014\n1st, 3rd. 4th ana Bth   Sundays at\n11 a.i;i\nSunday 8nnoi\u00ab\u2014-\nat 10 a.m. until furtner notice.\nEvening Praver anrt swrmon\u2014\nat 7:30 axc.fitii. tne. fast 'nunday In\ni-aeh mouth   wnen mvnninar service\nis held ln thfl Parl,,h nr Ke\",e Val'\nley.\nSecond Street, Grand Forks, B. C.\n\u25a0', 4U \u2022,,:\nDEALERS IN TUB\nSEW ESSEX CHALLENGER\nTHE BBST CAR ON THE MARKET FOR THB MONBY\n\u25a0\u2022\nRare bargains in Used Cars in good condition can always be\nhad at uiy Garage.\nEfficient Repair Work\nUnion and Imperial Gas\nM. H. bURNS, Prop;\nCanada's First Electric Tug\nyALC HOTEL\nChicken Dinner Every Sunday fjT\\r\n5.30 to 8.30   -   -    <   -   -   -   - uv^\nROOMS AH rooms are newly deoorated, new   carpets, the best\nbeds, hot   and cold   water   day and night. Rates\u2014II a night single, *1.60\ndouble. Bit reduction In weekly rates Come and see and you will stay.\n\u25a0\n'\nHOLLAND'S FAMOUS RICHLY-\nFLOWERING DARWIN TULIPS\nOur Darwin tulips with extra long stems are remarkable for their\nlonii flw3rirt1 n^pioii. Enor mti3ly Ijrga flowers on strong stems of\nab \u00bba n \u2022 ; \u2022 isKigth. -vi liiidsiesit for beds, edges and for cultivation Ul <JOi.S.\n13 JY  CJ.AS3 .<JvV Dltti-Cr __U.\u00abI THiS DUTCH GROWER\n.\nJOHN   DONALDSON\nGENERAL  MERCHANT\nMeet Your Friends\nAt Ths-\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nPOOL AND BILLIARD TABLES\nCIGARS ANR CIGARETTES\nTOBACCOS AND PIPES\nSOFT DRINKS\nCANDIE8\nK. RUITEK & CO.\nORAND FORKS\nfransf\nransrer\nOAVI8 * HANSEN, PROPS.\nCITY\nBAGGAGE    AND\nTRANSFER\nGENERAL\nCOAL, WOOD AND ICE\nFOR BALE\nPHONE M\nESTIMATES FURNISHED\nBOX 733\nPalaceBarber Shop\nRAZOR HONING A SPECIALTY\nV\"*-\nIlllSf\nPARE,  Proprietor?\nNEXT P. BURNS'\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING '\ni\nExcalbiit 0iryintulip3 in5 colours -pink, rai.violet, heliotrope,\nysllov-lild 61 ea-ia colour aaJ aaoti colour pacted ssparately,\nPOST aaJ J Ji'\/f i<_.!:, dalivarai at your ao.m for only...\t\n$10\nay\nP.ease remit amount per money order:\n. 1 IDE Ili, HC, DUTCH BULB\nHEEMSTEED\nfeature in Canadian shipping, the\nDiesel-electric engines with which\nthe now vessel is equipped, are\nof social interest to marine\nenEinsji-rs. Each of 600 H.P., they\nare  directly  connected  to  twin\nThe first electrically-driven tug\nto be built in Canada was\niiuuched-at lnui'in,' -Que., re-\ncently, when (.lie \"I'rcs^otont\",\n\u25a0Diesel-electric tug lor the Cana-\n\u2022\"ian Pacific Cf.r and, PiiaaeuLrerj ^K.r^tJrV\"\\_pable of delivering\nVransfer Goisspimy's service !;a- liao kilowatts, each at 250 volts,\ni.ween Prescott, Ont., atid O'gdaus-1 when operated at 246 revolutions\nliurg, N.Y., 8lipped-!5ra!e!u,ly into! per lafnute.\nthe water) of ihe lit. Lawi.nee! In operation, a car barge with\nrfter the traditional bottle of I three tracks for 16 hundred-ton\ncharapa'jne had bce,i troktn-awiss i ears, -.rill bis lashed to the startler bows by Mrs. Duff, wife of j board counter of the tug which.lit\nM. McD. Duff, manssger oi the will be possible to control either\nCanadian Pacific Great - Lakes I from ite own wheel-house or frc.ni\nSteamship Service.   As a pic2eer I the bridge of the car barge.\nTHE vulue of well-\nprinted, neat' arnicar\niiij; Stationery as a\nmeans Of getting and\nholding desirable bus\nlness haa been amply demonstrated. Try\nThe Sun for' Good\nPrinting.\nWE PRINT\u2014\nWedding Invitations\nDance Programs\nBusiness Cards\nVlsitln Cards\nShipping Tags\nLetterheads    -\n, Statements\n' Noteheads\nBillheads\nPamphlets\nPrice Lists\nEnvelopes\ni Circulars\n, Dodgers.\nPosters\nMenus\nEtc.\nLatest  styles  Types\nSwilt Presses\nI\nHolland, v\u2122?* Read The Sun and Enjoy ttfe\nFurniture Mads to Order,\nAlso Rrspalrlng of All Kinds,\nUphol taring Neatly Don*\nR. G. McCOTCHCON\nWINNIPE8  AVENUE\nHard to Tell\nAuntie\u2014Sap,   Willie,  sometimes\nTHE SUN\nand\nColumbia   Ave.\nLake Street\nTELEPHONE 101\n-w-^\ndon't believe you know on -which s^da\nyour bread is buttered. . \u25a0.\u201e\u25a0\nWillie\u2014Yeah;    sometimes   I doa't\ntwhen you hutter it, auntie.\nSOIL  SURVEY   MAP8\nMaps of the soil survey made last\nseason    by    a special   committee  in\nOkanagan, Creston and Salmon Arm,\nare now complete and copies ara be-1\ning made for distribution among thej\nresidents of    these    districts.   They J\nshould prove useful as guides iii   he !\nseloction  of soils  particularly suited\n'\u25a0tor jibe oroduptlo\u00a3 <if .different classes j\n'Bf Trult \"trees or produce; and will J\nalso  indicate   .what lands  are, besl|\nfitted for irrigation.\nar-w\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_1932_02_05","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\/1.0407199","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 1929-05-65","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":"1932-02-05 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":"1932-02-05 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":""}]}