{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"95c12419-3f28-4d16-89c6-7d7522ec0c55","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2017-01-30","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1925-05-22","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341184\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" One thorn of experience is worth a whole wilderness of warning\nOF GRAND F US\nCO-OP.\n.\ntzjknd KETTLE VALLEY ORCHARDIST\nThat there is a brighter fu\nlure in siore for the fruit\ngrowers of this province, was\npredicted by E. J. Chambers,\nof Penticton, president ofthe\nAssociated Growers of British\nColumbia, Limited, in a short\naddress at the annual general\nmeeting of the Grand Forks\nCooperative Growers' Exchange and the Grand Forks\nCooperative Growers' Build'\ning company in the Exchange\nhall lust night.\nMr Chambers \" based his\nbelief of increased prosperity\non improved marketing meth\nods and on the fact that, although the 1923 fruit crop\nwas nearly double that of the\n1924 crop, the returns for the\nlatter were about equal to\nthe returns for the fortifier.\nMr. Chambers.gave a lucid\nexplanation of the agreement\nentered into by the Associated dowers with the wholesalers of the prairie provinces\nfor the marketing of the 1925\ncrop. The abandonment ot\nthe plan to sell direct to the\nretailers had been influenced\nby a desire not to ha\\ethe\nwholesalers as competitors\nand thus to keep foreign fruit\nout of the prnirie market.\nThe speaker also gave a comprehensive statement of the\ndamage done to the fruit trees\nin various sections of the province by the extremly cold\nweather. At the conclusion\nof his address, a few minutes\nwere devoted to answering\nquestions on various subjects\nfrom the audience.\nPresident Woodland gave a de\ntailed account of tbe business trans*\nacted   at   tbe directors'   meetings.\nHe also took a hopeful view of tbe\nfuture.\nManager Cooper read tbe finan*\noial statements and auditor's reports\nof the two associations. These\nshowed tbat tbe financial condition\nof the organizations ie slowly but\nsteadity improving.\nTbe following officers were\nelected:\nDirectors Grand Forks Cooperative Growers' Exohange\u2014H. B\nWoodland, C. A. 8. Atwood, 0.\nPennoyer, E. J. Hughes, T. Padgett,\nH. W. Collins; central director, H.\nE   Woodland.\nDirectors Grand Forks Coopera\ntive Building Association\u2014H. E.\nWoodland, H. A. Glaspell, C A. 8.\nAtwood, E. V. Laws, J. A Cole*\nman, T. Padgett, E. Jt Hughes.\nTWENTY-FOURTH YEAR\u2014No 28\n\"Tell me what you Know is tra\u00bb\nI can'tn-MS as well ss yoa.\"\nFRIDAY, MAY 22, 1925\nA\n-FATAL\nGUN ACCIDENT\nA gun in the hands of three\nboys came very close to being\nthe cause ot the accidental\ndeath of Roy Clark, the 11-\nyear-old son of Mr. and Mrs.\nC. W. Clark, who live on a\nranch a mile south of the\ncity, last Sunday evening.\nRoy had been sent after the cows,\nwbich were grazing on the Kettle\nValley line right-of-way a short distance south cf tbe Claik bome\nWhile engaged in driving the cattle\nhome be met the two Helmer boys,\nRupert and Harold, wttb a 22 rifle.\nAt this time an automobile hap\npened to be passing tbem, and as\ntbe boys bad no gun license, tbey\nlaid tbe weapon down in tbe grass,\nwith tbe trigger up, to bide it from\nthe occupants of tbe car. In picking\nnp the gun after tbe car had passed\nit was accidentally discharged, and\nRoy happened to be standing right\nin front of tbe muzzle at tbe  time\nTbe bullet entered tbe boy's ab\ndomen, a couple of iocbee to tbe\nright of tbe navel, aod took a glancing couise outward, but it did not\nemerge from tbe body. Wben hit,\nRoy collapsed as if be bad been instantly killed, but he soon revived,\nand witb the assistance of tbe otber\ntwo boys he managed to reach bis\nhome.\nDr. Kingston was summoned,\nand the wound was dressed. Tb\nbullet bas been probed for but it bas\nnot been found. At present the\ninjured boy is doing nicely, and be\nis considered to be out of danger.\nFROM EVERYWHERE\nAccording to the Alberta Prorh>\neial Department of Agriculture nearly a quarter of \u2022 million bushels of\noats were shipped from that province\nto New Zealand for seed purpeM\nlast winter.\nFREIGHT RATES\nTANGLE TO BE\nThe Quebec Provincial Automobile\nBureau estimates that well over 100,-\n000 automobiles will be registered ta\nthat Province during the year. This\nwill mean an increase over the 1914\nregistration of about 16,000 cars.\nThe 1924 exports of live cattle to\nGreat Britain exceed the 1923 figures\nby over twenty-two thousand heads,\naccording to the official Canadian\nreturns. Exports to the United\nStates also showed a slight increase.\nTHE GOOSE STEP AGAIN\nAn Impartial Assasr\nof the Doukhobor's Lite\n;THE WEATHER\nTbe folmviug is the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\nday during the past week, aa recorded by the government thermometer on E. F. Law's ranch:\nMax.\nMay 15\u2014Friday  83\n16\u2014Saturday   85\n17\u2014Sunday  85\n18\u2014Monday  82\n19\u2014Tuesday    83\n20\u2014Wednesday  77\n21\u2014Thursday  82\nMin.\n39\n43\n43\n49\n55\n47\n52\nInches\nRainfall 05\nFINES NOT LEVIED\nOn Saturdiy las thirty-five capes\nagainst the Doukhobors for not observing the school regulations, adjourned from May 5, when a settlement was begun, were brought\nbefore Magistrate Neil McCallum\nConvictions were secured and fines\nwere imposed in all cases. C. F. R\nPincott, counsel for the prosecution,\ngave the undertaking of the attorney\ngeneral that tbe fines would not be\nlevied nor distress warrants asked\nfor, ao long as tbe Doukhobors filled\nthe available school accommodations and observed the school laws.\nThe Doukhobors have given tbeir\nassurance to School Inspector Sheffield that they will fill tbe schools\nat present available.   .\nExperiment Makes\nRadio His lory\nChicago, May 19.\u2014Radio history\nwas written at the Great Lakts today when a message was flashed on\na dewly invented outfit from a navy\nairplane flying over the lake to Prof.\nC. M Jansky in tbe department of\neiectrical engititering at the Univer\noity of Minoesuta, \u00ablm rt plitd to it\nOfficers in charge of the experiment said tbe success marktd a oow\npage in radio history in that itis tbe\nfirst time euch a message bas been\nsent on an outfit which works without a generator and simply on dry\nbatteries.\n -s>\t\nYoung Lochinvar on the\nPavements\nNow that tbe Grand Forks elec*\ntion iti over and all tbe politicians\nand newsp-ipem have finished ex.\nhorting escb otber to use strong\narm methods against the Doukho\nborn, let tbe voice of reason be beard\nfor a moment.\nThe Doukhobor does not use our\ncity ways. He has no desire to go to\ntbe movies or to own a car. His\nwife and d iughter would not feel\nthemselves disgraced were tbey to\nappear without flesh-colored stock\nings or new clothes at Eister. Not\none of them carries a vanity case.\nThis is all very shameful, of course,\nbut far from feeling unhappy over\nhis lot, tbe Doukhobor is a happy\nman. He is not afflicted with tbe\nmania for possessing things. He\ndoes not lie awake at nights wonder\ning what will happen in case he dies\nbefore bis family grows up, or wbat\nbe will do wben the note falls dne at\ntbe bank. Wbere most of us find\nhappiness in the scramble for\nthings, he finds happiness in community of goods. He never feels sick\nat heart over tbe mnltitude of petty\nworries and envies of city life. He\nalways has his work, his bome, bis\nsustenance, and lots of oompany.\nHe thinks he has a very much hap-\npiar time than the rest of the people\n\u2014and he own to know.\nLike the rest of us, be has re-\nligious beliefs that seem odd to\notber people. Also he wears whis>\nkers. Now and tben, under stress of\nreligious emotijn, he likes to emulate the example of the prophet Ne\nhemiab, and divest himself of clothing, in tbe belief tbat thereby he\ngets closer to God. This is very em.\nbirraBuing to some readers of the\nSunday editions of tbe city news-\npipers who tbink strip-poker is a\nfunny game when played by movie\nactresses as a press agent stunt.\nAs a wealth producer and worker\ntha Doukhobor has justified him\nself. Whether on the prairie or in\nthe valleys of British Columbia,\nwherever he se ties he tills the land\nand raises good crops.   He pays his\nHe knows that it is tbe storm center\nwhere lust and rapine and envy\nlurk. This may not be a just view,\nbecause the city is also the citadel\nsnd rallying place of art and science\nand culture and altruism. But your\nDoukhobor wants to play safe. He\nis a workingman, and be contrasts\nhis lot with that of otber working,\nmen in tbe crowded centers. With\ngood reason he believes bis life to\nbe more filled with good things and\nmore free from bad things tbau the\naverage life of the toileas iu the city\nwbo are tbe prey of envy, worry\naod artificial standards of living.\nEducation, for' tbor*e wbo can\nmake use of it, is a choice and\nvalued aid. But where it can not\nhelp it is apt to be a hindrance.\nBritish Columbia at tbe present\ntime is suffering from an overcrop\nof educated people and an under,\ncrop of manual laborers capable and\ncontent to wrest a living from our\nfisheries, forests, valley and mineral\nareas.\nJudged by tbis test, tha Doukho-\nbor is a desirable citizen. He cont,\ntributes to tbe commonwealth far\nmore than he takes out of it. If he\nwa ts to educate his boys and girls\nfor farm life instead of city life, tbat\nie bis own business. In doing so he\nsb:wg himself possessed of better\njudgment tban thc people who are\nhowling to have tbe Doukhobors\nbanned, drawn, quartered and\nburned at the Btake for concluding\ntbat tbere ie more happiness in their\nsimple communal life in the country tban in swelling tbe .anks of the\nwhite-collared brigade wbo haunt\nthe cities seeking for a job.\u2014\nSaturday Tribune, Vancouver.\nFor a recent exhibition at London\nof the current fashions in drees,both\nfor   men  and for  women, lifelike I way and **\u00b0eet8 the demandB \u00b0'  lbe\nmodela-beautirui   waxen   women t\u00ab*oolleotoj. He does not flock into\nthe city io winter time and join tbe\nbreadline. He is a self sustaining\nprodueer  and  improver    of   tbe\nChronicle, cockney wit comes into ' country\nits  own   and reaches   the heights.     The point  at which be disagrees\nThere was a   carter who, observing j wjtb   the   authorities is over   the\ntbe embarrassment of a shamefaced\nyouth    struggling    along   with   a\ndressmaker's life-sice dummy in his\narms, urged  him   to \"'Urry up,\nyoung man,'er father's after youl\"\nwaxen women\nand smiling waxen men- were\ncarried to the ball. On occasions\nike  that, says tbe Loudon Daily\nThe somewhat cryptic announce\nment of the Associated Growers of\nBritish Columbia on the front page\nof this issne, received in the form\nof a telegram from Vernon yesterday, will be read by most cooperative growers with mixed feelings of\nastonishment, disappointment and\ndismay, as it seems to indicate that\nthe wholesale fruit trade has shown\nits teeth and growled, whereupon\nthe Associated directorate beat a\npusillanimous retreat from the\nvaliant attitude assumed on April\n7th.\u2014Kelowna Couriar.\nFour small wooden vessels to act\naa tugs and feeders from Coronation Gulf to Herschel Islands, ta the\nArctic, are being built at Vancouver,\nB.C., to the order of the Hudsons Bay\nCompany. They will be well powered and sheathed ln iron bark.\nThere is now only one mine ta the\nCrow's Nest Pass district idle. Between eight and nine thousand tone\nof coal are being mined there daily\nand the mines at Coleman, Blairmore\nand Bellevue are rapidly striking\ntheir stride, their output being about\nsix thousand tons.\nAlthough the chief beneficiaries\nnnder the new British preference\nproposals will be Canadian sugar,\ntobacco and automobiles, it is stated\nthat Canadian wines and silk goods\nwill also benefit te a certain extent\nIn the sugar preference an increase\nef about 25%, and in tobacco of from\na fourth to sixth has been made.\nBy a recent Order-in-Council of\nthe Lieutenant-Governor, premiums\nfor clearing land, which had previously been set at $6 an aere, were\nincreased to $8. I'he Order also pro-\nvides that the premium will be paid\nfor a maximum of twenty acres of\nland and, as a result of lt, a settler\nmay obtain a grant of f 180 from the\nGovernment aa a reward fer hia\nwork.\nThe annual invasion of Canada\nby anglers from the United Statea\nhas commenced. F. N. Peet, secretary of the Izaak Walton League of\nChicago, with other members of the\nLeague is catching salmon at Cains\nRiver, N.B., while a party of prominent newspapermen from New York\nis at Lake Archambault, ta the\nLaurentiana, ta quest of the elusive\ntrout. Mr. Peet holds the world\nchampionship for casting a fly.\nWalter Llndley-Jones, editor and\nfoundirof the Mercantile Guardian,\nof London, Eng., and an authority\nupon commercial matters ta general, recently passed through Canada\non the last lap of a journey around\nthe world, by Canadian Pacific\nsteamships and trains. Mr. Llndley-\nJones states that a terrific boom ia\ndue ta Chh-j-n as soon as hostilities\ncease there and that Great Britain\nand Canada will be the chief ben*,\nficlaries.\nA man reached the station platform Just as the 6.15 waa pulling out.\nA little burst ef speed netted him\nfifty feet In overcoming the traln'a\nhandicap, but the best he could do\nthereafter was to run a losing race.\nHe quit at the end of the long platform and returned. \"Miss your train,\nsir?\" enquired the porter cheerfully.\n\"No, my friend,\" he replied, \"Oh,\nnol I was just chasing it out of the\nyard. \"You oughtn't to -allow it\naround here. Don't you see the tracks\nit has left?\"\u2014from \"Bail Lifs,\" bf\n-Alfred Pries.\nVancouver, May 21.\u2014\nFreight rates tangle to be\nstraightened out satisfactorily\nto British Columbia; Dominion government to sign Australian trade treaty; title to\nto Sumas reclaimed lands\ntransferred by Dominion to\nprovincial government.\nThese are the three bulletins of information elicited\nfrom Premier Oliver during\nhis brief stay in Vancouver\nthis morning enroute from\nOttawa to Victoria.\nThe premier arrived on the C.N.\nR. train at 7:30 and preceded with\nmembors of his family to the Van-\ncouAer Generalhospital to visit his\nson, W. A. Oliver, \u2022--\u25a0ho recently\nunderwent a serious operation on\nbis knee.\nA-\u00bb 10:30 am. Mr. Oliver left on\ntbe Prsncesii Kathleen for Victoria.\nSpeaking of the fre'ght rates situation tbe premier declined to indicate tbe terms of the bill which\nHon. George P. Graham bas announced will shortly be tabled in\ntbe commons. He said, however,\nthat he was satisfied British Column\nbia's chief difficulties would be removed.\nHv also stated that he bad {beep\nreliably informed that the federal\ngovernment intended to bring the\nAustralian trade treaty into effect\nas early as possible.\nThe Dominion government's\npromise to transfer the title of the\nland*- in the Sumas area to tbe\nprovince upon completion of tbe reclamation scbame was fulfilled\nwbile the premier and Hon. \u00a3. D.\nBarrow were io the capital, he\nstated.\nAs to the Peace river transportation problem, he expressed the fear\nthat little result was to be expected\nthis year.\n\"They are allatsixes and sevens,\"\nhe said. \"Premier Greenfield of Alberta bas been ther for some time,\nhowever, and has interviewed every\nbody having any relation to the\nsubject.\"\nIn reply to a question Mr. Olivir\nsaid be was substantially in agree*\nment witb Mr. Greenfield's efforts.\nSpeaking of bis son's condttion.\nwhicb is giving him much concern,\nhe said be feared be would be per*\nmaneDtly crippled.\n\"Tbe best be oan hope for is a\nstiff leg, and it may be much worse.\"\nsaid Mr. Oliver. The operation was\nthe result of a bone infection arising from au old injury to the knee.\neducation of young Peter or  Maria.\nbis childien educated as if for city\nlife.   The Doukhobor fears city life.\nThe sitting of tbe county jourt\nwhich was to have been held in\nGreenwood yesterday was postponed\nuntil next Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.\nThere are more than 7000\nhospitals in Canana and the\nUnited. States and nearly\n2000 orphanges for dependents.\nWanted\u2014An energetio man to\nhandle our ptoducts in Grand\nForks and vicinity. Must bave some\ncapital. Apply I. R. Watkins Co.,\nLtd., 1150 Hamilton Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nRETRENCHMENT\nIN CIVIL SERVICE\nThe policy of retrenchment in tbe\nprovincial civil service is going on\nslowly but surely under tbe direo\ntion of the minister of finance, Hon .\nDr. MacLean. This jb being effected\nwithout having to make many dismissals, by combining offices wbere\nany official dies or leaves the service\ninstead of filling the vacancy. In\ntbis way il bas been found tbat con-\neidereble economy can be effected.,\ntbe eame amount of work being\ndone as effectively by a rearrangement of duties and by instance os\nevery one putting in a fair day's\nwork. Tbe new fiscal year come\nmenced witb about 5 per cent reduction in number of the service re\ncompared witb tbe twelve months\nprevious. Tbe cut has been made\nthroughout the whole service, but\nthe larger proportion of it has been\nin Victoria.\nTb     fire   of  genius  irtn't ajways\nable to keep the pot boiling.\nMrs.   H. W. Young and famil*,\nand Walton Young,  will  leave tt -\nmorrow   morning   for   KimVrlev.\nwhere they will be located fnr   eoui \u2022\n'uue at leant THB SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n\u00aete (Starti. Jfarka Bun\nAN INOEPENOENT NEWSPAPER\n\u20223. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\nF   SUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year (in Canada and Great Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States)   1.50\nAddress- -\u25a0\" \u00ab~---\u2014-''cations to\nThb Grand Forki Sur\nPhosk 101R ;  Gra-id Forks, B. Cj\nOFFICE:    COLUMBIA AVENUE ANO LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, MAY 22, 1925\nNotes \u2022 Notions \u2022 Notables\nIt is reported from Russia tbat the press\ncorrespondents of the soviet newspapers of\nMoscow and Leningrad are having a hard\ntime of it among the exasperated peasantry.\nThe correspondents are Bolshevik agents\nwho were sent to the villages to awaken and\nnourish communistic sentiment among the\npeasants. They have become government\nspies, who keep a careful watch on village\naltairs and report promptly to Moscow any\nfailure of the community to live up to soviet\nprinciples. The peasants, who desire to be\nleft alone, resent the activity of the correspondents, often do violence upon them,\nand have killed some of them with circumstances of great brutality. The soviet government retaliates with great severity; and\nthough capital dunishment for murder is not\npart of the soviet code, it is generally inflicted\non. those who are found guilty of killing press\ncorrespondents. The offense is regarded not\nas murder merely but as \"counter revolu\ntiouism.\"\nuse the name of relatives who have been en\ngaged to do the negotiating for them and the\nweeding out of the unsuitable, so that the\nyoung men who want to marry will not be\nembarrassed by turning down any applicant\nfor sufficient but hard to explain reasons.\nA young man once applied for a position of\nconsiderable responsibility.     The  employer\ntold   him   that   he was too young and half\njokingly suggested that he call again   five\nyears Inter.   \"Five years from now,\" said the\nyoung fellow, \"I shan't want this job; I shall\nhave a much better one.\" The words and the\nquiet confidence with which they were spoken\nso impressed the employer that a few daysj\nlater he sent for the youngster and gave him j\nthe place, in which he \"made good.\"\nMaking horseshoes has become so compare-\ntively unimportant a biisiin ss that the United\nStates Steel Corporation hni decided to drop\nit. The American Steel & Wire company, a\nsubsidiary of the steel ci : j oration, has sold\nthe machinery, stock on hand and good will\nof its horseshoe department to a Chicago firm.\nIt has been using only eighteen thousand tons\nof steel a year for lioraedti-ies and therefore\nis going to use its horseshoe plant for more\nprofitable business\nHerbs used by the ancient Maya physicians\nin South America ahd supposed to possess almost miraculous powers of curing and healing\nwill be sought by a scientilie expedition sponsored by Tulane university., according to an\nannouncement from Now Oiv-ans. Dr. William A. Gates is in charge of the expedition,\norganized as a result of statements made in\nthe Maya manuscripts which have in recent\nyears come to lighi, anr, which have beeu\ntaken somewhat seriously i>y tnuderd scientists.\n\u00bb\nA British officer who was captured by the\nTurks in the great, war gives some amusing\nextracts from the prison commandant's daily\nbulletins to the prisoners. Here is one: \"Every\nbody is obliged to neither eook food nor to\nhavo any sort of fire in the rooms where they\nlive and lie, as a very slight carelessness as\nregards fire, cleanliness and neatness may be\nthe cause of great dangers. It \u00bbs rather good\nto considsr the heaviness of the legal penalty\nthat may impend for a damage caused by a\nlack of precaution and care. It a fire starts it\ngoes. Therefore, don't smoke in bedrooms for\ngoodness'sake.\"\nA man may not be able to come out on top,,\nbut by and by his hair will.\nQueen Mary is a great collector of china,\nespecially Wedgewood and old Chelsea. Her\nmajesty has been gradually sorting and rearranging the china at Windsor, when tbe\nspecial cabinets containing it are lit up from\ninside at uight.\nUnder a new law and regulation of the\nAmerican post office department Holy Scripture manuscript for the blind may be sent free\nif it is to be given to the blind, and if it is to\nbe sold to the blind the postage is only 1 cent\na pound instead ofthe regular rates.\nFollowing a number of street accidents at\nHaney, Englang, policemen, with the aid of\nblackboards, are teaching pupils at school\nthe rules of the road.\nAn escaped luuatic at Birmingham, N. Y,\ndrove a Lackawanna flagman from his station,\nthen tilled his pipe and sat down to take\nthiugseasy until ho found he had no match.\nA train whistled. Flagging the train he asked\nthe engineer for a \"light.\" That was moro fun\nthan he had counted on, so every train was\nstopped after that while engineers and trainmen tried to make out what the \"new flagman\" was up to. But hospital attendants found\ntheir missing ward and his vacation was shortlived.\nIf the mustache is coming back,why doesn't\nit come back courageously instead of a hair\nat a time?\nBy advertising aggressively an   American\nmanufaceurer's agent in Lima, Peru.increased\nhis sales of shoe polish in that tropical  coun\ntry from 14,000 boxes in 1923 to  to 432,000\nin 1924\nIn  the  country  around Frankfort.-on the\nMain in Germany, young men are advertising\nfor wives,   ut are specifying that \"they  must\nnot be too modern.\"    Some of the advertisers\nI The Maharaja of Nepal, that remote princi\npality among the Himalayas at thc foot of\nMt. Evenst itself, has issued a decree emancipating all persons who are held in slavery\ntliere. It is estimated that there are more\nthan fifty thousand. The decree does honor to\nthe head and the heart of the Maharaja, who\nis under no compulsion to free the slaves.since\nhis printidality, though it conducts its foreign relations tbrongh a British resident, is\nquite independent in domestic affairs. The\nGurkhas, who are among the bravest of the\ntroops of Great Britain, are  natives of Nepal.\nIt is so often the little things that contribute the distinctive note to one's costume. Not\nexpensive, but just the thing to lighten the\nsomberness of a black or dark toned frock, is\na ball of cut crystal that swings from a long\ncord of black silk.\nPreach not because you have to say something, but because yoi have something to say\no4ncient History*\n[Taken Fbom Twentv-Year Old Sun Files.]\nThe Russian fleet is reported to be short of\ncoal. If Vic-Admiral liojestvensky will\nbring his boats to Grand Forks he.can acquire\nan interest in a few coal claims of the Southeast Kootenay Coal & Coke Co., Ltd., at 'a\nreasonable figure.\nTrainloads of railroad laborers are passing\nlhe city daily over the Great Northern to\nwork on the section to be constructed between\nOroville and the international  i oundary line.\nW. K. C. Manly will erect a $15,000 building on the site ofthe store recently destroyed\nby tire.\nYesterday morning work was commenced\non the big flue dust chamber at the Granby\nsmelter.\nThe total assessed value of property within\nthe city limits of Grand Forks  is  $1,200,000.\nThe midweek half holiday was inaugurated\nWednesday noon without friction.\nThe Grand Forks Lacrosse club has been\nreorganized for the season. ,\nThere are approximately 2,200,000\npersons attending school in this\ncountry. Of this number, 1,600 are\n\u2022t institutions for the blind and\nmute; 81,000 at vocational schools\nor classes; 14,000 at Indian schools\nand the remainder attend colleges,\nuniversities, subsidized and private\nschools and institutions lor training\nteachers.\n____ )\nWith \u2022 view (So arranging a new\ntrade and transportation agreement\n.between Canada and the British\n[West Indies a conference is to be\nheld at Ottawa in June which will\nlbe attended by representatives of\nthe Governments of Canada, Bermur\nda, Leeward and Windward Islands,\nBarbadoes, Trinidad, British Guiana,,\nJamaica and British Honduras.\nThe gold mines ef northern Ontario are said to have yielded a\nhigher income during the first quarter of 1925 than in any similar period in their history. Estimates\nplace the income of mining companies in the Porcupine district at\nnearly six million dollars and in tke\nKirkland District at one and a quar-\n(ter millions.\nJohn Hartney, Canadian Pacific\nHallway engineer, who has recently\n(completed his 42nd year in the company's service, was the guest of\nhonor at a banquet given by the\nBrotherhood of Locomotive Engineers on St. George's Day at Smiths\nFalls, Ont. Mr. Hartney, ia President Beatty's special engineer and\nwas presented with a gold cane.\nIn an effort to individualize the\nname of Saint John, N.B., the City\nCorporation, Board ef Trade, and\nother organizations are in future to\nspell its name out in full. This pert\nhas grown rapidly in importance in\nrecent years and in addition to being the winter headquarters of the\nfleet of the Canadian Pacific Railway, is also a port of call for numerous lines operating between Canada and Eurorr. r.s well as the\ncentre of a lnr->:n fishing industry.\nIN\nSay \"Bayer\"-Insist!\nUnless you see the \"Bayer\nCross\" on tablets you are not\ngetting the genuine Bayer product proved safe by millions and\nprescribed by physicians for 25\nyears.\nO \u2022*&>*\u2022*\u2666 AcceP* onlv *\ntJ-Xf*^    Bayer package\nwhich contains proven directions\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tablets\nAlso bottles of 24 and 100\u2014Druggists\nAspirin la ttae trade mark (registered In\nCanada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono\nacetlcacldeiter of Salicylic-acid.\nYOUNG AT 50\nDr. Legard's New Life -Tablets\nImparts to the Old and Middle-aged\nYouthf illness, Energy and Fitness, retards  mental and physical\ndecay,   thus    promoting longevity,\nPreserves  the arteries   and tissues,\nSufferers irom Deafness with its many\ndistressing accompanying   ailments,\nas Head noises, deriveal most immediate beneflt.    Calm refreshing sleep\nassured. Gloom, Depression and Nern\nvousnesa is banished under the influence of those \u25a0 Life-giving   Tablets\nWrinkles, hard  lines and' blemishes\ndisappear.    The skin becomes olear,\nlight and elastic and the complexion\nbright and smooth.    Think   of  the\nblessings of perfect   health, tbe possesion of few; the joy of a olear Youthful appearance and tingling blood, of\nlustrous hair, bright eyes and health-\ntinted cheeks; the beauty of   radiant\nlife and the realisation thai; Time has\nbeen put back Ten years to the envy\nand admiration of your friends, and\nthe unbounded satisfaction of   your,\nself.    Can you allow a golden opportunity like this to pass?   Remember\nthere are no arduous rules to follow,\nno restriction on diet, noi   are |,there\nany ill effects after. On the contrary\nit gives the entire system a feeling of\nexhaltation   with   increased   mental\nand   bodily  vigour.    Why not look\nund feel 30  at 50?    Do not delay,\ncommence   the   treatment   at once.\nYou will never regret the slight cost\nIncurred for such incalculable   benefits    The price of   these  Marvellous\nTablets including   Mail   Charges  is\n3 Dollars per bottle, dispatched  in\nplain wrapper on receipt of  amount.\nObtainable from\nDr. Lcgard's  Laboratories,\n106, Liverpool Road, Barnsbury.\nLondon, Rutland.\nPrevent Forest Fires\nCITY REAL  ESTATE\nFOR SALE\nAmplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City* within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPricesi--From $25.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms j\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be seen at the\nCity Office.\nJOHN K. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nMassey-Harris\nIMPLEMENTS\nWe are agents -for the well known Massey-\nHarris line of farm equipment. Let us\nfigure on your needs.\nA Complete Line of Garden Tools\nMILLER & GARDNER\nFurniture and Hardware\nWhat 8:30 firings\nWhen the hands of the clock reach\nhalf past eight each night the longdistance rates drop to the lowest level\never reached by them in this Province-\nThese new rates prevail until 7 a.m.\nBritish   Columbia  Telephone\nCompany\nThe Sun Is The People's Paper :y\nTHB SUN: GRAND POBKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMovie-Making in Canadian Rockies\n1\u2014-Mnctbal an Alaskan\nS\u2014A k\u00abi* bam \"Tlu\nsin Alberta.  2\u2014 A Northern villain hiding In the Rockies,\nn\" featsirtntt Thomas Melghan and screened near Banff.\n4\u2014Thomas Melghan.\nWille tt may be true that ln the\nmaking of moving pictures Canada lags a trifle behind the United\nStates, tbere 1* at least one particular ln whieh American producers are\nbecoming more and more dependant\nupon the Dominion for the proper\nproduction of their, super-f itais. And\nthat particular Is\u2014scenery.\nThey may have their stars, their\nmechanical contrivances, their experience and their wealth, but during the past few years they hare\nlearned that for sheer beauty ot\nscenery and-splendor of \"settings\",\nthe Canadiaa Pacific Rocky Mountains are unsurpassable. That this\ndiscovery wae made at all is duo\nmainly to one, Mr. Ernest Shipman.\nTwo or three years ago it occurred\nto Mr. Shipman (who has produced\nsome notable pictures in hls> time)\nthat tliere were certain spots ln the\nRocky Mountains, such as Banff,\nLake Louise, Emerald Lake and their\nenvirons, which were, on account of\ntheir singular beauty, admirably\nadapted to the production of Northern dramas. So he marshalled his\nforces, placed bis beloved megaphone securely under his arms and\nembarked, via the Canadian Pacific\nHallway, for the Rocky Mountains.\nHere, \u2022with Henry MacRae direct-\nins, he proceeded to film \"The Foreigner\" near the shores of Lake\nLouiee, with the magnificent mountains for a .background, and, for a\nstage, one of tbe most exquisite\nspots on earth. The result was that,\nnot only did he produce a splendid\npicture but that the Rockies sprang\ninto instant popularity as a setting\nfor northern dramas.\nSince then scores of other \"super-\nfilms\" have been produced and many\nvillains have paid the penalty of\ntheir foul deeds, many modest maidens have yielded to the wooing of\nstrong, silent men; many dauntless\nheroes have faced the nameless terrors of the Alaskan wilds, on the\npeaceful shores of Emerald Lake and\nthe innocent highway between Banff\nand Windermere.\nAmong the most notable pictures\nscreened entirely or in part, with the\nRockies for a background, are \"Back\nto God's JGountry\", \"The River's\nEnd\", \"The Alaskan\", \"Empty\nHands\", \"The Sky Pilot\", \"Glengarry Schooldays',, \"The Man Prom\nGlengarry\", \"The Valley of Silent\nMen\", \"Frivolous Sal\", \"Strongheart\"\nand \"The Foreigner\".\nThe chances are, then, that when\nyou sit in your favorite movie house\nand gaze in silent admiration on the\nforbidding beauty of Alaska, tbe\nhills of Shasta or the still Sierras,\nyou are, in reality, gazing at something far nearer home, not nearly so\nforbidding and Infinitely more beau*\ntlfut\u2014the Rocky Mountains themselves.\nSo, America may have her Hollywood and her monopoly of the Industry, but now that the value of the\nRockies as a place where people may\nshoot the rapids, kill each other,\nmake love, win fortunes and indulge\nin the other pleasant pastimes peculiar to mot-iedom, had been realized,\nlt is to be hoped that Canada's position in the realm of the silent drama\nwill shortly become more prominent\nthan it has been in the past\nThe Rockies are now easily accessible, there are Canadian Paciflo\nhotels at some of the most attractive\npoints, the light, atmosphere and\nother conditions are good, and there\nis no reason in the world why they\nBhould not eventually become a ver*\nitaible \"Hollo-wood of tbe Hills.\"\nSun's Cross Word Puzzl\nT75\n\\7+\nV6\n6\n7\n&\n9\n\\w\n\/2\n'7\n\/jr\n.\nua\n\\2+\n\/9\n\\2*r\n26\n*7\n26\n29\n30\n3\/         i*32\n33\n34-\nsr\n36\nw\n36\n39\nFROM EVERYWHERE\nAccording to the first weekly report issued by the Canadian Pacific\nRailway, the crop acreage this year\nwill be slightly less than last. It\nis estimated that Manitoba will sow\nabout 2,643,000 acres this year, Sas-\nketchewan 8,655,183 and Alberta\n2,721,689 making a total area of\n13,919,872 as compared with 14,-\n153,905 in 1923.\nKEY I'O CROSS WORD PUZZLE\ns>\nHorizontal\n1 Pertaining to tilling tbe soil\n11 To sew tempotarily\n12 Seeps out; comes out slowly ae a\nliquid\n12 A bov's name, ab\n14 To worry: pester\n15 Prince of Wales' rancb, ab\n18 For cleaning floors\n21 A land measure, metric system\n23 Reprove\n24 A snare.        >\n25 Spasmodic twicbing of muscles\n32 A symbol; a keepsake\n35 T i acquire knowledge; memorize\n37 For boring holes\n39 Tbe qualit; ol being   hu'iitu-illy\nsileut; disinclined to  ujnve \u00bb\nsation\nVertical\n1 To aid or encourage; assist\n2 A stick or rod\n3 Royal Society, ab\n4 Three odd letters\n5 A coin\n6 A n Ttlern water t-ird\n7 To fondle; a playtbtng\n8 Two odd letters\n9 A contraction of   \"ever,\" back*\nwards\n10 lo get sight nf\n16 A heavenly body\n17 A.path\n18 Mankind\n19 A kitchen utensil\n20 A residue\n21 iVrtttiuiiig   io    paiiiiii.^b   and\npictures\n22 And so on, ab\n2G For flavoring eatables\n27 Sop; refrain from\n28 To rip\n29 A nickname for a political party\n31 A beverage\n32 .Meaning \"three\"\n33 A woman di v >ted  to a religious\nlife\n34 U ni   to   k \u2022 p a wonan'sbar\nmat\nHow to Solve a Cross Word Puzzle\nWhen the correct letter is placi'd in tli-* wliiie spicra thi. puzz'e will\nspell .words both vertically and but (son Ul y lhe first letft- in each word\nis itidiciited by a nuinber, which reler- to tho iefintti.in listed below the\nptizz'e. Thus No I uniier the column h . .led '-lioiizontin''Hefires a word\nwhich will till tbe white snaces up in t.'io lir-r. b'nek square to the right, and\na number under \"vertical\" defines a word which will fill tho whitiTsquares\nin the next back one be ow. No letters go is the black -.pices All word\".\num'H are dictiona.iy words, Pxcept proper naiiies, Abbreviations'; sjana, in\nitials, technical terms and obsolete furms are indicated in the definitions.\nVery encouraging reports as to\nthe general agricultural outlook in\nSouthern Alberta have been received frem Canadian Pacific Agents\naround Calcary. Much more progress has been made with seeding\nthan was anticipated and conditions\nare described as either \"splendid\",\n\"fine\" or good and in every case\nplenty of moisture in the ground is\nreported.\nThe country is being beseiged by\nmoving-picture stars. Mary Pick-\nford, Viola Dana, Tom Mix, Harold\nLloyd and others have passed\nthrough within the last few weeks,\nand explored the Rocky Mountains\nand other Canadian attractions. The\nlatest is Hoot Gibson, who is bringing a large company of movie people here to film the Calgary Stampede as as incident ln a \"super\"\ndrama.\nLord Aberdeen and Temair, former Governor-General of the Dominion and Lady Aberdeen passed\nthrough Canada recently with tha\nBritish delegates to the seventh\nQuinquennial conference of the International Council of Women, of\nwhich the Marchioness is president\nand founder, at Washington. On\nthe bridge at Niagara Falls Her\nLadyship was presented with a golden key symbolic of free entry into\nth, Ualttd States.\n36 Account, ab\n38 Gills, ab\nSolution to Last Week's\nPuzzle\nld-3lUli'irigfltl*ffltl6l\na**ma h a cjuiih\nA\n1?\nD\nE\nnJHjJHa\nl\u00bb\no\nM\nA\n1?\nc\nC\nD\ni\ni\u00bb\n1\nC\na b b a ra \u25a1 m\nAhJ|\nO\nL\naIzIi\nI\n*\n\u25a0 pJi\nsK\n0\n0\nnHc\n13\nA\nbJIn\ntpi\ne>\nA\nTfTlC\nra\nY\n\\f7\\a\nn n a a a m b\nc\n1\n13\nc\n\u25a0 Hi HP\nM\ni\nT\nE\nt\nA\nR\n1\nA\no\nN\nA\nt\nO\n5\nT\nw\n1\nI\nmn^rarinnrantiH\nMOTORING IN SHANGHAI\nDr ERWIN  GREER\n(President   Greer   College   at\nAutomotive EnjrlllU\u00abinss\u00bb-) \u25a0\u25a0\nA friend of mine returned the\nother day from Shanghai, China,\nana the tale of the motoring laws\nin Shanghai may be Interesting to\nChicago motorists.\nin the first place, traffic runs\nalong the left side of the street,\nwhich is the opposite to the American custom.\nThere are so many Chinamen on\nthe streets that one would naturaly\nsuppose the law would require the\nmnlorict to drive slowly. They\nmay drive as fast as they wish-\non the contrary, it ls up to the\nCoolie to get out of the way. However, if the motorist happens to\nbump a high-class Chinaman or a\nforeigner\u2014woe unto hint\u2014for the\nlaw takes its full course and for\nsuch an offense the motorist will,\nnine chances out of ten, find himself ln Jail, and Shanghai Jails\naren't very nice when one shares\nthorn with numerous coolies.\nFew accessories are used on\ncars in the Orient, but then the cars\naro, for the most part, not worth\ndulling up. As long as they run on\nah four wheels, nothing ls done to\nthim. When repairing Ib Imperative, only that work is done which\nls absolutely necessary.\nThe roads are narrow and eon-\netmcted of cobblestones, except ln\na .-small downtown district Cars\naud tires do not last very long\nthore.\nTlte traffic officers are Stke polio, men, who stand at the main\nt-\". .\u25a0..\u2022 rs ln a sort of dejected manner and wave their hands spas-\nmo iically, flrst in one direction and\nthen in the other. Rickshas, ma-\nchines and street cars wait Impatiently sometimes while a Slke policeman settles a dispute among\nsome coolies, then, with a start,\nwakes up and sends tbe held-up\ntraffic on once again.\nilost machines dont seem ca-\npable of breaking any speed laws.\nHowever, there are some very honest to goodnesB machines on the\nstreets, driven by chauffeurs and\nthey for the most part are observant of the speed laws, or, at least,\nthey watch the movements of\nother cars so as to avoid a colli..'en.\nGasoline sells for a dollar a gal-\n]o;i, China mouey, or about fifty\ncents in gold. However, you can\nhire an automobile all day for $5,\nbnl why use an automobile when\nyo*i can have a ricksha for fifty\ncerts a day and be carried some-\nv :-e between ten and twelve\nr..   -s an hour.\nogether, motoring In the Or-\nli Isn't a very comfortable sport,\nI ,;h most of the well paid for-\ne i- :isrs own automobiles or \"motors\" as they say over there. If\nyo-*. drive outside of tbe cities and\nlie. t-G a breakdown, then your trou-\no'ri begin, for there are not many\nK- ?es ln that country.   In fact\nthe only place cars are used Is in a\nshort radius of the larger towns.\nlt is expected that the present\nyear will break all records in the\nmovement of Eastern trans-atlantic\ntravellers. It is estimated that over\na quarter of a million Americans\nand Canadians will travel to Europe\nduring the season.\nThe supply of farm hands for\nWestern farms is not equal to the\ndt-fmand and the shortage is becoming more pronounced as the season\nprogress, in spite of the large number of Immigrants coming from Europe fur this purpose.\nDuring the eight months ending\nMarch-1926, 187,798 cars of grain\nwere passed by the government inspectors for the western provinces.\nThis number has only been exceeded\nfour timet in the past twenty-four\nyears. Of the total for this year\n106,566 were on Canadian Pacific\nAccording to a statement issued\nby the Bureau of Statistics, Canada's production of commercial\nfruits for the past year showed a\ndecrease of $8,902,912 in value aa\ncompared with 1923. The total\nvalue of fruits grown in 1923 was\n$38,169,843 and in 1924, $24,266,481.\nThere has been a decided increase\nin the first quarter of this year in\nthe ordinary life insurance written\nin Canada as compared with that of\nthe corresponding period in 1924.\nThe increase in March over February was from twenty-eight te\nthirty-five million dollars.\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFORFINE PRINTING\nDO YOU WANT\nTHE PEOPLE\nTO READ YOUR\nADVERTISEMENT\nPeople take The Sun\nbecause they believe\nit is worth the price we\ncharge for it. It is\ntherefore reasonable to\nsupoose that they read\nits contents, including\nadvertisments. This\nis not always the case\nwifh newspapers that\nare offered as premiums with chromos or\nlottery tickets\nWE DO NOT\nWANT CHARITY\nADVERTISING-\nAdvertising \"to help flj\nthe editor.\" But we do fll\nwant businessadvertis-\ning by progressive business men who know\nthat sensible advertis- J\/j\ning brings results and Jm\npay. If you have some- JJJ\nthing to of fer the pub- 0(J\nlie that will benefit j^\nthem and you as well, yj|\nthe newspaper reaches Hj\nmore people than a bill JQ\nboard\nSUN READERS\nKNOW WHAT\nTHEY WANT\nard if you have the JQ\ngoods you cnndobxisi- JJQ\nness with them .J\/j\nil THE SUN: GBAND FORKS, BEITISH COLUMBIA\nFilCW ABOUT TEA SERIES-No. 8\nThe Consumption of Tea\nTea as a beverage is used in nearly every\ncountry in the world. It is estimated over\n200 billion cups are consumed annually.\nAustralia leads in tea drinking with an\nannual per capita consumption of about\nnine pounds, which means that every Australian consumes from six to eight cups of\ntea every day. The consumption per capita\nin England is 8\u00a3 lbs., and in Canada nearly\n5 lbs. In the United States, ?t is less than\n1 lb., but this is largely because Americans\nhave not been able to get fine teas until\ncomparatively recently. \"SALADA\" is considered one of the choicest blends on the\nmarket, and is the largest selling tea in\neither United States or Canada.\nNEWS OFTHE CITY\nOn Monday, May 25, the post\noffice wickets will be open from 9\nto 10 a.m. only. Mail for box-\nholders will be sorted as usual upon\narrival of trains.\nAll signs point to federal election\n\u2014next year. Hopes and tears thrt\nthe government would go to the\ncountry in the near future bave den\nparted from political circles at Ottawa.\nMrs. Gilbert Orser of tbis city,\nand Mrs. Charles Nelson of Dan\u00bb\nviile, left last Thursday lor Oroville,\nWash., wbere tbey will visit at the\nbome of Mrs. Greer's sons.it* law for\n\u2022 few weeks.\nAfter seven burs'deliberation the\nNelson jury in tbe Hanley case reported on Saturday tbat it was  unable to agree upon a verdict regarding   tbe  shooting   and   killing by\nHanley, a war veteran, alleged by\nthe   defense to   be  insane, of Miss\nMildred Neilson,a Vancouver nurse,\nin tbe hospital at Trail.   Tbe  jury\nwas dismissed by Mr. Jnstice Mur\u00ab\nphy and the cise will be laid over\nuntil tbe next Nelson assizes. ,\ncellor of tbe diocese at the opening\nof the fortieth session of thn Anglican SyDod of N;:w Westminster,\nheld iu St. Paul's Hall Tuesday\nBishop A. U. de P.saciercommented\nou the position held by the judge in\nthe public life of the city, as well as\nhis churchtnanship, and remarked\nthat the synod should be congratulated on the fact that Judge Cayley\nhad accepted the position.\nGilbert Orser haa received a letter\nfrom his son, J. A Orser, who opera\nates a large cuttl; ranch forty five\nmiles north of Medicine Hat, saying\ntbat stock in his district came\ntbrough the late winter in better\ncondition than thty for years past.\nMedicine Hat is reputed to be the\nlargest cattle market iu westeru\nCanada.\nAll free miners' certificates expire\non May 31.\nI    Frank L. Peterson has opened the\nGreenwood garage.\nJudge Cayley, of Vancouver, who\nwas a barristea in Grand  Forks   in\n.Tames  McCreath, of Greenwood,\nwas in the city on Saturday.\nJoseph  Cunning,  of  Beaverdell,\nis in tbe city today.\nissuing i*-z4 tne uanaaian *-t>-\noperatlve Wool Growers' Association\nsold 2,600,000 pounds of wool, making a total of 25,348,604 pounds\nhandled since its organization seven\nyears ago. Wool was first exported\nin 1922.\n- Filings on oil land in South Alberta are drawing near the E.P.\nranch, owned by the Prince of Wales.\nThe ranch is said to lie on a Benton\noutcrop, and portions of it may have\nbeen staked out by oil seekers before the spring is far advanced.\nCaribou are coming back to New\nBrunswick,. says the Chief Game\nWarden of that province. This ls\nregarded as a testimony to the protective methods employed by the\nguides who are fully aware that the\nbest means of protecting their livelihoods is to soc that hunting of big\ngame is not carried to excess.\n\"Relations between France and\nEngland were never more cordial\nthan they are to-day,\" said Hon. W.\nC. Nichol, Lieut.-Governor of British\nColumbia, interviewed on his return\nto Canada from a visit to France.\nReferring to his own province His\nHonor said there was every indication of British Columbia being\nswamped with tourists this year.\nLauchlan McLachlan, of Toronto,\nafter serving nearly fifty years on\nthe employ of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway has been retired on pension\nat his own request. He was presented at leaving with an embossed\naddress and gold watch and chain,\nwhich were handed to him by B. W.\nScott, superintendent of Toronto Ter-.\nminals, on behalf of his friends and\nassociates.\nThe Prince of Wales, just before\nBetting ont for Us tour of South\nAfrica and South America, took a\nlightning trip to the Wembley Exhibition grounds. His Royal Highness was especially delighted with\nthe children's section of the Park,\nTreasure Island, the main attraction\nof which is a Canadian Pacific model\ntrain in which the kiddles will \"tour\nthe Rockies.\"\nThe Canadian Pacific S.S. \"Mont-\nroyal\" docked at New York recently\nafter her second and final West Indian cruise of the season with a\nveritable zoo on board, collected by\npassengers and to be taken inland\nas souvenirs. It included 500 parrots, and love birds, several monkeys,\na deer and a Mexican tiger. Some\nof these are destined for various\ncities in Canada.\nAbout  seventy meo are working\nin the mines around Beaverdell.\npioneer days, was appointed  chan\u00ab  week in the city.\nJohn Mowat, of Vancouver, representing Canada Life, is   spending a\nA young man in a tight suit with\nsprings-bottom trousers was overheard to say to a clerk in a music\nstore: \"What jazz tune is that girl\nplaying in the back of the store?\"\n\"Thatiso'taoy tune,\" the clerk\nreplied, \"it's one of the clerks dust-\nin' off a piano.\"\nA 10-cent argument can 1 ead to a\n1810,000 quarrel.\nStoney Indians Prepare for Celebration\n1. Stoney Mountain Indians Rattmrlnft In\nthe hotel yard at Banff for the distribution of the Pow-wow prizes.\n2. An Indian encampment scene. Insert:\nThe Duke of Connaught as a Tschuni ofta\nchief.\nThese are Tschantoga or Stoney\nMountain Indians \u2014 \"people of\nthe woods''. Time was_when they\nwere a blood-thirsty lot, with a\npartiality for white men's scalps\nand an unpleasant habit of slaying anybody they did not happen\nto approve of. But look at them\nnow. Their war-like glory has departed and they realize that the\nwhite-man ls not such a bad sort of\nchap after all. Big Chief Powder-\nface is as friendly as a Rotary president, and he and his six hundred\nbraves come over every year to\nBanff, all decked out in their gala\nattire, and celebrate the burying of\nthe hatchet hy a two-day carnival\nand Pow-wow.\nThe occasion is cailed an \"Indian\nDay and Pow-wow' and consists of a\nseries of parades, sports and encampment scenes and events. It\nalways takes place on the third\nMonday and Tuesday in July, falling:\nthis year on the 23rd and 24th.\nThe Individual In tlio insert is nol,\nand never was, blood-thirsty nor fond\nof scalps. It is the Duke of Connaught in his regalia as an Honorary\nChief of the Stoney Mountain Tribe,\n'i'he picture was taken on the occasion of His Excellency's visit to the\nRockies when he was Governor-\nGeneral of t'anada during the war.\nThis year's POw-woV and Indian\nDay will be the thirty-third since its\ninauguration. After the field events,\nthe members of the Tribe meet in\nthe yard of the Banff Springs Hotel\nfor the distribution of prizes. The\nbig picture above depicts the scene\nwhich usually follows the prize distribution.\nS. T. HULL\nt Established 1910\nRealEstatc nntl Insm since\nttclrlcnt At-cut Gt'nml Forks Townsite\nCompiin}\/, l.imiieil\nFarms      Orrluird*     City Property\n''Atphi. tit Nelson, Oisljrary, \\Vih\u201elj.Cir sod\nother l'ruirt.-iinii.ts.  Vancouver Again :\nPBNDKII IN\nHATTKNBU\nTAUNTS\nI.ANUSLTI.\nKitebliEhe.l lis H'lii. we are\n[urt.lsh reliable iiiforniatso;.\ndistrict.\nWrits tar tr\u00bbe lltntnture\nx. 'lost 11 osl   lo\n'.ucer-.iiia; tills\npOR SALE_\nOne good top buggy; or\nwill exchange for good\nfresh, or to freshen shortly, milch cow.\nMRS. R. RITCHIE,\nChristina Lake, B.C.\nE.C. Henniger Go.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nBARGAINS\nGet the habit of  ,\ntrading at our\nstore\nWe have exceptionally good bargains in all our\ndepartments\nDONALDSON\nPhone iO\nDON'T MISS THIS FREE OFFER\nA BLUE  RIBBON  COOK  BOOK,\nbound in white oilcloth, which has made good\ncooks of thousands of house-keepers, who previously could not cook at all, is yours if you\nwill call or 'phone us at once.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25 \"Service and Quality\"\nS\nTHE HUB\u2014Bring your boot\nand shoe repairs to my\nshop for neat and prompt\nwork. Look for the big\nboot.\u2014GEO.   ARMSON\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\n^TOBACCONIST\nonler la\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand r*orka, B. C.\nPICTURES\n.    ANO PICTURE FRAMIHB\nFurniture  Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds,\nUpholstering Neatly Done\nR. C. McCOTCHEON\nWINNIMUAVUUB\nMDE THEBE ON CLEVELAND\nIT brings the whole country for miles around within easy reach.\nHave you seen tho new models) They're as graceful as swallows! As\nbright as now coiril As weatherproof as aduok? Automobile Steel\nBearings. Frame of English Seamless Steel Tubing. Hard Maple\nRims. Hercules Brake. Everything oomplete. Real Quality. Real\nValue.  Easy Terms. We are tlie people to mount yon right.\nJ. R. MOOYBOER 8BSSr&K\u00ab\nOpen Saturday Evenings Till 10 o'Clos-k\nOur\n\/Hobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\nTPHE value ol well-\nprinted, neat appearing stationery as\na meansof getting and\nholding desirable business has bcen amply\ndemonstrated. Consult ui before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBall programs\nBusiness cards\nVr!';ng cards\nSh'    ing tags\nLetterheads\nStatemgnta\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\n^Envelopes\n-^Billheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\n- Posters\nMenus\nNew Type\nfLatost Style;\n\u2022 Faces\nTHE SUN\nColumbia Avenue and\ng-^ciake Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nGRAND FORKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS ft HANSEN, Props\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer!\nCoal,   Wood and   Ice\nfor Sale\nOffice  at FR.  F.  Petrie's Store\nPhone 64\nYale Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specially\nShipYourCream to\nThe Kettle Valley\nCreamery Go.\nWe pay the highest price and assnre\nyou tha most accurate tost. Give your\nlocal creamery your trade.\nKETTLE VALLEY CBEAMEBY COMPANY\nA. E. MCDOUCALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nA\u00bbei|t\nbo-minion Monumental Worka\nAabraios Products Co. Hoofinft\nESTIMATES FURNISHED*\n80X1332     BRAND FORKS, B. C\nP. A. Z. PARE* Proprietor\nYALR HOTRD,    FlB8T*-*IRRl*T\nSINKS OF   ,\nUNDACTAMENDMEMS\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nVacant, unreserved, aurveyed\nOrown landa max ba pre-empted by\nBritish aubjeota ovar U raara of ac*.\nan* Iv aliens an declaring lntantlon\nto baton* British aubjeota, condl-\ntloaal aaaa residence, oooupatlon,\nand   tmaro-noMnt   for    MTrtoaltursil\nMB infer-giatlon era-seralng rcg-u-\nlattMM ngardiag pre-emptioaa la\ngiven Im Bulletin No. 1, Laad Saries,\n\"Bow to Pre-empt Land,\" eoptaa af\nwhieh aan a* obtained frae of oharge\nby tddrcsolng Ut* Departmant of\nLanda, Viotorla, B.C. ar ta aar Government Agent\nRaaavda will ba granted covering\nonlr land aultabla Iar agricultural\npurnoeta, and whioh ia not Umbei--\nlaad. Us, carrying ovar 1,000 board\nfeet ftr aor* waat ef tha CoaatRana**\naad MM faat par aora aaat of that\nnum*.\nAppUaatloa* far pre-emptlona are\nto be addriaail to the Laad Com-\nmlaaioaar ef the Land Recording Dl-\nvision, in whieh tha land applied (ar\nla -tftuated, and are maas on printed\nforma, oopbas ef whieh ean be ob-\ntalaed teem the Land Oammlaaloner.\nPre-emptlona muat be occupied for\nOre fasts aad Improvementa mad*\nto value of $10 per aore, Inoludlng\nclearing aan cultivating at leaat five\nbefare a Crown Grant can be\nreoelved.\nfor mote detailed Infers itloa aaa\nthe   Bulletin    \"How    to    Fre-empt\nPUROHASE\nApplications ara reoelved for ptj-\noheee of vaoant and unreserved\nOrawn lamia, not being tlmberland,\nfar agricultural purposes; minimum\nprioe of flrat-olaaa (arable) land la II\npar acre, and aeoond-olaas (graslng)\nlaad M.50 per acre. Further Information regarding purohaaa or leaae\nof Grown landa la given in Bulletin\nMe. 10, Land Barlee, \"Furohaae aad\nLeaae of Crown Lands.\"\nKill, factory, or induatrial alta* on\n\u25a0ed,\npayment\ntimber laad, not exceeding 40 acre*,\nma\/ be purehaaed or leaaed, the con-\nItnea*      inoludlng\n\u2022 HOMUITI LIASES\nUaaarreyad areaa, net exceeding M\naor**, mar be leaaed aa homeaitea,\nooadltlonal upon a dwelling being\nerected ln the drat rear, title being\nobtainable after reildenoe and improvement oondltlona ara fulfilled\nand land hi\nLIASES\nTor graaing and   Induatrial    pur-\npoeee areaa not exoeedlng 040 aorta\nmay be leaaed br ona person ar a\nGRAZING\nUnder the Oraalng Aot _\nine* la divided Into grating i\t\naad tha range admlnlatered under a\nChasing Commissioner. Annual\ngraaing permits ara Iaaued baaed on\nnumbers ranged, priority being given\ntd established owners. Stook-owners\nmar form aeeocl&tlons for range\nmanagement Free, or partially free,\ni.nrmlta are available   for    aattlera,\nimpei-s   aad   tr-velles-a,   up   to  tea","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1925_05_22","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0341184","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.031111","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-118.439167","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Titled The Evening Sun from 1902-01-02 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-09-20 to 1929-05-10","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Grand Forks, B.C. : G.A. Evans","@language":"en"}],"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\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1925-05-22 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1925-05-22 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0341184"}