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C, Tuesday, September 22, 1903\nW   No. 93\nENTHUSIASTIC\nThe Liberal Rally Last Saturday Night\nGauged the Political Wind.\nCandidate Clement, Duncan Ross and W. A. Galliher, MP.,\nEnunciate Liberal Principles\u2014Sweeping\non to Victory.\nWhile the Conservatives lost week\nand this are bobbing in and out the\nfence corners to sec what's going on\nin the open, the success of their\ncandidate depending on undercover\nmanipulation of government machinery, the Liberal candidate has\nissued his manifesto and comes before the voters of his constituency in\nmanly earnestness to tell the people\nwhere he stands, what he proposes to\ndo to assist in relieving the people\nof thc crushing burdens of taxation\nwhich Conservative misgoveminent\nhas heaped upon them, and from\nthe public rostrum is declaring himself on vital issues touching the interests of the masses. Just compare\nthis course with the obscure methods\nof the Conservatives. Mr. Fraser,\nin keeping witli his party's undercover practices, finds himself at sea\nwithout any purpose or intent, save\nto hoodwink the voters by whispered\npromises\u2014no manifesto no platform\ndeclarations.\nSaturday night the Liberals held\nanother rousing meeting at Biden\nhall, and a large and attentive audience greeted the speakers, W. H. P.\nClement, Duncan Ross, R. B. Kerr,\nand W. A. Galliher, M. P. Mr. Kerr\nrepresented the Socialists.\nK. C, McDonald, chairman of the\n(irand Forks Liberal Association,\npresided, and after stating the order\nof the speakers, opened thc meeting by introducing Mr. Clement,\nwho in his usual clear and logical\nmanner, took up thc issues before\nthe voters in this riding, showing\nclearly how the Victoria Conservatives, among whom McBride bad\nbeen a conspicuous figure the past\nfour years, bad run the finances of\ntho province with a reckless indifference that had resulted In an in\ndebtcdness of (0,800,000, and was\nincreasing (hat indebtedness at the\nrato of nearly a million a year.\nAnd this appalling condition confronting us, he said, while the mining industries of the interior were\ntaxed almost beyond endurance;\neVen the poor prospector, who was\nthe pioneer anil frontier agency in\nthe development of the mineral resources of tho province, before be\ncould take his picks and packs and\nstart for thc hills to hunt out and\nbring to light their hidden treasures,\nwas compelled to pay a fine of\nS6, to fatten thc coffers of a Conservative government which, it had\nbeen pretty conclusively shown, was\nnot satisfied with these extortionate\ntransactions, but seemed determined\nto place the public domain and its\ninternal and external wealth in the\ncontrol of the C. P. R. He advocated the abolition of the tax on the\nprospector, and all taxation levied\nagainst the mining industries of the\nprovince, until such industries had\nreached a stage of development that\nreturned .profits tn   tbe   operators.\nMr. Kerr, who, according to Mr.\nMills, the Socialist candidate in\nGreenwood, is a parasite on the\nliody politic, appeared on behalf, of\nMr. Riordan, the Socialist candidate\nin this riding, following Mr. Clement\nin a repetition of thc speech ho had\nmade at Phoenix and Greenwood,\nwhich consisted mainly of statements\nrelative to the growth of socialism\nthe world over, and thc broad, humane foundation of their theories; be\nundertook to demonstrate the claim\nthat labor had lost by tiie introduction of labor-saving machinery because capital controlled that machinery, and closed with the assertion\nthat thc real cause of poverty anil\ndistress among the laboring classes,\nwas that they had been deprived\nof the ownership of the implements\nof production and distribution, and\nretircil without even suggesting how\nsuch control could be transferred\nfrom the hands of capital to those\nof labor. He said not one word on\nprovincial politics, although Mr. Clement, the previous speaker, had requested him to state the character of\nlegislation needed to relieve the-\ncountry of the ills he complained of.\nMr..Duncan Ross of Greenwood,\nwas the next speaker, who ably set\nout the reasons why the Liberals\nshould begivenan opportunity totriy\ntheir hand at conducting the affairs\nof government in this province.\nHe caused the audience to smile\naudibly when he stated that Mr.\nMills, thc Socialist candidate, had\nmade thc statement the other night\non the platform .in Greenwood, thai\nall lawyers were parasites on the\nbody politic anil bad no right to\nlive, and bad made it in the face of\nlawyer Kerr, who was present to\nchampion the socialist cause.\nHon. W.A. Galliher, followed Mr.\nRoss, in an elaborate showing in\nunmistakable clearness that the Liberal government had, in all its legislation since coming into power,\ndemonstrated its sympathy and interest in thc welfare of the laboring\nclasses; had establish a Labor Bureau had been added to the governmental departments, statistics and\nother information were being compiled and published in the Labor\nGazette, which had been cstiibliscd\nand was being published by the Liberal government in the interest of\nlabor, and when this department of\nthe government had, through its investigations in the labor field, found\nfurther need of legislation for the\nalleviation of wage-workers, the\ngovernment stood ready to enact it.\nDuring Mr. Gallihcr's remarks, a\nman named Bambury, of Phoenix,\narose in the audience and questioned\nhim regarding the report of Com\nmissioners Hunter and Rowe, who\nwere appointed to look into the\nlabor troubles in British Columbia.\nThe chairman told the gentleman he\nwould he allowed a hearing later\nif he came to the platform. He\nwent up, and started in to occupy\nthe time allotted to Mr. Galliher,\nbut was notified by thc chairman\nthat if lie wish to talk at any length\nhe would be required to take his\nturn after Mr. Galliher had completed his address, whereupon he\nsat down. Later on he was permitted to put his question to both Mr.\nClement and Mr. Galliher, which\nwas, \"Do tbe provincial Liberals endorse the report of the lahor commission, that 'the Western Federation of Miners should be suppressed?' \" Mr. Galliher said that\non that point be could only state his\nown position. The report was accompanied by a vast mass of evidence which was now in thc hands\nof the printer, and was not yet\navailable to the public It was on\nthat evidence that the report claimed to be based. Until lie had seen it\nhe could not say whether tbe findings of the commissioners were justified. But if the evidence bore out\nthe statements of the commissioners\nas to what hud oceurcd\u2014lie would\nnot say that it did, but if it did\u2014\nthen he personally would bear the\nodium of saying that such things\nought nut to be allowed by law.\nMr. Clement took lnneh the same\nground, stating that no man could\nendorse or repudiate the report until\nhe had seen the evidence; but both\nthe commissioners were in sympathy\nwith organized labor, and claimed\nthat the evidence supported their\nfindings. He said frankly and fcar-\nlezsly, that if the commissioners\nwere right in saying that the evidence showed that certain organizations were secretly controlled by\nforeign leaders who induced Canadian workmen to break their solemn\ncontracts, who ignord the constitu\ntions of their own organizations, who\ndid not disapprove of violence and\niiiitiniidatiun, and who were guilty\nof deception and concealment toward\ntheir Canadian followers, then it was\nin the interest of Canadian workmen\nthemselves that some action should\nbe taken. It was the right and the\nduty of labor to organize and light\nhard for its rights, but as to the report neither he nor Mr. Kerr nor Mr.\nBambury could form an opinion\nof any value until the evidence was\nprinted.\nHere the meeting was adjourned\namid three hearty cheers for the\nLiberal standard bearer, \\V. II. I'.\nClement, whose election the third of\nnext month, seems assured.\nMr. Fraser, dooming discretion the\nbetter part of valor, was conspicuous by his absence from this meeting.\ncal merchants, he left for the coast\non bis return trip.\nA very pleasant little social event\ntook place last Friday evening, at the\nresidence of the Rev. Mr. and Mrs.\nBetts. Some fifty friends of Dr.\nFollick gathered there to tender the\nDr and Mrs. Follick a hearty reception and welcome, on their arrival from Chicago, where the happy\ncouple were united in marriage.\nAfter many congratulations to the\nestimable bride and groom, the\nmembers of the congregation of the\nMethodist church, of which Dr. and\nMrs. Follick are members, presented\nthem with a beautiful silver chocolate set, and a pair of silver pepper\nand salt stands. Mr. Farmer and\nMi's. Woodland in a few well-chosen\nwords made the presentation; after\nwhich the Rev. Mr. Betts made a\npleasant little speech in which, on\nbehalf the congregation ho welcomed Mr. and Mrs. Follick to their new\nhome. Dr. Follick replied in a\nvery fitting manner. He said it was\nthe most pleasing surprise ho had\nexperienced for a long time, and he\nwas at a loss to find words to express\nMrs. Pollock's and bis own thanks\nto the members of the congregation\nfor tbe beautiful gifts, and hearty\nreception tendered them. Refreshments were served and games indulged in till a late hour. Dr. and\nMrs. Follick will take up their residence in the cottage next to the Rev.\nMr. Betts' home.\nMrs. K. MacDacDonald and baby\nEileen returned home Saturday from\na visit to tho coast.\nA nice sample of coke is on exhibition at the Trust and Investment\nCo.'s bank. The sample is from the\nInternational Coal and Coke Co.'s\nnew ovens at Coleman.\n0. H. Dingman, late of Winnipeg,\nMan., now representing W. ,1. McMillan & Co., wholesale grocers of\nVancouver, visited thc city Saturday\nin the Interest of his firm. This is\nMr. Dlngman's first trip into the\nBoundary country, and to use his\nown words, it was a startling revelation to him, The vast resources of\nthe country, and the lovely climate\ngreatly impressed him,\nThc Cariboo Conservatives arc so\ndissatisfied with thc party platform\nthey have issued one of their own.\nA correspondent from tho coast\nwrites that Westminster, Delta, Cbil-\nliwaek and probably Richmond will\nturn down the McBride candidates.\nJ. W. Bennett sayH the action of\nPremier McBride in sudilenlv switching the date of the elections is the\ndirtiest trick he has over known on\nthe part of any government, So think\nall honest-minded people, if they don't\nsay it.\nThe Orand Forks Sun has been in-\nereosed in size andotherwiBoiroproved,\nThe Sun is a credit to Grand Forks\nand its editor, Mr. (I. A. Evans Net\nson Economist,\nCharlie Simpson left last Thursday for a trip up the North Fork,\nwhere he will do assessment work on\nsome of his claims.\nDr. Kingston returned Saturday\nfrom a Hying visit to Fire valley, n\nmining camp about ninety miles\nnorth of Grand Forks.\nForSalb\u2014No, 2 Remington Typewriter, almost new; 1 bicycle; 1 camera; all cheap.   Apply Sun office.\nW. A. Galliher, M. P., left by the\nGreat Northern on  Sunday for Nel-\nBorn\u2014In Danville, Wash., Monday,\nSept. 21, 1903, to Mr. nnd Mrs. P.\nB. Nelson, a son.\nJ. A. Knox, of the firm of Knox\n&\u25a0 Co., wholesale and manufacturing\njewelers, Toronto, was in the city Inst\nweek. Mr. Knox is greatly taken\nwith the Boundary country, and wits\nagreeably surprised U) see the mining\nindustry so .active throughout the\nmany districts, Thc Granby plant\nwas a wonder Ui him, and he predicts\na great future for Grand Forks. It\nwas under Mr. Knox that our local\nwutcluniiker and jeweler, A. D. Morrison, first learned tho trade iu Toronto.\nAlnx Miller, lata runjrigor of t\\\nGrand   Forks  Investment it Trust\ncompany, loaves today for Seattle,\nWash.\nW. L. Wells returned Saturday\nfrom Thunder Hill mining camp.\nJ. Burtt Morgan arrived by Sunday's Great Northern train from\nEast Kootenay points.\niVreey Wihiiot returned yesterdy\nfrom Spokane and other points south.\nA. Caruthors, traveling representative of Turner, Beaton it Co,, of Vancouver, arrived iu the city yesterday.\nGeorge Ewing, teller of the U. T.\nBrnk, is acting iu that capacity in the\nPhoenix branch, during the absence\nof N, II. Slack on a vacation trip to\nthe coast.\nJ. A. Maceonahl, tbe well known\nbarrister, is the Liberal candidal-\nfor Rossland. lie points out that\nPremier McBride declines to commit himself as to any policy regarding the coal and oil lands, and say.-:\n\"A man who wouldn't say what hi:\nwas prepared to do before election,\ncould not intend playing fair afterwards.\"\nVancouver World \"The changing\nof the election date at this time cannot but be regarded in the light of n\nfraud deliberately perpetrated by the\ngovernment upon the assumption thai\nthrough it an unfair advantage luav\nlie guinisl over ihe rival political\nparty.\"\nVictoria citizens protested to the\ngovernor against tho sudden clutnge\nill the date of thc election.\nThe Evening Sun, published at\nGrand Forks, has been enlarged to\nAve columns, It is published a twice\na week and is one of the brightest\nof our exchanges.\u2014Midway Dispatch.\nThos. Gray, representing W. II.\nMalkin it Co., wholesale grocers of\nVancouver, was in the city last\nweek.   After drumming up thc lo-\nTHE MILWAUKEE\nA familiar name for tho Chicago,\nMilwaukee 4 St. Paul Railwoy,known\nall over the Union as the great mil-\nway running the \"Pioneer Limited\"\ntrains every day and night between St,\nPaul ami Chicago, ami Omaha and\nChcago. \"The only perfect trains iu\nthe world.\" Understand: Connections are made with All Transcontinental Lines, assuring to passengers\nthe best service known. Luxurious\ncoaches, electric lights, steam heat, of\nn verity equaled by no other line.\nSee that your ticket reads via \"The\nMilwaukee\" when going to any point\nin the United States ,\u201e\u2022 Canada. All\nticket agents sell them.\nFor rates, pamphlets or   other   Information, address\nR, L. Foim, H, S. Rows,\nTniv. Pass. Agt.,      Gen. Agent,\nSpokane, Wash,     Portland, (Ire. ullje iEtinmuj &un\nPtlll.lSllKI)\nKVEI'IV\nTUHKDAVAXI\nFRIDAY\nKVEXIXII\nS A'l\" ORAND FORKS, II.\n:., HV\nQ. A.\nEVANS.\nsubscription rates:\nOne year,.,.$8.00 I Tlireemontlie. ,60\nSix months..  1.00 \\ One mouth SO\nAdvertising rates furnished uu application,\nLegal notices, 10 and,r> Cts, per line.\nAddress nil communications tn\nTun Evening. Sun,\nPhone 55. grand forks, b.o.\nTUESDAY.SEPTEMBER 22, 190,'i\nREPREHENSIBLE METHODS.\nThc character of the campaign\nwhich the Conservatives are putting\nup in this riding, and throughout\nthe province, for that matter, is\na striking forshadoiv of what we\nmay expect from the McBride government should it be returned to\npower. The various largo government appropriations made for road\nand trail purpose have been lavishly\nsquandered for individual benefit by\nthe Conservative clique of which he\nis a shining light. Thc McBride\ngovernment is now skinning and depleting every reserve and emergency\nresource of the tr.-astiry department\nto further the interests of his supporters, This underhanded and reprehensible practice is in line with\nandcminently fitted to serve the aims\nand ambitions of Mr. Fraser, and\nbis lirst lieutenant, Mr. Ernest Miller,\nwhom many Grand Forks and Phoenix sports remember sadly as tbe\nreferee in the fanioiisSmith-IIawkins\nprize-light. It will be romembei-\ne 1, too, that Mr. Fraser was recently\nsummoned into the august presence\nof McBride. On his return his \"pur-\nfhiisod-for-canipaign\" organ began\nto boast of the success of Mr. Fraser\nin securing appropriations from the\ngovernment to bo applied on public\nimprovements in this section. A\npolitical scheme. Mow does it work?\nAdmirably 1 Look at tbe situation\niu Cascade ! An American saloonkeeper down there who couldn't\ngel a license to keep open longer\nwithout applying for first naturalization papers, has been allowed tho\nprivilege of handling this money\nin thc interest of Mr. Eraser's candidacy, while the farmers at Fife,\nwho are Liberals, have been begging\nthc government for years for road\nhelp without avail. When the\nLiberals held a meeting there the\nother night, those from the outside\nwere compelled ,o go to his theonly\nopen hotel in the place, where\nthey were subjected lo insult and\nabuse at the hands of the proprietor\nand mado to pay double rates for\nIhe accommodations afforded thorn,\nThis la the style of campaign\nMr. Fraser is conducting   through\nbis heelers, on tic   | pie's   money\nfurnished bim by the McBrido gov-\nornment, Up the .North Fork much\nthe same deplorable conditions exist,\nIf the Conservative methods areas\ncorrupt in oilier ridings of the prov\nince as in ibis, enormous sums of\nihe people's 111000)' ale being wasted, while legitimate needs are being\nignored.\nLiberals  are   not opposed to  the\nproper expenditure of public moneys\nfor legitimate and needed public improvements, but they do strenuously\nobject to the established policy of thc\nConservatives of handing out the\npeople's money to be used by their\nhenelnnen in keeping that party in\npower.\nworking classes. Thc fact is, every\npart of society is dependent on every\nother part. The real friend of all\nclasses is the man who recognizes\nthat wo all have to work together,\nand gives his thought anil energy lo\nreforms which tend lo fair distribution of the product of labor. We\nshould be glad to think thai by\nsending John Riordan to Victoria\nwe could make life an easy mad for\nall of us, bill neither Mr. Riordan\nnor bis spokesman, Mr. Kingsley.\nhas shown us how Socialism is going\nto do it. Vote for the candidate of\nthe Liberal party, which has boon\nthe party of reform all through its\nhistory.\nHis Worship Mayor Burrell nominated Mr. Eraser, the ( onservative\ncandidate. No doubt many voters\ncombined to Induce him to this step.\nEsteem for Mr. Ernest Miller, Mr.\nCuming's chief lieutenant in the municipal election last .January, is no\ndoubt first among the reasons that\nlead him to support Mr. Miller's caucus opponent and protege. Then the\nmen who are now behind Mr. Eraser\nwore surely very active in placing Mr.\nBurrell in tbe office of which ho now\nthinks to use the prestige, such us it is,\nfor partizan advantage. Then, those\nwho are now leading in the struggle\nfor \"good government\" in the province were of course prominent in the\ncause of moral reform in the city.\nBut the consideration shown Mr. Burrell and his close friend, Mr. Kerman,\nby the party managers, was no doubt\na leading factor.\nA wtiniiiu, a dog, mill a ivalriiil tree\u2014\nThe more you beat'oin tiie batter tlioy be\nHow different,quite, witlf Martin a.!\nMr. Fraser says the lieutenant-\ngovernor will not let Mr. McBride\nissue (be coal licences. Mr. Eraser\nmust think the province is a Russian\ndependency. If thc lieutenant-governor wore to take any such stand\nhe would bo interfering with the\npopular right to govern. His\nHonor has nothing to do with the\nmatter, it is for thc lands anil\nworks department, and the Act says\nthe commissioner shall issue the\nlicenses on the Act being complied\nwith.\nHow do you coal locators relish being told,, as plainly as if iu winds,\nthata vote for the government candidate is the price you must pay to get\nyour plain rights,' Tiie only unswer\nyou get is, Wait ! Wait for what I\nWait till the government scoops in the\nvotes of thc Grand Forks people who\nwant the licenses and the vote of the\npeople elsewhere that oppose the issue\nof tbem. Then the government, if\nreturned, would he independent of\nboth. Your only hold on the government is before election day. Alter\nOctober :i, the government will either\nb it of office or will be independent\nof your votes.\naway two blocks of coul hinds \"contiguous to Fernie,\" on the word of\nn colleague, is too generous to the\ncorporations to be endorsed bv the\ncommon people.\nSaturday noon last the legal nominations for .Member of thc Local Assembly, were made. For the Liberals\nMr. William II. V. ('lenient was\nproposed by Mr. Win. Dclahiiy, foreman laeksniith at the Snowshoe mine,\nand seconded by Edward Buckle, one\nof the most prominent and successful\nranchers of this valley; and C. W,\nGreer, merchant at Phoenix, Donald\nDunbar, rancher at Fife, and Harry\nH, Spinks, smelterman at Grand\nForks, assented to the nomination,\nDocs anyone seriously believe this\nnonsense about a railroad subsidy for\ntho Nortli Fork? Mr. McBride dare\nnot make the suggestion in public long\nenough before election to have it published elsewhere in thc province, We\nwant a railroad up the North Fork\nand will help it along, but we don't\nwant, to be humbugged.\nQuebec under Conservative rule had\nan annual deficit. When the Liberals\ntook hold the province was well nigh\nbankrupt. Now the balance is on the\nother side of the ledger: the credit of\nthe province has leaped forward, and\nadministration in every department is\nabove reproach.\nMcBrido is being seriously criticised\nby his own party papers for the duplicity he is practicing in the matter\nof the eoal and oil lands, It appears\nthe C. P. R. has him safely hound and\ngagged.\nIf you want to learn the Conservative policy you must go dow a baol;\nalley with tho candidate. Take an\near-trumpet with you, for it mustn't\nbe mentioned above ii whisper.   Hush!\nA vote for Fraser inca'is a vote for\nthe old gang, the old lack of policy\nand the old delieit.\nConic, now! What has Richard\nMcBride ever done to entitle him to\nyour support!\nWhat th;1 Liberals have done at\nOttawa thev will   repeat ut Victoria,\nHave you got vonr eoal license vet!\nThe interests of labor are safe in\nClement's bands, lie has been a\nsluilcnt of social questions, and\nwhile   he opposes Socialism, he call\nbe depended on to help along any\nmovement that promises real improvement in the condition  of the\nThe only hope for the interior is a\nstrong delegation of Liberal members\nfrom the mining districts pledged to\nturn uut the coast clique that has been\nand is now in office, Conservative\nmembers cannot do it, for they unpledged to the support of the \"old\ngang.\"   The Interior knows what it\nneeds, and^Lihcral members are going\nto Victoria in a solid phalanx. Make\nsure that Grand Fork-, is inline. Mr.\nClement will help the good work\nalong.\nPickling  Season\nDon't spoil your Pickles by buying Acid Vinegar.\nPure Cider Vinegar Pure English Malt Vinegar\nPure White Wine Vinegar\nWo have just received the lirst consignment of local\nwhea) for chicken feed.   A No. 1 quality.\nJEFF DAVIS \u00ae, CO.\nThe \"Club\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE,\nFi rst Street.\n> } Highest grade imported\nPorts, Cherries, Burgundies, Etc.\nC. C. TILLEY, Prop.\nFOR A GOOD FIT\nA Stylish Finish and\nLasting Satisfaction\nOpt Vour Clothe,\n.Made by\nW. H. DINSMORE,\nMK1ICHANTTAILOII,\nGRAND FOHKS, B. C.\nFire Insurance\nI riipresciit the following\nKi'lmhle l''ire Companies.\nROYAL, ATLAS, GUARDIAN AND LAW\nUNION AND CROWN\nItiMinint't' ('oinpiuiies,   I inn lilso iiyrnt for\n11.0. Permanent Loon and Saving* Co. <>f\nVtineiHiviT iiidI tiie U. 8, fidelity A Gimruiity\nCo.\nDONALD  McCAl-LUM.\nTelephone lit Johutoti Blb'oh\nDR. MACDONALD\nDENTIST\nGraduate Pennsylvania Collide <\u00bbt\"\nDental Surgery, Philadelphia.\nOffice in Megaw Block. ,\nPhone 138. (J rand Forks, B.C.\nW. 11   H. CLTMKNT\nJHOK D. SI']-;sck\nClement (3$. Spence\nHiirrlMtLTi, SolIcHorn.\nNotorlen. Ktc-\nBUlen Blooki <'ornor Winnipeg Avenue arid\nPint Street,\nGUAM) tfORRS, B. C.\nflAHMONY 1,0001-: No. 37.A.F.\nit A. M.\u2014Regular Commumca-\ncation First Wednesday of euch month\nat S o'clock p. in. precisely. Sojourning Brethren cordially invited to attend. Jno. UoGtJiis,\nJno. Westwood, W.M. Sec.\nGRAND  FOHKS FEDERAL LA-\nImr   Union  No.  231, AX.U.\u2014\nMeets    every    Wednesday    evening\nat * o'clock in   Federal   Union  hall.\nJan. A. Hauhis,\" Pius.\nJohn T. Lawrknob. iSec.\nMr. Clement lights hard for hi*\nclients. He uses every honorable\nmeans t<> win his cases. After October .\"{, the constituency of (.irand\nForks \"ill he his chief client and will\ncommand his whole ability nnd resource.     Isn't this worth while!\nNew advertisements in this issue:\nDonald McCallum, fire insurance; A.\nI>. Morrison, jeweler; W. H. Dinsmore, merchant tailorj Clement &\nSpence, barristers.\nTHE  MILWAUKEE\nA familial\" name for (he Chicago,\nMilwaukee i\\' St. Paul l.-iilwiiyjcnown\nall over the Union iw the great railway running the \"Pioneer Limited\"\ntrains every day and night between St.\nhud and Chicago, aud Omaha and\nChcago. \"The only perfect trains iu\nthe wm Id.\" Understand; Connections an* mudo with All Transcontinental Lines, assuring to passengers\nthe he.^t service known. Luxurious\ncoaches, electric lights, steam heal, of\na verity equaled by no other line.\nSee (hat your tlokot reads via \"The\nMilwaukee\" when going to any point\nin the United States or Canada. All\nticket agents sell them.\nFor rates, pamphlets or   other   information, address\nl{. U Fohd, U.S. Rowb,\nTrav. Push. Agt.,       Gen. Agent,\nSpokane, Wash.     Portland, Ore.\nThe Grand Forks hotel, the oldest\nhotel in the city, lias a capacity\nfor 70 people. Everything tip to\ndate.    Rates, $1 and $i.50 per day.\nL.   P. ECKSTEIN\nBARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.\nMolllireON Ili.ooK, GIUSl) FOHKS. B.C.\nBICYCLES\u2014Clevelands, Maiune-\nHarris, Imperials, Columbias, Ramblers\u2014all top-notchers\u2014for suit- and\nfor rent. Also a complete line of* bicycle sundries. All kinds of bicycle\nrepairing. Geo, Chapplk, First St.,\nopposite postoffice, Gfrand Forks, B.C.\nKlondike pool table. Only one\nin oity,   Grand Forks hotel,\nA special fl o'clock chicken dinner\nwill In: served next Sundav evening\nat the Pacific hotel, opposite the C.\n!'. B. station.\nIf you want to liny Halcyon Mineral Water call at the (irand Forks\nhotel.\nEnjoy\" Photography\" with\nLittle Expense\nStrength ami vigor come of good\nfood, duly digested. \"Forte, a\nready-to-servo wheat and hurley food\nadds no burden, hut sustains, invigorates.\nRichard is u young man, hut he is\ntoo old a politician tn mend his ways\nnow. Se would (jive us, if returnc\nto office, the same slipshod government that lias heel) handed nut tn us\nin the post    A  minister  who gives\nLADIES'\nWATCHES\nPlain gold flllml\nH.'i-y* iircu-B.vvltli\nA. D, MORRISON\nThe\n, Jeweler and 0|iil<-itu\nI. HAN 11 PORKS, 11. u.\nIf yon want all the local news,\nread Tim EvEXHCO Sin.\nFor a nice hair-cut or shave go to\nthe City Barber Shop mi Riverside\navenue.    Baths '-'\u2022\u00bb\u2022.\nSubscribe I'orTiiK EvENTNO Sr.v.\n82 pel' year.\nCHURCH DIRECTORY.\nKNOX PRESRYTBRIAN CHUROH, Orand\nPorln ,1. It. Rohertsnu, IU , pastor,\nfjorvtup. every Snndns ol It n.m, are ?|M p.\nm.iSummysol I unci Hll.li. i-l.ui. ii p. in.:\nWestminster llnlM of ('. li., Tuesday, \u00ab\nFIRST MBTflMDIBTOHUItUH Curlier Main\nauil PJttlists, J. p. Pettc, I'liHinr. Service,\nevery Hunoay ni tl n. in, uml 7,80 imii.i\netna, h tliucnt rlnsoof xht  service)\nSun,If,v   aolltlOl mi,I   llil.tr  rlllKHHl B| :\nprayer meeting every Thursday oreiihiK\nin So'oloolc. Tl ubllelai lUDjrlnvftM.\nHOLY TRINITY 0HUI1OH (Ohlinh \u00abf Hint-\nlatiil), Grand Porhs, Henry Steele, vicar-\nHnty Comutunl s a, m.j morning prayer\nnnd sermon, 0 n, m.t Sunday school, '\u25a0'\u25a0 p. ip.i\neveii.oiiu alio sermon, \"? :*t, ,,. m. All are\ncordially Invited.\nBrownie\nCAMERAS\nWork Like Koiluks,\nnnd in Daylight.\n$1 Brownies, Also $2\nWOODLAND\n&co\u201e\nSole Dealers for\nEASTMAN KODAK CO.\nN. cTWcLellan <\u00ae, Co.\ntvlKil.KSAI.K AND IIKTA1I, DEALERS Uf\nHAY, GRAIN, FEED AND FLOUR\nPhone 78        Winnipeg Ave. Grand Forks, B. C.\nAPPLES\nHomo Grown.\nThe very finest\nin the market.\nPreserving Peaches, Plums, Nectarinos, Crab Apples, Etc.\nW'c Keep the Best .Money will Buy.\n9JB2L   DONALDSON'S Clement's Platform\nA Manifesto Which Will Be Heartily Supported by All Citizens Having the Province's Welfare at Heart.\nFtlhiw Electors'\nAt the request of the Liberal Association uf this ruling l huve consented to contest the coming election in\nthe Liberal interest, While I personally regeet that the honor of carrying the Liberal standard to victory 1ms\nhas in it fallen toother and stronger\nhands than mine, it is with no misgiving as to the result ^hat I enter\non the campaign. I am in this battle\nto win, if by strenuous straightforward fighting any political battle can\nl>e won. I believe it can. What is\nneeded is united effort on tbe part of\nthe Liberals and all others who desire\nto see reform in the government of\nthis province.\nThe condition of the province 1ms\nbecome intoltrable. Blessed by Provi-\nyence with vast stores of wealth in\nmines, forests, agricultural lands and\nfisheries, British Columbia has had it\u00ab\nvery good tnrned to evil by a long\nseries of personal sectional, clique governments of men who have exploited\nthe people's property for private gain.\nWe have a population of 177,000\u2014\nmen, women ami children, Indians\nand Orientals\u2014and a public debt of\n$6,300,000, representing $35 per\nhead, or 8175 at least for each adult\nman in the province. The average\ncupt of government in the other prov\nn *es of Canada is about $ ^jier head\nper annum; with us it is seven times\ngreater, or 811.25 per head. In\nsalaries alone we pay more than $'2 a\nlead, or over 8370,000.\nEvery year we spend more than\nour income. Last year wewent further\ninto debt to the tune of #750,000\nand Mr, Carter-Cotton, a former Con\nservative finance minister, says\nthat if the accounts of the last four-\nyears were properly investigated it\nwill be found in that short time we\nhave spent S5,000,000 mora than our\nrevenue from all sources,\nThe present premier was a member\nof the assembly during those four\nyears, and he has never protested\nagainst the prodigal scale of expenditure, on the contrary, the very assets\nfrom which a fund might be derived\nto meet the costs of government have\nbeen wasted. As a minister of the\nCrown, Mr. McBride was a party to\nthe orders iu council granting large\nareas of valuable coal and petroleum\nlands in Southeast Kootenay to the C.\n}'. K.\u2014a fraud upon the legislature,\nwhioh was pjevented, not by Mr. Mo*\nMride, but by the watchful  zeal   of   a\nLiberal member, The excuse given by\nMr. McBride for  his   official   act   in\nagreeing to the grants shnws that he\nis utterly unworthy U> be trusted\nwitli the care ofthe people's property.\nHi- took ihe word of a colleague that,\nit    was   all   right.    What   guarantee\nhave we that another colleague will\nuot again hypnotize Mr. McBride into\ngiving away further tracts of the\npublic domain?\nHut when bona fide locators comply\nwith the law of the province, stake\ncoal lauds according to lhw, aud tender the price fixed by law, Mr. McBride refuses to grant the licences\nwhich the law says shall be granted to\nthose who have followed the requir\nluetits of the Act. He prefers to keep\nthe question dangling fur partisan advantage,\u2014the last refuge of a weak\npolitician. Or is it that he still hopes\nto \"deliver the goods\" to the C. P. K.T\nBy a piece of trickery quite in keeping with the traditions of the political\ngamesters with whom lie been so long,\nand still is associated, the honorable\npremier has cut short the campaign.\n\u25a0 It will lie almost  impossible for me to\nhave the privilege of seeing you all\npersonally in the three weeks left before the polling day. For this reason\nI publish this open letter in order that\nyou may know where I stand on the\nissues hefore you. It is now your\nturn to take personal part iu the government of your province. Act in the\nway you want your representatives in\nparliament to act. Vote with a tingle\neye to the best interests of our common country. As the candidate of\nthe Liberal party, 1 respectfully ask\nyour votes and your influence to elect\nrue because I believe that neither at\nthe hands of the McBride government,\nnor at tiie hands of theorizing .Socialists, will any practical business-like\nimprovement upon the past misdoings take place.\nThe Lil)eruls have had no opportunity to show their mettle in the political\narena of his province. Hut the administration of public affairs by a Liberal government at Ottawa since 1896\nis a striking example of what Liberalism in action means. National\nunity from ocean to ocean; a loyalty\nto Hritish connection evidenced in\ndeed instead of.mere lip-loyalty: a system of taxation equal in Incidence and\nin protection to home industry instead\nof a system of government aid to favored manufacturers; a determined stand\nagainst the Oriental deluge of low-\nstandard civilization; an honest etlbrt\nto bring capital and labor into harmonious working for tho g I of   all:\nenergetic workjtoward peopling the west\naud toward providing adequate transport facilities; all these and whatever\nelse tends to the betterment of the\nCanadian people are the planks of the\nLiberal platform in the federal field.\nThe same broad ideas dominate the\nLiberals of British Columbia.\nI am in hearty accord with the platform and manifesto of the Liberal\nparty in the province. When elected,\nI shall endeavor to put the principles\nset forth in them into practice. I\nshall particularly support the following principles as of Immediate interest\nto this riding\n1. The people's property, whether\nland, timber, minerals or the fisheries,\nshould be administered for the benefit of the whole people, with a view to\nlessening the huge burden of debt and\ntaxation now resting on us. Only\nthose who in good faith will utilize our\npublic property in forwarding settlement aud developing our natural industries should be allowed to acquire\nan interest iu any part of the public\ndomain.\n'X, The mining laws should be\namended and simplified after a careful\nenquiry through a competent commission. Then tinkering with them should\ncease. In the develnieiit stage there\nshould be no taxation of miners or\nmining property. Developed mines\nshould bear their share of the public\nburdens in proportion to the net output.\n'{. No further aid in land or money\nshould la1 given by this province to\ntranscontinental railway projects.\nFullest liberty should In- given to the\nV*, V.A E. Railway company to complete the construction of their line.\nAlthough I was at one time professionally employed against that company, and did my duty, I hope, to my\nclients, I am ready to support any\naction which may be deemed necessary\nto place beyond any doubt the right of\nthe V., V. & E. to build their contemplated line throught to the Pacific\ncoast. In reference to the North-and-\nSouth lines through the valleys of\nBritish 'Columbia, 1   should   support\ngovernment construction, with the\nidea of leasing the completed lines as\nfeeders to the through lines on such\nterms as will keep the province in control of passenger and freight rates and\nsecure a rental sufficient to pay the\ninterest on the cost of construction.\n\u2022I. Till' province should set the example of obedience to its own laws.\nIf under our statutes individuals have\nacquired right in the public domain,\nsuch rights should be at once transferred to iheiu.\nThe course of the government in\nreference to the coal lands of Roote\nnay shows that in their opinion we\nare governed, not be law, but by their\nwhim as influenced by the count of\nvoters' noses.\n1 have the honor to be your most\nobedient servant,\nWilliam H. P. Clement.\nW. K. C. MANLY\nit\n<\nShelf and Heavy\nHardware\nLarge Stock of Heaters on Hand.\nTu the K ectors of British Columbia:\nAt a Liberal convention, held at the\ncity of Vancouver, on the 6th and\n7th of February, 1902, the following\nplatform was adopted:\n1. The immidate red'sbribution\nof the constituencies of the province\non a basis of population, but allowing\na smaller unit, of population per scat,\nfor the outlying districts.\n2. Government ownership, Dominion, Provincial and Municipal, oi\npublic services or utilities is sound,\nand should be carried out in British\nColumbia.\n.'(. Should it be iidvis. bl I a; am\ntime to grant aid to a railway com\npany, such shall he in cash, and not in\nlaud, and no bonus of any kind shall\nbe given without definite and effective\nmeans being taken to safeguard the\ninterests of the province in the management of the road, control tin\nfreight and passenger rates, and pro\nvision made against such railway having liability against it, except actual\ncost,\n4. J unnediate construction of the\nCoast-Kootenay railway; the Caribou\nrailway; the extension of the Islam!\nrailway; a railway from Alberni to a\npoint on the east coast of Vancouvei\nisland, aud a road in the northern\npart of the province, from the coast to\ntbe eastern boundary, with an extension to the northern boundary; the\nrailway from Vernon to Midway bv\nthe West Fork Of the Kettle river,\nwith all necessary branch lines, ferries\nand connections.\n5. The enforcement of the Act now\non tbe statute book compelling the\nscaling of logs by government scalers.\n(i. That such legislation should he\nenacted as will result in making the\nlands included in the various dyking\nareas available for cultivation as\nquickly as possible and secure p.iompt\npa\\ nt of assessments when due.\n7. That the government should\nkeep In touch with the conditions in\nconnection with mining, protecting\ntlmt industry against combines and\ntrusts, and, if necessary, for that purpose build and opi-ratc siiicltersand re\nfineries. No radical change should be\nmade in the mining laws, without full\nnotice Ut all parties interested, giving\nfull opportunity for discussion and\ncriticism.\nS. As the province can only advance by the settlement within its\nborders of thrifty and prposerou\ncitizens, and as Orientals never be\ncome citizens in any prope.i sense of\nthe word, we declare it to be the duty\nof the government to discourage Oriental immigration ami employment by\nevery means within its power, and we\nappeal to our fellow Liberals throughout the Dominion to aid us iu our efforts to protect ourselves against the\nruinous competition of men having a\nstandard of decency and comfort immensely below that of civilized people,\nand who shirk every duty and obligation of citizenship which tin; law will\nallow them to escape.\n.).    The government ought to   pre\nvent the waste and Buffering caused by\nstrikes and lockouts, aud an earnest\neffort ought to be made to provide\nsome means for preventing such\n\u25a0strikes and lockouts, and we approve\nof the adoption of compulsory arbitration.\n10. The fiscal system of the province stands in need of revision. Taxation should bear upon privilege rather\nthan upon industry, and no addition\nshould be made to the debt of the\nprovince, except for public works\nproperly chargeable to capital.\n11. The retaining of theresources of\nthe province, as an asset for the benefit\nofthe people, and taking effectivemeas-\nures t >) re vent the alienation of the\ndublie domain, except to actual set-\ntlers, or for bona fide business of industrial purposes, putting an end to\nthe practice of speculation in connection therewith.\n12. The construction and maintenance of roads throughout the province, to aid in the development ofthe\nmining and agricultural districts.\nWHY GO EAST\nOver the sun-burned, sage brush\nnnd alkali plains, when you may\njust as well take a delightful, cool\nand comfortable ride through the\nheart of the Uocky Mountains in\nview of the grandest scenery on the\nAmerican continent?\nThis you can do by traveing on,\nthe Rio Grande system, the far-\nfamed \"Scenic Line of the World,\"\ntho only transcontinental line passing through Salt Lake City, (ilen-\nWood Springs, Leadville, Colorado\nSprings and Denver enroute to eastern points.\nThree daily express trains make\nclose connections with nil trains east\nand west, and afford a choice of live\ndistinct routes of travel. The equipment of these trains is tbe best, including free reclining chair ears,\nstandard and tourist sleepers, a per-\nleet dining ear service, and also\npersonally conducted excursion cars,\neach in charge of a competent guide,\nwhose business is to look after the\ncomfort of his guests. No more\npleasant and inexpensive menus ot\ncrossing tho continent can be found\nthan is provided by these excursions.\nFor additional details address .1.\nD. Mansfield, Gen, Agt., RioGrande\nLines, No. 12-1 Third Street, Portland, Ore.\nStrength and vigor come of good\nI'ood. duly digested. \"Force, 0\nready-to-serve wheat and barley food\nadds no burden, but sustains, invigorates.\nIf you   want  nil the local news,\nrend Tiir: Kvknini; Sun,\nDon't I'oiget to leave your order\nor lee with  K. Miller. Phono 64\nP\nACIFIC HOTEL\nMRS, NICHOLS & MISS BAILEY,\nI'koj'jiiktokh.\nF irst-Class Board and Rooms.\n$2 Per Day.\nSpecial Rate by the Week.\nThis dining r i i\u00ab Brat-class\nin every respeot, Tablo supplied witli the best to be found\nin tiie markets.\nOP, C.P.R. STATION, GRAND FORKS, B.C,\nHay,\nMcCallum\n&\nWright\nMining and   Real\nEstate Dealers\nLots Kob Sale in Ai.l\nParts ok thk Citv.\nChoich Uardkn Lands\nat Low Pricks.\nMONEY TO LOAN\nCOLUMBIA   ST.,\nCHAM)  IfORKS.  H. C.\n9\nSEE MAC\nFOR BARGAINS\nNew inn! Second-Hand        2\nGoods Bought and Sold        1\nSTOVES A SPECIALTY     |\n0\n\u00bb\n! N. D. McINTOSH %\ni   Cor. Bridge and Second Sta.     2\n\u00ab 0\noooooooooooooooooooooooooo\nPacific Hotel\nJ. J. MoINTOsn\nOpposite O.P. II. Station,\nPbomM. Columbia. II <!.\nG. J. HAYWARD\nCUSTOMS BROKER\nConsignments send to mo will\nbe passed Custom* and ilistrili-\nutod speedily by unexcelled fii-\neiliticB.\nFREIGHT AND III TV PAID.\nCORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.\nReference:\u2014\nEastern Townships Hunk.\nNotary Public\nReal Estate Dealer\nOFFICE IN MIXKK ROUSE.\nGrand   Forks,  B. C. BOUNDARY ORE SHIPMENTS\nThe following table gives the ore shipments of Boundary mines for\n1 !>00, 1901, 1902, 1903, and for the past week:\nWOO\nt>4,f>33\n25)7\n150\n5,840\nGranby Mines,Phoenix...\n.Snowshoe, Phoenix\t\nBrooklyn, Phoenix\t\nMother Lode, Deadwood.\nSunset, Deadwood\t\nMorrison, Deadwood\t\nB. C. Mine, Summit\t\nH. Bell, Summit\t\nEmma, Summit\t\nOro Denoro '\t\nWinnipeg, Wellington\t\nGolden Crown, Wellington\nAthelstan, Wellington     1,200\nKingSolomon,W. Copper\t\nNo. 7 Mine, Central\t\nCity of Paris, Central    2,000\nJewel, Long Lake       100\nGarmi, West Fork\t\nprovidence. Providence\t\nFlkliom, Greenwood\t\nRuby, Boundarv Falls\t\nM iscellaneous...\".    3,230\n1901.\n231,702\n1,721\n190.1.\n309,858\n20,800\n1903.. Past Week\n242,208\n48,502\n8,012\n2,010\n19,494\n1,070\n2,250\n99,034\n804\n150\n47,405\n500\n141,320\n7,455\n14,811\n85,791\n13,447\n2,404\n19,305\n3,840\n780\n540\n050\n8,530\n1,040\n785\n625\n550\n875\n005\n482\n350\n2,175\n. 890\n219\n80\n3,456\n325\n12,512\n5,787\nt175\n402\n792\n175\n1,590\n180\n705\n129\nTotal, tons  99,730   390,000   507,515   430,784     10,791\nGranby Smelter treated.., 02,387   230,828   312,340   228,337      7,500\nSCHOOL OPENS ON MONDAY, 31st\nliv, sure and get; jour SCHOOL SUPPLIES from W. H. ITTER & CO.\nThe best Circulating Library in the Interior of British Columbia.\nWe carry a complete line of Up-to-Date Stationery, and what we have\nnot in stock we will order for you. . . . Come to us to swap fishing\nstories and find out where to go to catch fish, and let us show you what\nTackle to use.\nW.   H.   ITTER & CO.\nTHIS WEEK\nIT'S\nFRUIT JARS\n<&\nBERRIES\nPHONE\n30\nJ.H.\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\n,      GRAND FORKS\nFRANK    MILLER\nGENERAL TRANSFER AND DRAYAGE\n(loud Dry Wood Delivered to\nAny Part of the City.\nPHONE 04\nGRAND FORKS AM) COLUMBIA, B. C\nOFFICIAL NOMINATIONS\nFollowing is a full list of thc provincial electoral districts, with the\nnames of the candidates officially\nplaced in nomination. Each riding\nhas one member except in cases\nspecified:\nAlberni\u2014W. W. B. Mclnncs, Liberal; Major R. J. Hiokey, Conservative.\nAtlin\u2014James Stables,Liberal; Dr.\nYoung, Conservative; J.' Kirland,\nLabor. \u2022\nCariboo (2)\u20148. A. Rogers, W,\nAdams, Conservative; James Murphy, Haniy Jones, Liberal.\nChilliwaok\u2014C. W. Munro, Liberal; J. L. Atkinson, Conservative.\nColumbia\u2014W. C. Wells, Liberal,\nelected by acclamation.\nComox\u2014F. McB. Young, Liberal;\nRobt. Grant, Conservative.\nCranbrook\u2014Dr. James H. King,\nLiberal; Thomas Cavin, Conservative\nCowichan\u2014J. N. Evans, Liberal;\n15. M, Skinner, Conservative.\nDelta\u2014John Oliver, Liberal; W.\nH. Ladner, Conservative.\nDewdney\u2014W. W. Forrester, Liberal; Hon. R. McBride, Conservative.\nEsquimalt\u2014John Jardine, Liberal;\nC. E. Pooley, Conservative,\nFernie\u2014J. McPherson, Socialist-\nLabor; E. C. Smith, Liberal; W. R.\nRoss, Conservative.\nGrand Forks\u2014W. H, P. Clement,\nLiberal; Geo. A. Fraser, Conservative; J. Riordan, Socialist.\nGreenwood\u2014J. R. Brown, Liberal;\nDr. E. G. Spankie, Conservative.\nIslands\u2014T. \\V. Patterson,Liberal;\nH. \\V. Bullock, Conservative.\nKamloops\u2014F. J. Deane, Liberal;\nF. J. Fulton, Conservative.\nKaslo\u2014John L. Retallaek, Liberal;\nRobert S. Green, Conservative; S.\nShannon, Socialist.\nLillooct\u2014A. McDonald, Conservative, elected by acclamation.\nNanaimo\u2014Edward Quennell,Conservative; J. H. Hawthornthwaite,\nSocialist; H. Sheppard, Labor.\nNelson City\u2014S. S. Taylor, Liberal; John Houston,   Conservative.\nNewcastle \u2014 David \\V. Muraay,\nLiberal; A. Brydcn, Conservative;\nP. Williams, Socialist.\nNew Westminster\u2014Thos. Gilford,\nConservative; W. H. Keary, Liberal.\nOkanagan\u2014T. W. Sterling, Liberal;\nPrice Ellison, Conservative.\nRevelstoke\u2014James M. Kellio.Lib-\neralj Thomas Taylor, Conservative;\nJ. W. Bennett, Socialist.\nRichmond\u2014John C. Brown, Liberal; F. L. Carter-Cotton, Conservative.\nRossland\u2014J. A. Macdonald, Liberal; A. S. Goodeve, Conservative.\nSaanioh\u2014H. Tanner, Liberal; J).\nM: Eberts, Conservative.\nSimilkameen \u2014 W. A. McLean,\nLiberal; L. W. Sluitl'ord, Conservative.\nSlocan\u2014W. Hunter, Conservative;\nW. Davidson, Ind. Labor.\nSkeena\u2014P. Herman, Liberal;\nC. W. D. Clifford, Conservative.\nVancouver Citv (5) -Joseph Martin, T. S. Baxter, J. B. Turnbull,\nDr. W. D. Undone-Jack and C. R.\nMonck, Liberals; Hon. I!. G. Tatlow, Hon. C. Wilson, Jame' F. Garden, A. if. B. MacGowan and W. J.\nBowser, Conservatives; Francis Wil\nlimns, A. (I. Perry mid .1. McLaren,\nLabor; 10. StobbingS, Mortimer and\nGijliths, Socialist.\n\"Viotoria (li\u2014R. L. Drury. W.G.\nCameron, J. 1). MoNivon and Richard Hall, Liberals; li. D. Helmcken,\nHon. A. 10. McPhillips, C. Hayward und Josoph Hunter, Conservatives; T. T. Walters, Socialist.\nVale Stuart Henderson, Liberal;\nT. (i. MoManamon, Conservative.\nYmir\u2014-Alfred Parr, Liberal; H.\nWright, Conservative,\nMEDICAL   HALL\nFOR\nPURE DRUGS\nTake a Look at Our Window\nDisplay of the Latest Novelties\nIn Chatelaine Bags and Purses.\nRST ST., OP. POSTOFFICE\nPrescriptions Carefully\nCompounded.\nFRASER DRUG CO.. DRUGGISTS\nHESERVATI0N SHIPPERS\nThe following is thc statement of\nthe ore tonnage shipped from Republic and Danville over thc Kettle\nValley line last week:\nREPUBLIC CAMP.\nMountain Lion\u2014\nBooundary Falls    186\nTo Trail smelter    073\nKnob Hill-\nTo Nelson smelter.      30\nHall Bros.\u2014\nTo Granby smelter      20\nCHESAW CAMP.\nRuby Mine\u2014\n'io Hall Mines smelter      20\nDAXVII.I.R CAMP.\nLucille Dreyfus\u2014\nTo Granby smelter    130\nTotal, tons 1,271\nJust what you want\nJust when you want it\nGOOD SERVICE is composed of two elements\n\u2014excellence of the work and promptness in\nthe execution. Bad work executed promptly is not good service\u2014good work delivered behind\ntime is not good service; but the two combine to\nmake one of the most necessary, but hardest to obtain and often most expensive, requirements of the\ntwentieth century business man. That we have\nlearned the lesson in theory we have shown. Our\ncustomers will testify that we have also learned it\nin practice.\nWE PRINT:\nPrice Lists\nPamphlets\nLetterheads\nBillheads\nStatements\nInvitations\nBall Programmes\nBusinss Cards\nVisiting Cards\n'Shipping Tags\nDodgers\nEnvelopes\nEtc., Etc., Etc.\nii*\nWe Carry a Complete Line of Stationery in Stock.\n&\nOur Jobbing Plant is new, and consists of the\nlatest and most popular faces of type and the\nmost up-to-date machinery. All work|guaranteed\nto give satisfaction.\n\"ffie Evening Sun\nPtoe 55 JQB DEPARTMENT.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Evening_Sun_1903-09-22","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0341358","@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":"1903-09-22 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1903-09-22 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Evening Sun","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0341358"}