{"@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":"22a6270a-b40b-4bea-9776-1d2fe060a3d5","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2017-01-30","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1921-10-21","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341912\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" GRAND FORKS iJt\nthe center of Grand Forks valley, the\npremier fruit growing district of\nSouthern British Columbia. Mining\nand lumbering are also important\nindustries in districts contiguous to\nthe city.\n6>\nKettle Valley Orchardist\nTHF SHIM is tlie favorite Dew8*\n1 LIU OKJL* paper of tj,e 0iyMng\nof the district. It is read by more\npeople in the city and valley than any\nother paper because it is fearless, reliable, clean, bright and entertaining.\nIt is always independent but never\nneutral.\nTWENTIETH YEAR\u2014No. 51\nGRAND FORKS B. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1921\n\"Tell roe what you Know ia true:\nI can guess as well as you.\"\n.00 PER YEAR\nIS THE LIBERAL CANDIDATE FOR YALE\nUnanimous Choice of the Most Enthusiastic Con-\na \u25a0\/ **\nverition Ever Held in the Constituency,\nat Penticton Last Nijjht\nAt the Liberal convention for\nTale district in Penticton laat night\nMayor Sutherland, of Kelowna, was\nnominated on the first ballot to contest the constituency against J. A.\nMacKelvie, government nominee,\nin tbe present federal elections.\nThere were three candidates in the\nfield, and as Mr. Sutherland received more votes on the first ballot\nthan the other two combined, his\nnomination was, on motion o( one of\nthe unsucessful aspirants, made\nunanimous.\nEvery section of the constituency\nwas represented by delegates, and\nthe harmony and enthusiasm whicb\nprevailed in the convention augurs\nwell for success on the (5th day of\nDecember. Mr. Sutherland is regarded as tbe strongest man tbat\ncould possibly bave been chosen to\nchampion the cause of Liberalism\nin this district. He bas been mayor\nof Kelowna for sixteen years, and\nhas an enviable record as a man of\nintegrity and as a citizen generally.\nThe delegates from Grand Forks\nriding were G. W. Elliott, Fred\nClark and C. V. Meggitt, and Dan\nMcPherson represented Greenwood.\nTb^local delegates retnrned home\nthis evening,\nF. B. Gossett, of Vernon, was\nele.lcd president of the Yale Liberal\nassociation, and C. H. Jackson, of\nKelowna, was chosen secrerary-\ntreasurer. The presidents and secretaries of the various provincial\nriaing associations will constitute\ntbe executive of tbe district association.\nGREATER SPEED\nIII THE AIR\nClaim Is Made That Invention of New Airplane\nWing May Give Three\nHundred Miles Per Hour\nLondon, Oct. 19.\u2014A domonstra\ntion was given yesterday of an air\u00ab.\nplane fitted with wings of a new\ndesign that, in the inventor's\nopinion, is likely to revolutionize\nair flight.\nTbe \"alula\" wing is the invention\nof a Dutchman, Mr. Holle, who\nhopes soon to attain a speed of be\"\ntween 200 and 300 miles per hour\nwith it In construction the wing is\nunlike anything ever seen in this\ncountry. It has a single frame built\nof mahogany planking.\nWben the pilot cume down after\na long series of miinvouvers he snid\nhe had been travellers nt 184\nmiles an hour and that his rale of\nclimbing was as much as -iiiOO feet\na minute.\nThe angle of some of bis ascents\nwas sixty degrees. The wings were\nattached to a fighting iierial destroy-\n\u00bber driven by a 300 horsepower engine, the machine being designed to\ngo up and attack at a moment's\nnotice. Tbe wing can also be fitted\nto airplanes designed for carrying\nheavy cargoes.\nNobody Can\nInvention of a perpe^oal motion\nmachine is claimed by Richard Ul\nram, of New York. He has organized the Perpetual Motion Power,\nHeat & Light company, and is offering $25,000,000 worth 'of stock\nat 10 cents a share.\nDon't crowd I\nMr. Ulram's greatest problem will\nbe to fight off pirates. For tbe pa\ntent office, recognizing that perpotu\nal motion is a scientific f il lacy, long\nago made a rule against issuing pa\ntents on any contraption supposed\nto run forever without outside aid.\nSix lollies of science\u2014fix things\nneither you nor an \/ one else can do.\nPerpetual motion is one. In 1874\nmany thought John Keely, Phila-\ndelphio carpenter, had invented it.\nThe Keely motor gave wonderful\nresults. But it got its power from\ncompressed air, secretly conveyed.\nTbe fraud was exposed after the inventor died. He sold much stock.\nSquaring the circle and multiplication of the cube are two otber im-\npossiiblities. They have driven\nmany mathematicians crazy.\nFourth scientific folly is magic\u2014\nthe black art wbicb mediicval sorcerers sought and pretended they\nfound. Magic would mean doing\nThurston's tricks without sleight of-\nhand or olher fakery.\nFifth scientific fallacy is tbe elixir\nof life. Ponce de Leon sought it in\na fabled fountain of youtb. Voron-\nofT, of Paris, seeks it in monkey\nglands.\nSixth scientific fallacy is transmutation of metals\u2014conversion of\niron or lead or other baser metals\ninto gold or silver.\nThat men like Richard Ulram\nstill attempt to achieve the six\nfollies of science shows that there is\nalways some one who refuses to be\nlieve that anything is impossible.\nIt is man's nature to deny tbat he\nis limited in bis powers. Laughed at,\njeered, he defies precedent\u2014and\nthereby makes progress. This spirit\nmay not achieve tbe original goal,\nbut it will accomplish something.\nThus Glauber, who devoted a lifetime in attempting to change lead\ninto gold, discovered a very useful\nsalt that bears his name.\nProfessor Frederick Soddy, of\nOxford,\" says tbat when man has\nenougb radium and :an work with\nl.OOOJWO volts of electricity *e may\nreally be able to change lead into\ngold- . v\nSix follies of science we call tbem\nuow. But will future man solve them\nand look back and laugh at us?\nFlying was once called the seventh\nfolly of science. It has been laken\noff the list.\nSeed Grain Distribution\nThe annual free dstribution of\nsamples of seed grain will be conducted as usual at the Central experimental farm, Ottawa, by tbe\nDominion cerealist.\n-The following kinds of seed grain\nwill be sent out tbis season:\nSpring wheat, in about 5-lb. samples; white oats, about 4-lb.; barley,\nabout 5 lb.; field beas, about 5-lb.;\nfield beans, about 2 lb.; flax, about\n2-lb.\nNone So Blind as Those Who Will Not See\nOnly one sample cen b\u00bb s^nt to\neach applicant. '\nApplications must be on printed\nforms wbicb my be obtained by\nwriting to tbe Dominion Cerealist,\nExperimental Farm, Ottawa.\nAs the stock of seed is limited,\nfarmers are advised to apply early\nto avoid disappoinment. Those who\napplied foo laie last season are par\nticularly requested to send in their\nnames at once so that application\nforms may be forwarded .to them!\nNo application forms will be fur-\nnished after February 1, 1922.\nNews of t*he City\nThe Globe Export Liquoi company's store on Winnipeg avenue\nwas broken into on Tuesday night,\npresumably by bootleggers from\nacross the line, and two cases of\nliquor stolen. Mr. Mayo, who sleeps\nin tbe building next c'oor, heard the\nrobbers, and gave the alarm by telephone, which frightened tbem\naway, otherwise they undoubtedly\nwould havo made a big haul, as it\nis said tbey had two big cars ready\nto fill with the wet goods.\nMrs. C. M. Kingston returned on\nWednesday from a visit to Vancouver.\nSpecial attention is called to the\nnotice of the city clerk in this week's\nissue of The Sun regarding the registration of householders and\nlicenceholders. All householders\nand licenceholders who wish to get\ntheir names on the 1922 municipal\nvoters' list must register at the city\noffice on or before the Slst of October.\nRev. Hillis Wright visited Nelson\ntbis week.\nWork on tbe foundations for the\npumps and pumphouse of the No.\n1 unit of tbe irrigation system is\nprogressing favorably under tbe\ndirection of Engineer Graham. Tbe\npump station will be located on the\nAlmond raocb, on the sout.i bank\nof river at a point wbere a bend in\nin the river reaches the farthest\nsouth. ________________!\nThe court of revision of assessments in conneetion with Grand\nForks irrigation district will be beld\non November 12.\nA. E. Dodson had a leg broken\nin tire* Billings sawmill this week,\nand was brought to tbe Grand Forks\nhospital yesterday morning.\nMrs. Millions, who bas been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nA.'Brown, returned to her home in\nVancouver this week.\nMiss Joyce McLeod returned\nSunday from a visit with friends in\nVancouver and Kelowna.\nJ. Willis bas returned from a\nmonth's trip to Montreal.\nRIFLE ASSOCIATION\nI\nMany Good Scores Were\nMade on the Range at\nthe Wind-up on the\nLast Day\nShooting fortheLiddicoat-Huttorrl\nshield was completed last Wednesday afternoon, when the annual\nshoot of tbe Kettle River Valley\nRifle association came to an end.\nA great deal of interest was taken in\nall tbe contests.\nSecretary Liddicoat won the grand\naggregate, the tbfrd occasion on\nwhich he bas captured that honor.\nFollowing were the trophy winners, together with the score made\nand the prize won by eacb:\nGrand Aggregate, Ross Rifles\u2014\nFirst\u2014W, Liddicoat, 208 points,\nHenniger cup and $5.\nSecond\u2014John Hutton,203 points,\nMcKie cup.\nThird\u2014Neil McCallum, 194 points,\nBank of Commerce cup.\nService Rifles\u2014 .\nFirst\u2014Clinton Atwood, 168 points,\nFripp cup and $5.\nSecond\u2014E. G. Eaton, 157 points,\nSpraggett cup.\nThird\u2014G. B. Garrett, 157 points,\nHot Air cup.\nFourth\u2014R. Ball, 153 points, Gazette cup.\nFifth\u2014Constable Stacey, 151\npoints, R.C. M.P, cup.\nOther scores made outside of the\nprize liet were as follows:\nRoss Rifles\u2014 W. H. Dinsmore,\n181 ;E. St. G.Smyth, 160.\nService Rifles\u2014John Grassick,\n151; G. F. KiHam, 140; D.C. Manly,\n139; Sergt. Reed, 134; W. Rossiter,\n125; N. R. Norris, 120; W. Gowans,\n119; W. H. Kirkpatrick, 113; Con\nstable Saunders, 108; Corpl. Cope,\n105; W. Patterson, 98; A. Scott, (\nSeveral otber competitors carried\nout practice over only part of tbe\ncompetition.\nShield Competition\u2014\nThe ten men who won positions\non the two teams to compete forthe\nLiddicoat.Hutton shield were:\nRoss Term\u2014Liddicoat, Hutton,\nMcCallum, Dinsmore and Smyth.\nService Rifle Team\u2014Atwood,\nEaton, Garrett, Ball and Stacey.\nThis team match was shot off\nWednesday aflernoon, 10 shots at\n200 yards, competitors -hanging\nrifles after firing five shots on score,\nand firing the otber five with his\nopponent's rifle. Eaton being ab\nsent, J. Grassick took bis place on\ntbe team. Tbe standing of tbe teams\nin this competition was as follows:\nRoss Rifles--N. McCallum, 42\npoints; W. Liddicoat, 41; E. St. G.\nSmyth, 39; W. H Dinsmore, 35;\nJobn H. Hutton, 24; total, 191\npoints.\nService Rifles\u2014Clinton Atwood,\n44 points; Robert Ball, 43; G. B.\nGarrett, 41; John Grassick, 38; Con.\nstable Stacey, 37; total, 203 points.\nTbis service team won by twelve\npoints, and Clinton Atwood having\nthe highest score on the winning\nteam captured tbe shield.\nThe event was very interesting,\nthe competition being keen.\nThe trophies are being suitably\nengraved, and when finished arrangements will be made for tbe\npresentation of tbe same to the\nwinners'.\nThe following good scores were\nmade at the 300 yards range (possible 35).\nRoss RirleB\u2014N. McCallum, 34\npoints; W. H. Dinsmore, 34; W.\nLiddicoat, 33; John A. Hutton, 33,\nE. St. G. Smyth, 32. Service Rifles\n-r^G. B Garrett, 32; R. Ball, 29.\nCHIEF PARKS\nA. E. Savage, Chief o*f Police of City for Fifteen\nYea-is, Appointed toSuc-\nceed Hinj\nTHE WEATHER\nThe following is the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\nday during the past week, as recorded by the government thermometer on E. F.- Law's ranch:\nMax. Min.\nOct. 14\u2014Friday 54 38\n15\u2014Saturday 60 34\n16- Sunday 57 34\n17\u2014Monday 62 39\n18\u2014Tuesday 54 34\n19\u2014Wednesday.. 62 39\n20 Thursday 54 ' 41\nInches\nRainfall 0.31\nGREAT BOON FOR\nSMALL CAR OWNERS\nDunlop Rubber Company's New Straight\nWall, 31 x 4 Cord Tire\nUsers of cars taking 30x31 rims\nhave now available a Straignt Wall\ntvpe of rim, which allows the use of\na 31 x 4 Straight Wall Cord Tire, recently developed by the Dunlop Tire\n& Rubber Goods Co., Limited.\nThis 31 x 4 Cord Tire, as previously stated, is made to fit the new\nStraight Wall rim in 30 x 3J size,\nand its introduction at this date is\nparticularly interesting because the\n31 x 4 Straight Wall Cord Tire re-\npresentran extension of the Straight\nWall principle in tire-building to the\nsmaller car tire. This makes it\npossible for owners of \"Briseo1\"\n\"Chevrolet,\" ''Ford,\" \"Gray-Dort,'\n\"Maxwell\" or \"Overland\"cars lo use\nthe ne*v Straight Wall Tire\u2014if tbey\nso wish\u2014by converting their present Clincher Rims into Straight\nWall.\nRim makers are now supplying\n30 x 3\u00a3S)raigbt Wall Rims to in\nterchange witb 30 x 3J Clincher\nDemountable Rims or Solid type\n30 x 3J Clincher Rims.\nThe new 30 x 3\u00a3 Straight Wall\nnm is exactly tBe same as the 32\n3\u00a3 Straight Wall rim except that\nit is twenty three inches in diameter\ninstead of twenty-live.\n\"31 x 4 Straight Wall\" introduces\na new size ib Cord Tires, one that\nundoubtedly will be very pipular\nbecause of tbe records it will set for\ntremendous mileage.\nOne Car Maker has already adopted the new Dunlop Cord Tire for\nequipment purposes, and the pros\npeels are that others will follow the\nexample immediately.\n31x4 Straight Wall Coid is supplied in both \"Ribbed\" and the\nwell-known \"Traction\" tread designs.\nPaul C. Black, district hortieul\nturist, Ieit this week for a couple\nof months' vacation trip to Van\ncouver.\nAI a meeting of the board of police commissionere Wednesday night\nChief of Police Psiks tendered his\nresignation, to take effect at once.\nAt an adjourned meeting of the\nboard yesterday morning Mr.\nParks' reaignation was accepted and\nA. E. Savage was appointed chief\nof police. Mr. Savage will assume\nhis duties on Sunday night. In the\nmeantime Thos. |Wilkinson is acting chief.\nThe new appointee was chief of\npolice for about fifteen years, having relinquished bis position about\nthree years ago.\nFOSTER'S FORECAST\nWashington, Oct. 17.\u2014A high\ntemperature wave will develop in\ntbe extreme uortbwest during the\nweek centering on October 12 and\nthe storm wave, a low barometer,\none day behind it, will control the\nweather for that week. That warm\nwave moving southeastward is expected to reach meridian 90\u2014a\nstraight line extending north and\nsouth from St. Louis\u2014near October\n12. Three days earlier it will be in\nAlaska, and after reaching the Gulf\nof Mexico, it will spread over the\nSt. Lawrence valleys and surrounding sections near October 14. The\nusual change >, first tbe storm wave,\nthen the cool wave one or two days\nlater, will affect'the whole continent\nas they move eastwaid.\n\u2022This disturbance will not be very\ngreat, but above the averge, and\nrainfall accompanying will be about\ntbe average and in sections where\nmoBt rain occurred during the summer. The most severe storms of the\nfirst half of Octoher were expected\nfrom October 1 to 8.\nBy October 8 the humidity, or\ndrmpness, of the wind tbat comes\nfrom the eastward will have begun\nto lessen and by October 15 will begin, gradually, a long spell of dryness. Tbis does not mean a drouth.\nNews of ttie City\nMrs. Geo. B. Garrett returned on\nFriday from Miple Creek, Alta.,\nwbere she has been visiting ber\nmother, Mrs. Poett, who accom-\npanied ber to this city.\nRobert Lawson left thia week for\na visit to Soap Luke, Wash.\nDonald McCallum and Nil Taylor made a motor trip to Rossland\nlast week.\nThe death of the 14 months old\nson of Mr. and Mrs. James Galloway, of Oliver, occurred in Nelson\nlast Sunday. Tho remains were\nbrought to this city for burial.\n\u25a0Joe Rossi and family left thiB\nweek for Italy. They expect to return to this city in ahout n year.\nWilliam Simpson, of Bridesville,\nwas a visitor in the city on Monday-\nWork has been started on the cement sidewalk on Winnipeg\navenue.\nW. O. Easton has returned from\n] a visit with friends on Vancouver\nisland, THE StJN, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nSite (granb $tttk* \u00a3un\nAN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER\nQ. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANOE\nOne Year (in Canada and Great Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States) 1.50\nAddresr -n \u2022\"-\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u2014''cations to\nThe Grand Forks Sun,\nPhone 101R Gh imb Forks, B. C.\nOFFICE: COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1921\nThere is just cause for congratulation on\nthe spendid personal character and high standing in the constituency of the Liberal candidate nominated at the Penticton convention\nlast night. Mr. Sutherland is a gentleman in\nwhom ffot only Liberals but electors of other\npolitical affiliations can unite and give their\nwhole hearted support.\nA Ford car thatsells for $285 in Minnesota\ncosts $600 or $700 in Canada. Mr. Ford has\nfactories in the United States and in Canada.\nHe can manufacture a car as cheaply iu Canada as he can in Michigan. But the tariff allows him to pocket the difference of- the cost\nof the car in the two countries as an addition -\nal profit above the cost of production. There\nare hundreds of parallel cases where old-estab\nlished and full grown manufacturing concerns\nare permitted to legally rob the consumers\nThe tariff eecds revising, and t needs it badly.\nHirohito, the crown prince of Japan.is back\nagain in Tokyo after several months of jour\nneying through Europe. He was greeted with\nan enthusiasm which seems to prove the undiminished loyalty of the nation to the royal\nhouse. An interesting incident of the welcome\nwas the loud cheering and the waving of hand\nkerchiefs that marked his progress through\nthe streets of Yokohama and Tokyo. In the\npast, whenever royalty passed by etiquette de\nnianded from the Japanese the complete\nsilence of awe and reverence. But young Ja-\np:in has learned to cheer and likes to make\na noise as well as young England or young\nAmerica.\nA large number of people can symathize\nwith the man of limited means who observed\nthat his two sons in college and a third in\npreparatory school kept his nose so near the\nground that he could see the bottom of his\nfeet at every step he took.\nened the horse into a runaway that smashed\nyour wagon and injured the horse and yourself? Would it be any comfort to learn from\nyour lawyer that this country has no laws on\naviation and that the statute books are silent\non the right to protection and on recompense\nfor damages? How would you go about it to\nto get satisfaction?\nDal Erin, or Dail Eireann, frequently seen\nin newspaper reports, is the name of the present republican parliament in Ireland: In ancient times a common name for Ireland was\nEire, nominative case; Eireann or Erin, possessive; Eirnn, objective. The'Dal was an assemblage somewhat like the English Knights\nof the Shire, its duties being of a legislative\ncharacter. Hence Dal Erin (pronounoed Dhawl\nAirin) means the parliament of Ireland.\nHOW YOU CAN TELL\nGENUINE ASPIRIN\nOnly Tablets with \"Bayer Cross\"\nare Aspirin\u2014No others!\nI\nIn every one of the newly created political\ndivisions of Europe the*chief aim of the peas \u2022\nani leaders has been to hasten the solution of\nthe land question, in order to satisfy the hunger of the people for fields of their own. In\nBulgaria, Czecho-Slovakia, Jugo-Slavia, Hun\ngary and Roumania the demands of the Green\nInternational have been receiving attention.\nIn Czecho-Slovakia especially there has been\nrapid progress, so that 150,000 farmers have\nbecome owners of the soil, and 500,000 acres\nof land are to be leased to former soldiers,\nfarming associations, parishes and public\nutility companies. The forests, because it is so\nnecessary to preserve them, will be adminis\ntered by the state.\nThe \\abobs\u2014North American Brotherhood\nof Bootleggers\u2014are doing a rushing business\nall along the southern border of British Columbia.\nA pernicious word is \"inexhaustible.\" \"In\nexhaustible\" mountains of ore, \"inexhaustible\" forests, ''inexhaustible\" fertility of the\nsoil have all been greatly depleted, and some\nhave been wholly spent. We need to'remind\nourselves that neither coal nor oil nor iron nor\nany other ore nor forests nor fertility can last\npermanently in the face of selfish exploitation\nor ignorant waste.\nIt is now two weeks since the government\nliquor store in this city was reported to have\nbeen robbed, and the only person who seems to\nknow much about the affair is the correspondent who first sent out the news to the ont-\nside newspapers. We take it for granted that\nhe has a good alibi.\nWhat would you do if you were driving along a road with a nervous horse, and an\nairplane suddenly swooped down and fright-\nRow Difficult It Is\nio Keep Vanity Under\n.Harness of the Intellect\nBy* Brig. Cen. C. G. Dawes\nOne changes his mind as information\nchanges, prov'ded that informt?tion alters the\nfoundation of correlated facts upon which\nopinion must always be builded. But we must\nbe guided by facts.\nIt takes more than reason to bend national\npride. Necessity must also exist.\nNow that the pressure of emergency is over\nI have to spur myself to work. I believe I am\nnaturally inclined to indolence when off a red\nhot stove. The merely spectacular in life will\nnever lack description.\nThe history of the great war will be written\naround achievement\u2014not shoulder straps.\nEmergency is after all the greatest coordi-\nnator.\nMy experienoe in working for co-orindation\nteaches me that the co ordinator must himself\nco-ordinate his mental activities with others.\nDistrust of each others' intentions is fatal to\nquick action in time of emergency.\nHow majestic is naturalness. I have never\nmet a man whom I really considered a great\nman who was not always natural and simple.\nAffectation is inevitably the mark of one not\nsure of himself.\nIt never occurs to me now to look for dirt.\nI am so anxious to get something to eat. I am\nwriting this right here for the benefit of middle\naged business mon. The joys of youth are still\nwithin our reach if we only give over physical\nand mental indolence.\nHumbleness and naturalness are the great\nprotection against ignorance.\nThe anti-climax which the inexperienced and\nover-vain bring upon themselves by encouraging newspaper self-exploitation upon assuming\nimportant duties is one of the chief causes of\na subsequent failure. The censor happily pro\ntected the A.E.F. from* much of this sort of I\nthing, but many in the United States were de\nstroyed, or destroyed their own usefulness\nthemselves, by it.\nIn proportion as men are right-minded and\nintelligent, ceremony is unessential in their relations.\nInexperience aid ignorance in its association with experience and knowledge will always profit by humbleness of opinion.\nHow difficult it is to keep vanity under the\nharness of the intellect.\nSomehow it is not so inspiring to work at\nsaving money for one's government as to work\nat helping to save its life.\n.Clementel, Fiench minister of commerce, inexpressibly horrified me by kissing me on both\ncheeks before a large audience. As we sat at\nthe table together, I told Hoover our old\nfriends in Cedar Rapids, la., and Marietta, O.,\nwho know us better, would never have made\nthe mistake either by making ns 30 prominent\nor by kissing us.\nWe lunched in a house owned by Ogden\nMills whieh was formerly the palace of Marshal Lannes. As I looked around me I said\n\"John (Gen. Pershing), when I contrast these\nbarren surrondings with the luxuriousness of\nour early life in Lincoln, Neb., it does seem\nthat a good man has no real chance in this\nworld.\" To which John meditatively replied:\n\"Don't it beat h\u20141!\"\nThere is only one Aspirin, that marked\nwith the \"Buyer Cross\"\u2014all other tablets uie only acid imitations.\nGenuine \"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin\"\nhnve been prescribed by physicians for\nnineteen years and proved safe by millions for Puin, Headache, Neuralgia,\nColds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis.\nBandy tin boxes of 12 tablets\u2014also'\nlarger \"Bayer\" packages, can be had\nat nny drug store. Made in Canada.\nAspirin is the trade mark (registered1\nin Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of\nMonoaceticocidester of Salicylicacid.\n8 While it is well known that Aspirin*\nmeans Bayer manufacture, to assist the\npublic against imitations, the Tablets of\nBayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped\nwith their general trade mark, tha\n\"Bayer Cross\/'\nYou Should Select\nthe optometrist who will\nexamine your eyes and\nwrite for you the prescription for lenses with\nas much care as though\nyou were picking out a\nbrand new pair of eyes.\nIt is just as serious a\nquestion. We know\nenough about the study\nof the eyes to take the\nquestion quite seriously.\nJ. C. TAYLOR\nJeweller and Optician\nBridge Street Grand Forka\nE. C. HENNIGER\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement\nand\nPlaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks,B.C.\nPLANT B, C. GROWN TREES ONLY\nTHE BRITISH G0LUMB1A NURSERIES CO., LTD.\nHava by careful and efficient management built up a large\nbusiness during the past ten years, and are the lajgest\ngrowers of nursery stock in Western Canada.\nA LARGE ASSORTMENT of very fine Fruit Trees and\nSmall Fruit Plahts are now growing in our Nurseries at\nSardis, which are being offered to planters at very Reasonable Prices.\nTHE QUALITY of these trees and plants are of high order\nbeing propagated from specially selected trees of known\nproductiveness.\nWe arge growing a very fine lot of Roses of leading varieties which have bloomed this season in the Nurserias aud\nwill give good results when transplanted in your garden\nor lawn. ,\nWe Solicit Correspondence from intending planters and\nurge the-placing orders early in the season. WRITE TODAY\nAddress\nThe British Columbia Nurseries Co. Ltd\nSardis, R. C. Department C.\nClinton A. S. Atwood, Salesman, Grand Forks, B. C.\nFloor Coverings at R.ght prices\nWhen in need of Floor Covering's do not forget that we carry a good range of patterns in\nLinoleum, Linoleum Rugs\nr Also Regular Rugs and Mats\nWe have the kind th;ft give lasting service\nand are pleasant to the eye. Our prices are right.\noMiller C& Gardner\nHome Furnishers\n*^f In all kinds of work, good results require\ngood implehients kept in good condition.\nIf the right sort of implement is important to an individual workman, efficient\ntools for industry and commerce are a\nnecessity.\n\u25a0^ Telephone service is one of the tools of\nindustry and commerce in most common\nuse and upon which much depends. To\ntransmit the vibrations of the human\nvoice from any point to any point demands an expensive mechanism of the\nhighest order of scientific precision and\nan efficient organization.\n*] It is onr aim to have the telephone, with\nthe co-operation of the public, the most\ndependable tool of industry.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nFame and fortune await the genius who\ncan invent a burglar-proof whisky cellar.\nCounter\nCheck Books\nWe have secured the\nagency for Grand\nForks of a large\nWestern Publishing\nHouse which manufactures a superior\ngrade- of Counter\nCheck Books\u2014carbon back and carbon\nleaf styles.\nPrices Are Right\nEncourage Western\nenterprises and keep\nWestern money in\nthe West.\nAny Quantity\nfrom 100 up to 2500\nbooks.\nThe Sun\nJob Department\nAUTO LIVERY\nAT Y0UI\nSERVICE\nModern Kigs and Good -\nHorses at All Hours at\nthe\nModel Livery Barn\nM. H. Barns, Prop. .\nPhone 68 Second Street\nYale Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\nC.V. Meggitt\nBenl Estate and Insurance\nORCHARDS, FABM LANDS AND CITY\nPBOPERTY\nExcellent facilities fot sailing your farms\nWo bave agents at all Coast aiid Prairie\nPoints -\nWE CARRY AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE.\nDEALER IN POLES. POSTS AND TIES.\nAND FARM PRODUCE\nReliable Information rosardin t this dlstrct\ncheerfully furnished. We solloit your inquiries.\nThose wishing neat sign painting\nto ornament their business places\nshould call on VV. P. O'Connor, a\nreturned soldier.\nA. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYaIiB Hotkl, Fiust Stukkt\nGRAND FORKS\nTransfer Company\nDAVIS & HANSEN, Props\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nPadlock Safety Paper,for private\nbankchecks, kept in stock by The\nSun Job Department.\nCoal,\nWood and\nfor Sale\nOffice at\nR. P. Petrie's\nPhone 64\nIce\nStore THE SUN, QRAND FORKS, B. C.\nINTERESTING SCENES FROM MANY PARTS OF THE WORLD\ncJ\n-w:=_\u00bbr*s'*j.fl;\n'.\u2022S'.\"*?**\"'*...\nt\\* ^.***i-t*-\n\u25a0-\u25a0rit.-ftfW-*!\nWM_1_ ~ ' '\u25a0___>-!*'. a\nt*rrj,lMi .'if *->\u00a3\n* !\u00ab1\n1 if \u00bbi\n^^iHi-ji-iPv\nr,;;:\n(1) In England, thousands of Shoreditch unemployed\nmarching from Hoxton to Guardians' Office to\ndemand Increase of money grant, free coal and other\nbenefits while out of work.\n(2) Launching of the latest and largest of Uncle\nSam's super-dreadnaughts, the U.S.S. Washington,\nat Cambden, N.J., September, 1921.\n(8) Mrs. Arthur Hamilton, who failed in her second\nattempt to swim the English Channel. She was the\nfirst woman to swim the Solent.\n(4) Anna Pavlowa, the celebrated dancer, who ar-\nSved In Canada on the \"Empress of Prance,\"\netober 18th, for a theatrical tour through Canada.\n(6) Canadian teachers In England. The Mayor and\nMayoress of Southampton, and Mr. Blakaway,\nChairman of the Education Committee, together with\nsome of the Canadian teachers, are here seen on\nboard the \"Corsican,\" just prior to her departure\nfrom Southampton.\n(6) Remarkable welcome in London, Eng., for film\nstar. Scene when Charlie Chaplin arrived at the\nRita Hotel.\n(7) Albert de Courville, known in Great Britain\nas the \"King of Revue,\" who will launch here \"Hullo,\nCanada!\"\n(8) Miss Shirley Kellogg, the most popular revue\nstar in Great Britain, will make her fiiat appearance in Canada in \"Hullo, Canada!\" with Albert de\nCourville, in association with Trans-Canada Theatres.\n(9) A smiling snapshot of Charlie Chaplin in\nEngland.\n\u2014'r'i'f\n^V \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0:\u2022* ,'-.;,;\u25a0\nTHE ROYAL ARMS OF CANADA\nIE\n-J \"V:~\nr?' AM'\n\/^ r*\n^ \u00ab'*'{\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0\n-1__i__^v.' 'T'm.W ].\nAt1- ..\u25a0\u2022>.;\ni^f$\n\u00bb\u25a0::\u25a0:--~ J\n\"J>*r*',i'\"**rr. -\nW\"\u00aejW\nm\nS-i'k\nWT'-iSM\n'^'--\"-^fl \u00ab-.-;\n^ , ,*ef, <***<**#*\u25a0\n4v*^.. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 , .\u25a0\n(By Professor Percy E. Nobbs)\nWhile the feeling of Canadians\nappears to be distinctly against\ntitular honors, and while the interest in personal coats of arms is\nso slight that the whole machinery\nof registration is Ignored alike by\nthe many unaffected and by the few\nentitled to bear arms, there has of\nlate been quite a healthy development in the matter of place heraldry.\nMany Canadian towns have adopted\ncoats of arms, and for thc most part\nthey are feasible, heraldic-ally speaking, and in some instances duly\nregistered at the College of Heralds\nin London. All the provinces, both\nnew and old, have beautiful coats\nof arms, duly granted, and used to\nthe full by the provincial governments, both as decorations to public\nprinting, and as flags, on occasion.\nThe Federal authority haa, however, till quite recently, been less\nwell furnished, and the maple leaf,\nthe beaver, the arms of the four first\nprovinces to federate, marshalled together on a quartered field, and\nlast, but not least, a marshalled coat ,\nof the arms of all nine provinces,\nhave all been used as a symbol of\nsovereignty in a rather indiscriminate fashion.\nJust recently, Hia Majesty the\nKing\u2014the Empire's \"fountain of\nhonor,'' to use the heraldic phrase,\nhas been graciously pleased to approve a Royal Coat of Arms for\nvanadai\nIt is not generally understood tbat\nAnna of Sovereignty are not necessarily the personal Arms of the sovereign, ana in case of conquest Arms\nef Sovereignty pass automatically to\nthe conquering ruler, at least thsfi\nhaa been the way of it in Europe.\nWhen the King is in Scotland, his\nstandard is flown, and on it the\nScots Anna occur on the first and\nfourth quarters, and the English and\nIrish Anna on the second and third\nquartera respectively. Also, hia\nScots Anns are surmounted by a\ndifferent crest, a red lion sitting up,\nhis supporters tne lion and the urn-\ncorn, are transposed, and they\nusually carry banners with the St.\nAndrew's ant St. George's crosses.\nAnd so the King's Arms of Sovereignty B Ireland ate differentiated by repeating the harp on\nthe blue field twice.\nHenceforth, in Canada, when the\nKing is represented ln authority by\na piece of ornamental symbolism\n- wbich we call hia Coat of Arms, it\nwill bo as in tho case of Scotland\nand Ireland, by a variant upon the\nRoyal Arms of England. To avoid\nthe heraldic portmanteau phraseology (which is the briefest and\nmoat concise form of scientific descriptive expression ever invented,\nbut a language not taught in the\nschools) the design will be as follows:\u2014\nThe shield will bave four quarters,\nand a base; on the right and left,\nat tha top, we have the three gold\nleopards of England on a red background, and the red lion of Scotland, with his blue claws and tongue,\non a gold background, with a double\nline of decorated framing round him.\nBelow tha. English leopards, on a\nblue background, we have the golden\nharp of Ireland, with its silver\nstrings, and below the Scots lion we\nhave the three gold lilies of France\n!__*\u00bb\nm\n' ceumtxe or cen. I\nalao on al3ue T>ackground; and at\nthe bottom of the shield we have the\ngreen Canadian maple leaves on a\nwhite or silver background. The\nsupporters are a geld lion (without\na crown on hla head aa in the Royal\nArms of England), but bearing as\na banner the Union Jack, and a silver unicorn with gold trimmings, in-\njfexfag hie cetlej. and Abs chain, aa*\nbearing as a banner the ancient\nArms of France, that is to say, a\npattern of gold lilies on a blue field.\nAbove the shield, the sovereignty\nbeing royal, there is a royal gold\nhelmet, with the Imperial crown, and\non this crown there stands the crest\nconsisting of a ferocious little golden\nlion waving a red maple leaf in his\npaw, and wearing a crown on his\nhead. It is to be observed that the\ncrown and crest are attached to the\nhelmet by means of a red and white\nwreath, and this may be drawn as\nribands twisting in and out of the\ncrown, or even as a red and white\ncord round a cushion on top of the\nhelmet, for if the rules of good\nheraldry are very rigid in the mat-\ntor of the shield, they are very elastic as to interpretation of the accessories.\nAnd so with the mantling. The\nold Scottish custom of blue and\nwhite will be followed, with this difference, that instead of white we\nhave ermine, and as this goes well\nwith royal blue, the combination\nmakes a far finer royal achievement\nthan if a gold and silver mantling\nis added to a gold helmet, a gold\ncrown and a gold crest.\nThere is no mottoed garter, or\nchain and jewel of a knightly order,\nsurrounding the shield, and thin is\nprobably an intentional difference,\nin consonance with thc present position of affairs with reference to\nCanadian titles.\nThe motto again is different from\nthat of the Royal Arms as used in\nEngland, Scotland and Ireland, being \"A mari usque ad mare.\"\nOn the Royal Arms of England\nthere occurs at the bottom an ornament\u2014the three badge flowers combined on one stem, symbolic of the\nUnion. In the case of the Royal\nArms of Canada the badge flowers\nwill be somewhat more numerous,\nconsisting of a rose flanked by a\nthistle, a lily and shamrock, and leek\nleaves, and terminating at each side\nlis a tn% td magi*. Tbia onuunani\nmay, of course, be treated with considerable freedom, and the coloring\nbe made as conventional or as naturalistic as the taste of the artist\nmay require.\nSo, we have in the Royal Arms nf\nCanada an agglomeration of symbols sanctified by origin, by time,\nand by association\u2014the leopards of\nEdward the First, and lilies of\nAncient France nnd of the Bourbons'\nempire, the red Scottish lion that\nwas old when Robert the Bruce replaced his private arms with the\narms of the Sovereignty of Scotland, and the supporting unicorn,\nwith a crown about his neck, which\nwas once the crown of a French\nDauphin, in Mary Stuart's day, and\nthough the crown has now the distinctive crosses of thc Scots crown,\nthe old chain is still appended thereto. The crest is the crest as it was\nin the Black Prince's time, with the\naddition of a crown on the lion's\nhead and a maple leaf in his paw.\nThe Union Jack on the banner is\nitself a combination of the crosses\nof the patron saints\u2014St. Patrick's\nfrom the earliest culture in the British Isles, and St. Andrew's, near as\nold, and St. George's cross that was\nUsed In land fighting since ever\nEnglishmen antl Scotsmen fought\nfor the adjustment of their borders.\nHut its use at sea, according to tha\nGenoese, was bought from them far\nj;old, because theirs was thc only\nflag respected by Turks and Riffs,\nand English merchants had need of\nit in the Middle Sea. And there ia\nthe story of the three badge flowers, and their combination on one\nstem at the time of the union, which\nis modem history.\n- tVhile we are considering this last\n.rant of Arms affecting the Dominion, it is interesting to hark\nhack to the first, which was probably\ntho heraldic device of tho Baronets\nof Nova Kcotia, a very beautiful design, albeit associated with a somewhat sordid talo of trafficking iu\ntitles by James I. and VI. (THE SUN. GRAND FORES, B.C.\nNews of the City\nAt a meeting of tbe Liberal asso\nc ialion on Wednesday evening G.\nW. Elliott was elected secretary,\nvice R. Campbell, resigned. G. W.\nElliott, Fred Clark add C. V. Meggitt were chosen dlegates to represent tbe association at the Penticton\nnominating convention. A resolution was also adopted urging the\nminister of lands.Hon. Mr. Pattullo,\nto advance 126,000 monthly for tbe\nconstruction of tbe irrigation system.\n\u2022 Ai Traunweiser has returned\nfrom a visit wtth relatives in Calgary.\nW. H. Jones, the Nelson job\nprinter, who recently disposed of bis\nbusiness, and who has been spending a few days in tbe city this week,\nreturned to bis home this evening.\nMiss Mary Newbeauer, who bas\nbeen attending a business school in\nSpokane, hap returned 40 her home\nin this city.\nH. W. Gregory returned to tbis\ncity on Sunday from Anyox, where\nhe has been with tbe Granby company for tbe past tbree years. He\nbas lately been suffering from an\naffection of the eyes, and at pres.\nent he has some difficulty in seeing\nwitb any degree of clearness.\nVernon Forrester, of the C.P.R.,\nbas been transferred to Trail.\nBusiness Places to Close\nfor Unveiling Ceremony\nBy resolution of the City Council\nall places of business id the city are\nrequested to close from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m on Nov. lltb, so that all\nmay have tbe opportunity of attend\ning the unveiling of tbe Soldiers'\nMemorial.\nJOHN A. HUTTON,\nCity Clerk.\nThe\nNational Crisis\n\"My appeal is to the whole people; to\nevery man and woman who -wants to do\nright by this country; to everyone \u2022who\nbreathes the spirit of our fathers who\nfounded this British Dominion.\"\n\u2014ARTHUR MEIGHEN\nTHE Election to be held December 6th\nwill be the most, momentous in\nCanadian history; for as men and\nwomen vote will depend the economic\nstability, the political stability and,\nindeed, the national stability of this\ncountry.\nToday we find group striving against group,\nclass against class, the industrial and financial\nstructure of the country assailed by false and\nunsound doctrines and theories, while our\ngreat neighbour to the south has adopted &\ntrade exclusion policy directed against Canadalfc\ntast agricultural interests.\nThe currencies of nearly every country in the woHS\nare depreciated. The Canadian dollar in the Unitefl\nStates is subject to a heavy discount causing a loH\nof over one hundred million dollars in exchange\nannually,\nEurope is overwhelmed with war debts\u2014unemployw\nment is acute \u2014and the restoration to pre-wai\nconditions is slow. m\nWhile Canada is in a much more favorable condition\nthan many countries, yet there is evidence of stagnation, instability, unemployment and lack of confidence.\nTaxes are heavy because of tiie country's efforts in\nthe Great War, but have become burdensome on\naccount of the misconceived policies and blunders\nof Governments that directed Canada's affairs prior\nto 1911.\nThese condition* are largely the direct aftermath of\nthe war, but they must be dealt with fearlessly and\nConstructively. This is no time to consider experimental changes, or the theories of visionaries.\nThis is no time for Crerar and his Free Trade policy.\nThis is no time for King and his wobbling \"charted\"\npolicies, varying with each provincial boundary.\nIt is the time to cling to orderly, stable Government\nin the interest of all the people; to be guided by the\nexperience of the past, proceeding upon lines that\nhave been proven Mound.\nIt is the time to place the destinies of Canada again\nin the hands of a Government led by a sane, courageous Canadian who has safely brought the country\nthrough the trying years of reconstruction, and upon\nwhom we can rely to retain and initiate policies in\nthe interest, not of a group ox Class but of all the\npeople.\nIt is the time to support Arthur Meighen and his\nCandidates.\nTfmUri v$&ut\u00ab\u00a3 jfcuqk\nThe National Liberal and Conservative Party\n61 Publicity Committee\nJ\nVARY YOUR DIET\nToo much meat is not healthy,\nvery choice\nLABRADOR and HOLLAND ERRING\nTheynre appetizing and make an excellent meat\nsubstitute. Also try our Bulk Teas and Coffees.\n\u2022They are the best in the city.\nThe City Grocery\nR. M. McLeod | Phone 25 | H. H. Henderson\nCOKPORATION OF THE CITY OF GRAND\nFORKS\nNOTICE\nLicenceholders and householders\nof 21 years or over (including women) who have paid their Road Tax\nfor 1921 of #2.00, or who are exempt by statute, must register at\nCity Office on or before October 31st,\nat 5 p.m., in order to have tbeir\nnames on the Municipal List of\nVoters for-1922. All former declarations are now void.\n, JOHN A. HUTTON,\nCity Clerk.\nPractically all tbe apples are now\norl the trees in tbis valley.\nS. T. HULL\nEstablished 1910\nRealEstate and Insurance\nResident Agent Qrirad Fork. Townsite\nCompany, Limited\nFarms Orchards City Property\nAgent* at: Nelion, Calgarjr, Wihnlpcg aud\notlier Prairie polnti. Vanoouver Agent.:\nFI__ND_.lt INVESTMENTS\nHATTBNBURY LANDS LTD.\nEstablished In 1910. we are In a potlllon to\nfurnish reliable information concerning this\ndistrict.\nWrite for Iree literature \u2022\nRev. W. P. Bunt, Mrs. J. J\nSmith and Phila Dinsmore attended\nthe religious workers convention in\nNelson this week as delegates from\nthe Methodist church Sunday school\nf rta CtBt of lulbfi\nHardy Flowering Plants and Shrubs\n\u2022SEE\nCity Property For Sale\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPrices:\u2014From $25.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms:\u2014Gash and approved payments.\nList of lots and prices may be seen at the\nGity Office.\nJOHN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk..\nBIDE THEM- ON CLEVELAND\nIT brings the whole country for miles around within easy reach.\nHave you seen the new models) They're as graceful as swallows! As\nbright as new coin! As weatherproof as a duck. Automobile Steel\nBearings. Frame of English Seamless Steel Tubing, Hard Maple\nRims. Hercules Brake. Everything complete. Real Quality. Real\nValue. Easy Terms. We are tbe poople^to mount you right.\nJ. R. MOOYBOER SB^A&ftft\nOpen Saturday Evenings Till 10 o'Clock\nOur\n\u2022As we go to press our Dutch Bulbs are rolling west from Montreal,\nand we expect them to arrive about the time our Price List reaches our customers.\nHyacinths for House Culture\nExtra Large Bulbs.\nGigantea\u2014Color Blush Pink.\nLa Grandesse\u2014Snow White; the finest of Bulbs. .\nEnchantress\u2014Lavender and Lilac Blue witb ligbt center.\nGrand Lilas\u2014Light Blue, shaded Lilac; very pretty.\nGrand Maitre\u2014Deep Porcelain Blue.\n20c each...$2.00 per dozen. Add 10c per dozen for postage.\nHyacinths, Selected Bedding Size\nGertrude\u2014Rosy Pink.\nL. Inuocence\u2014Light Blue.\nGrand Lilas\u2014Light Blue.\nQueen of the Blues\u2014Blue with Silvery appearance.\n$1.00 per dozen. $9.00 per hundred.\nAdd 10c per dozen for postage; 35c per hundred if by express.\nTulips\nAll Tulips by the dozen rate aro Postpaid.\nEarly Single\u2014Choice mixed colors.... 35c per doz.; $3.00 per 100\nEarly Double\u2014Choice mixed colors ._> 45c per doz.; $3.80 per 100\nDarwin Tulips \u2022\nThese stately beauties are borne on stems often 3 feet high, the oolors\nrunning from almost Black to the finest White.\nClara Butt\u2014Deep Apple Salmon, extra fine 60c per doz.; $4.75 per 100\nEurope\u2014Salmon Scarlet, one of the very finest...75c per doz.; $6.00 per 100\nGretchen\u2014Delicate Pink \u201e...60c per doz.; $5.00 per 100\nPainted Lady\u2014Creamy White 60c per doz.; $4.75 per 100\nWilliam Pitt\u2014Glowing Red, extra good....'. 95c per doz.\nCanduer\u2014Pure White : 75c per doz.; $5.50 per 100\nPride of Haarlem\u2014Carmine Pink, extra fine large flowers, tall stem.\n75c per doz.j $6.00 per 100\nChoice Mixed Darwin Tulips SOc per doz,; $3,75 per 100\nParrot Tulips\u2014In choice mixture 45c per doz.; $3 75 per 100\nEarly Double Tulips\nBoule de Neige\u2014Pure White 60c per doz.; $4.75 per 100\nDomonne d'Or\u2014Yellow, slightly tinged Rouge...75o per doz.; $5.75 per 100\nLe Matedor\u2014Bright Scarlet 75c per doz.; $5.75 per 100\nMurillo\u2014Extra fine blush Pink ? 50 per doz.; $3.75 per 100\nDaffodils for Forcing or Outdoor Planting\nPostage 10c dozen extra.\nVon Sion\u20141st size selected double heads, extra large.\n$1.00 per doz.; $8.35 per 100\nVon Sion\u20141st size round bulbs 75c per doz.; $6.25 per 100\nEmperor\u2014Perianth Primrose, trumpet deeper yellow; extra large.\n90c per doz.; $7.50 per 100\nEmpress\u2014Perianth White, trumpet rich Yellow; extra large Bulbs.\n90o per doz.; $7 50 per 100\nGlory of Leiden\u2014Dull Yellow $1.00 per doz.; $8.35 per 100\nGelen Spur\u2014Perianth and trnmpet rich Yellow; extra large double heads.\n90c per doz.; $7.45 per 100\nVictoria\u2014Perianth White, trumpet rich Yellow; extra large Bulbs.\n$1.00 per doz.; $8.50 per 100\nJonquil\u2014Double , 40c per doz.; $3.35 per 100\nJonquil\u2014Single sweet scented 40c per doz.; $3.35 per 100\nPoeticus Ornatus\u2014Pheasant's eye,double heads..55c per doz.; $4.75 per 100\nCrocus\u2014Mixed varieties 15c per doz; $1.25 per 100 postpaid\nIxia\u2014Mixed 20c per doz.; $1.40 per 100 postpaid\nIris Hispanica\u2014Choice mixed 15c per doz.; $1.25 per 100 postpaid\nIris Anglica\u2014English Iris 25c per doz.; $2.00 per 100 postpaid\nAnemone Cor\u2014Double, Red; for indoor'culture.\n35c per doz.; $2.50 per 100 postpaid\nSnow Drops 15c per doz.; $1.25 per 100 postpaid\nScilla Siberica 25c per doz.; $2.00 per 100 postpaid\nHardy Plants for Fall Planting\nPeonies\u2014All colors 50c each\nHardy Phlox\u2014All colors 25c each\nBleeding Heart 50c each\nFox Glove 25c each\nHolly Hock 25c each\nDellphinium ; 25c each\nCompanula.... 25o each\nColumbine .'. '. \u2022 25c each\nMichaelmas Daisy ' 25oeach\nCow Slip . 25c each\nShasta Daisy 25c and SOc each\nLilacs, Snowballs, Norway Maple, Spireai from 80c to $2.00 each\n3xu\\\\t Iras., Hitttiteb\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\nmHE value of well-\n\u25a0*\u2022 printed, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBail programs\nBusiness cards\nVisit hig cards\nSh'pping tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers \u2022\nPosters\nMenus\nTHE HUB\u2014Bring your boot\nand shoe repairs to my\nshop for neat and prompt\nwork. Look for the big\nboot.\u2014GEO. ARMSON\nSynopsis of\nLand Act Amendments\nNew Type\nLatest Style]\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColumbia Avenue and\nLake Street\nTSLBPflDMB\ntit-Imam prlo* at flrst-clans land\nreduced to |S an ur*; second-class to\n11.80 an acre.\nPre-emption now confined to nr-\n\u25a0rayed lands only.\nRecords wnl be granted covering only\nland suitable for agricultural purpose*\nsnd which Is non-timber land.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished,\nbut parties of not mora than four may\nMTanfo for adjacent pre-emptions\nwith Joint residence, but each making\nnecessary Improvements on respective\nclaim*. g,\nPre-amptora mnst occupy claims for\n. ***** and make Improvements to\nvalue of |io per acre. Including clearing and cultivation of at least S acres,\nbrfore receiving Crown Grant.\nWhore pre-omptor In occupation not\nI*** than I years, and has made proportionate Improvements, he may, be-\ncaua* of Ill-health, or other cause, b*\ngranted intermediate certificate of Im-\nliroVMBUit and transfer his claim.\nRecords without permanent rcsl-\nJ*iic* may be issued, provided applicant makes improvements to extent ol\n,-v3 par annum and records same each\n.\u2022ear. Failure to make Improvements\nor record same will operate ob forfeiture. Title cannot be obtained ln\ni811-, l}>*n 6 years, and improvements\nof 11900 per aero, Including 6 acres\na*\u00bbred and cultivated, and residence\nof at least 3 years are required'.\nPre-emptor holding Crown grant\nmay record another pre-emption, If ha\nrequires land In conjunction with hla\n\u2122\u2122. without actual occupation, provided statutory improvements made\nand residence maintained on Crown\ngranted* land. *y\nUrn urveyed areas, not excoedlng 10\nacr\u00ab. may be leased as homesites;\ntitle to be obtained after fulfilling rosl-\n\u00a3!\"\u25a0\u2022 *\"*} 'mprovement condition*.\nror graaing and Industrial purposes\nareas exceeding 040 acres may be\n\"St!; V one fereoa or company.\nMM, factory or Industrial sites on\ntimber land not exceeding 40 acres\nmay be purchased; conditions Include\npayment of stumpage.\n_._*\u25a0*}IU*} *** \"\u2022a-iowa Inaccessible\ny -SHS r\u00a5 eoeae may be purchased\nconditional upon construction of a road\nto them. Rebate of one-half of coat of\nroad, not exceeding half of purchase\nprlc*. I* made. \u2022>\u2014.\u2014\u2022\n-GRANTS\nR101\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nP. O. BOX 417\n-OKAND FORKS, B. C.\nFurniture Mode to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly\nr. c. McCutcheon\nW1NNIHG sMWSVJt\nDon\nPRE-EMPTOR*' FREE\nACT.\ni *_hS *CB!f* **t thSe Aat la enlarged te\nnclude all person* joining and *erv-\nIng with HtTlfaJesty. \/orces. Th.\nlime within which tbe heirs or devisees\nof a deceased pre-emptor may apply\nfor title under this Act 1* extended\nfrom for one year from th* death of\nouch person, as formerly, until one\n) ear after the conclusion of the present\nS\u00a3ct.?.h\"prtYUw -\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0&\u2022 SI\nNo fees relating t*. pre-emptions ar*\ndu* or payablTV soldiers on preemptions recorded after Jun* M. fill\nTajies are remitted for five ymri\nProvision for return of money* ac-\ncrurf. du* aad b**n paid .inc. August\n4, 1914, on account of payments\/fee*\nor tax** on Midlers' pre-emptions.\ninterest on agreements to purchase\n'own orclty lots held by members of\nAllied Forces, or dependents, acquired\ndirect or indirect, remitted from en-\nlistraent to March 11, imo.\nSUB-PURCHASERS OP CROWN\nLANDS,\nProvision, made for Issuance of\nCrown pant* to sub-purchasers of\nCrown Lands, acquiring rights from\npurchasers who failed to complete\npurchase, Involving forfeiture, on fulfillment of conditions of purchase Interest and taxes. Where sub-purchasers do not claim whole of oatglnal parcel, purchase price due andlax** inay\nbe distributed proportionately over\nwhole area. Applic \"\nmad* by Hay i, Imo.\nGRAZING.\nGraslng Act, Ull, for systematic\ndevelopment of livestock Industry provides for graslng districts and range\nadministration .under Commissioner\nAnnual erasing permits Issued based\non numbers ranged; priority for established owners. Stock-owners may\nform Associations for range management. Pree, or partially free, permit*\ntor settlers, campers ar travellers, up\nto ten bead.\nwhole area. Applications must be\n1. MM\nNEW HARNESS SHOP\nI have opened a new harness shop and am prepared\nto make harness to order\nand do all kinds of repair\nwork. Shop equipped with\nmodern machinery. All work\nguaranteed:\nC. A. Crawford\nStmt Telephone Office","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1921_10_21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0341912","@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
Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13
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":"1921-10-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1921-10-21 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\/1.0341912"}