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Freedom\"from debt begets a manly independence\nGRAND FORKS\nCITY COUNCIL\nT:\nI HE regular meeting o the\nGrand Forks city council was\nheld In the council chamber on\nMonday evening. The mayor and\nall the aldermen were present.\nRoutine business and committee\nreports of minor importance occupied\nthe attention of tho council during\nthe greater part of the evening.\n\"Ilhe council authorized the water\nand light committee to replace 3000\nfeet of the Mill creek flume, and also\nto replace 1000 feet of water mains\nln the North Fork addition.\nVALIDITY OF\nMARKET ACT\n\u2022    13\n\\m\nnative  Ii***\ne^Ana KETTLE VALLEY ORCHARDIST\nTWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR\u2014No   44\n\"Te'I me what you Know i\u00ab true\n'I win Iuam ft'- wf-11 n\u00ab ynu.\"\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 192k\nFORESTRY SERVICE\nENTERTAINMENT\nThe provincial forestry service\ngave a lecture on the preservation ot\nour forest wealth and a free moving\npicture show in the Empress theater\non Tuesday night. The house was\nfilled to its full capacity.\nThe lecturer gave a very interesting address on the importance of\nsaving our forests from the \"red\nfiend,\" and explained the various\nmethods of methods of fighting forest\nfires. He emphasized the fact thut\nthe best way to ensure a perpetual\nharvest from our forests was to save\nthe second growth of timber from\nforest fires, as reforestation hail not\nproved a success even In Europe.\nTo the rising generation in the audience, the speaker pointed out that\nit was to their interest to see that\nthe forests were saved from the \"red\nliend,\"  as,  when  they  reached  man-\nAFGHANISTAN\nVANCOUVER, August 29.\u2014Validity of the British Columbia\nproduce marketing act had been\nUpheld by Mr. Justice Murphy in .j\nwritten judgment filed on the habeas\ncorpus application made on behalf\nof Chung Chuch, who submitted to a\nfine of $10 in order to test the measure in the courts. The conviction\nhas been upheld.\n\u00abis lordship, after citing numerous l dlrect,y  engaged   |n   tne   tlni|ljer   ,\u201e.\nauthorities  upon   the   points  raised,! dH8try\nand particularly in respect to the] The moving plcture entainmtm\nmain attack, which was to the effect oonsi8led of tour reel3. The flrgt\nthat the marketing act is in conflict showed lhe eau8e8 Qf fore8t ^ ftn(,\nwith section 498 of the criminal code the proper m\u20actjhods o\u00a3 flghUug them\nand is in restraint of trade, says, Tne second ilhlgtrated the iumberlng\nThe pith and substance of the pro lndU8tl.y of the provincei and variol|s\nwuce marketing act appear in the manuta(.turing institutions directly\nportion of section 10 and in thedeflu- attrlbutable to ))e tore8t wealth of\nition of 'marketing' above quoted. iiritisn Columbla. llle thlrd was a\n\u25a0These provisions, to my mind, deal t,avei0gue, showing all the centeis\nexclusively with property and civil of iuterest ln the proviuce The\nrighto in the province. Section IU (ourth waa a eomlc Thls put m\nand the regulations thereby authov- kiddie8 ilv good numor\nlzed state in reference to any pro- j\nduct covered by the act, whether or;\nnot and at what time and in what\nquantities and trom and to what\nplaces and at what prices and ou\nwhat terms same can be marketed\nand delivered.\n\".Marketing as defined deals exclusively with a citizen's right to buy\nand sell and ship such product and to\nmake contracts in reference thereto.,\nAll these are matters affecting* olvllI\nproperty and oivll rights.\"\nIt is explained that property and\ncivil rights come within the jurisdiction of the provinces under powers\nconferred by the British North America act.\nAct Not in Restraint of Trade\nContinuing, his lordship says:\n\"Hhe only facts proven ln the case\nat bar on this phase are the provisions of the produce marketing act\nand the regulations passed thereuu\nder. Oau these be said to be, ex facie\n'undue' or 'unreasonable' as these\nwords are hereinbefore delned- lu\nthe flrst place they are the enactments of the legislature or made pursuant to its authority. Tho legislature, I take it, must be taken, at any\nrate, prima facie, to have authorized\nno 'undue' or 'unreasonable' act Iu\ntbe above souse. But if the court Is\nto examine into the matter the provisions of the act, on their face, do\nnot seem to be either 'undue' or 'uu\nreasonable,' as these terms have been\ndefined.\"\nCommenting upon the relation of\nthe aot to the criminal code section\ncovering combines in restraint of\ntrade, his lordship finds: ^^^~\n\"IX would therefore seem that there j\nare no grounds apparent on the sent-\npre record that would justify the conclusion that what the produce marketing act authorizes is necessarily a\nviolation of section 498 of the criminal code,\"\nAct Not Ultra Vires the Province\nHe further adds: \"The province in\npassing the produce marketing act\nwas in no way meddling with section\n498. it was occupying a field of legislation exclusively is own.\"\nIn concluding his judgment, his\nlordship says:\n\"No question of territorial jurisdiction arises on the facts cf this case\nsince Uie 'marketing' occurred whol-\nSUN'S WEEKLY TRAVELOGUE\nAFGHANISTAN, one of the most\nsecluded    of    the    larger countries  of Asia, has   come    more\nInto    world    consciousness  in  recent\nmonths than  ever  before  because  of\nthe visit of its. king    and    queen    lo\nEurope.     Until  this   occasions   these\nmonarchs    had    never  been  outside\ntheir   native    land,   and    their   trip\nthrough    Europe   was made up of a\n\u25a0scries    of    amazing    adventures.    A\nI journey  of   a   Canadian   through   AC-\nkghanistan would be little less amaz-\n| ing.\nAuthorities  differ   as  to   the  exact\nI origin of the Afghans, hut the oid\n| theory  that  they  are  of  Semitic  ex-\nII raction is now discredited; it seems\nI more probable that they are merely\n; a mixture of Turanian tribes, devel-\n, oped here through many centuries of\n[ raids, migrations, and tribal chauges.\nj'   In physical appearance the Afghan\nis  a sort  of  Turco-Iranlpn  type,  tho\nI minor tribal  divisions In the east of\nmtmumM-MunaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammMMMMMMMMMw-. ! the country  showing also a mixture Of\nhood, one out of every four would be | mi&B ,)lood     (The name ,.Afghan|,\nor \"Agwan,\" is of comparatively recent usage.)\nThe culture of the country is largo-\nFRUiT MARKET\nCALrrjA'RV,   August   ai'.\u2014This   week\nhas been cool and  varying from oe-l\ncasional    showers    and  sunshine  to\nheavy rains    Harvest ins just starting here.\nA heavy volume of produce Is now\narriving on the prairie markets-from\nBritish Columbia. The trade are now\nclamoring for edge pack tomatoes,\nand the districts shipping this kind\nof pack are getting the business.\nB. C. Skinner, formerly of Vernon,\nIB.C, is now representative ln Alberta of the Pacific Fruit and Produce of Yakima. Ho ls on^u business\nvisit to Calgary this week.\n'Kelowna is shipping tomutoos in\nlugs, not weight 2(i pounds, gross\nabout 32 pounds. These are selling\nat |1.60 per lug. A Summerland .lap\nhas sent n shipment of cantaloupes\nranging from thruo Inches to seven\nInches in dlumeter. These wero\npacked in onion crates and both tho\ncontents and the package were unattractive.\nOliver is now sending cantaloupes\nof size and quality that meets the\npopular demand,\nA heavy importation of mixed fruits\nis now arriving from Washington,\nlliese cars contain apricots, peaches,\nplums, prunes and pears.\nFlattery that is rewarded  is inexhaustible.\nDetermined\nPatient\u2014'Will I get well?\nDoctor\u2014Yes,  sir.    You'll  get\nif it costs you $50,000.\nwell\nThe  appli\nly  within  the  province\natlon is  refused.\"\nH.  S.  Wood,  K.C.,  and J.  P. Hogg\n'.ppeared In support of the application, and J. W. deB. Farris, K.C., for\nhe attorney-general, and R. L. Malt-\nland, K.C., for the committee of direction under tne   act.\nly Persian; but an eager desire for\nlearning is innate in every Afghan,\nand of late years not only Indian,\nbut also British culture and customs\nhave begun to influence the better\nclasses of the peopie.\nThe   Afghans   call   their   language\n\"Pushtoo.\"    For official matters, however, the Persian idiom is used and\nI understood over most of the country.\nI The Turkish and Mongolian tribes in\nI western    and    central    Afghanistan\nI speak their own tonghes.   The ruling\nAmir knows  Persian,  some  Pushtoo\nand Turkish.\n'Foreign newspapers, most of them\nj coming from India, are most carefully read at the amir's court, where\nthey are translated by hired students\ntrained In India. The amir delights\nin illustrated newspapers and is himself a (airly good photographer,\nJealous of Harem\nThe Afghan is notoriously jealous\nof his harem, and few, indeed, are\nthe men of the outside world who\nhave ever looked on the face of an\nAfghan woman of the towns. With\nthe desert women, wives and daughters of the nomads, it is different;\nthe Koran permits them to go unveiled. The breaking of this custom\nby the queen ou her recent journey\nwas  deplored   by  many   Moslems.\nThe Afghan works no more than is\nabsolutely necessary to make his living. Tihe upper classes consider il\ntheir privilege to oxpoll the poor.aml\nthe burden of taxation Is very heavy.\nAs for entertainment, the people,\nespecially Ibe wealthy, are fond Ofl\ngames ami of sports. Hunting, horse\nracing, wrestling matches, and gymnastic games era popular. Recently,\nfootball and tenuis have been adopted by the upper-class youngsters of\nKabul. Hum fights, eock-flghilng,und\neven fights between male quail, are\nfavorite diversions, and throughout\nall Afghanistan dancing is indulged\nin and the public declamation of ballads is warmly applauded.\nEvery better-class Afghan owns a\npiano, imported from Bombay, which\nhe plays with one finger, keeping his\nfoot on the loud pedal constantly.\nWhen an outsider plays for them,\nusing ten fingers at a time, they are\novercome with amazement and admiration. A tale is told of one man\nat Kabul who sawed the legs off his\ngrand pi,ano, so that he might play it\nwhile sitting on the floor, Afghan\nfashion.\nCostumes vary in different parts of\nthe country, ln the East the garments approach the Indian style, and\nof late years a few natives have even\nEuropean hats and uniforms of all\nstyles, imported in quantities from\nIndia, are often worn in tbe most singular combinations.\nThe typical national dress ot tho\nAfghan consists of a long-tailed calico shirt, white pants, leather shoes\nor hoots, and a tanned sheep-skin\ncoat elaborately embroidered with\nyellow silk; this coat is sometimes\nreplaced by a long toga of red cloth.\nThree kinds of headgear are customary. Some wear a low, 'many-colored cap: others a blue or white turban, which is frequently gold-embroidered with a flap hanging down behind to protect the neck from the\nsun. In some provinces men wear\nthe lcullah, a colored cap that looks\nlike a Turkish fez, which widens toward the top.\nln the hise and at work women\nwear long calico shirts, wide, colored\npants like the men, and head-cloth3\nabove gold-embroidered caps. Their\nstreet dress consists of long, wide\npants ami a blue or black overdress,\nthe costume being completed by a\nloose garment that covers the head\nabd upper part of the body, just allowing the eyes to look through a latticed insert like a strip of mosquito\nbar. Ilie feet are stuck in large red\nslippers.\nMeager Bill of Fare\nThe bill of fare of the Afghan is\nvery simple and reflects the poverty\nof the country. Bread, fruits, vegetables, tea, sweet milk, sour mllk'and\ncheese are the main foods. Rice, mutton, fowl, and sweets cooked in various ways are found ou the tables of\nthe well-to-do. The average Afghau\nhas no particular fondness for wine\nor spirits.\nTobacco raised in the laud is of inferior quality; the better soils- are\nimported from Russia, India and\nEgypt. The Amir Habtbullah Khan\nalways had a good private stock of\nHavana cigars. Both old and young\npeople lake snuff\nTea, sweetened and unsweetened.is j\nmr' favorite drink and Is consumed in\nprodigious quantities. When you goj\niu see &n Afghan, you can hardly escape before swallowing four or five\ncupfuls of tea; it is, therefore, no\ntrifling gastronomic feat to pay several visits in one afternoon, the more\nso if the pllte host (with a view of\nhonoring the western guests) has the\ntea served in big Russian glasses.\nThe right hand Is always used in\neating and drinking, the left hand being considered unclean.\nl)ogs, though numerous and useful,\naro looked upon as unclean, and\npious people never touch them.\nAnimals lhat go badly lame on ths\nmarch or camels that gel snowbound\nin the mountain passes arc abandoned to their later. Afghans never kill\nsuch animals, as we might do, to put\nthem out of their misery. They believe thul the lives of all living things\nare in the hands of Allah, and that\nman sins If he presumes l\u00bb interfere\nwith the supreme will. Afghans will\nnot even kill (leas or other vermin;\nthey moroly pick them off and throw\nthem away!\nThe trade of Afghanistan is moved\nentirely by caravans and Is largely\nin the hands of Hindus und Tadjiks.\nThe chief route lies tnrnugh the famous Khyber pass, the great gateway\nfrom India, which has been fortified\nby the British government.\nThis pass is open every week, on\nTuesdays and Fridays, except in very\nhot weather, when it is available to\nIrade only on Fridays. A most rigid\nscrutiny is exercised by the amir's\nagents on all who come and go. As\nsoon as caravans from India enter\nthe country, their Indian leaders are\nturned back and heavily armed Afghan guides take their places.\nSome of these Afghan caravans.or-\nT\nThe annual meeting of the West\nKootenay Medical association was\nheld in the court house In this city\non Wednesday. The territory covered by the association includes West\nKootenay, the Boundary, and the\nSlocan country, and the the meetings\nare held alternately in different\ntowns in the district each year. Last\nyear the convention was held In\nTrail. At these meetings, besides\ntransacting business appertaining to\nthe profession, the members also\nlisten to a series of lectures by eminent medical men from all sections\nof Canada.\nThe meeting in this city das attended by ten physicians and surgeons from Nelson, Trail, Rossland\nand   the  Slocan  district.\nThe lecturers this year were: Dr.\nA. T. Basin, Montreal, professor of\nsurgery at MoGill University; Dr. A,\nH. Gordon, Montreal, professor of\nmedicine at 'McGill University; Dr.\nGordon Bates, of Toronto, and Dr. T\nH. Lennie, of Vancouver. Very Interesting addresses to the attending\ndoctors were made by the lecturers.\nAfter the meeting in the court\nhouse, a banquet was served at the\nGrand Forks hotels, after which the\nmembers of the association indulged\nIn a program of speech-making and\ngood oheer until midnight.\nDEISM\nRESERVED IN\nPOWER DISUTE\nVi\nICTORIIA, August 29^\u2014After\nlengthy before the water board\non the power rate dispute between the West Kootenay Power &\nLight company, the Granby company\nand the city of Grand Forks, decision was reserved on the contention\nof the power company that the board\nhad not power to adjudicate in power rates outside the area of fifty\nmiles from Rossland, because the\ncompany has no legal right to sell\npower outside this area to companies\nlike the Granby at Allenby.\nR C. Crowe, counsel for the West\nKootenay company, at the conclusion\nof the healing stated that the company would supply Granby with power pending the conclusion of the\nwater board argument, so long as the\nGranby company shipped its concentrates to Trail for smelting.\nMr. Crowe declined to state what\nwould happen if the concentrates\nwere not shipped to Trail.\nTlhe board said it had nothing to\ndo with this aspect of the question.\nWHO WILL LEAD\nTRAIL  SMELTER   SMOKE\nDAMAGE TO BE HANDLED\nBY JOINT COMMISSION\nA dispatch from Washington.D.C,\nsays that the governments of Canada\nand the United States have agreed\nto refer to the international joint\ncommission the long standing grieV'\nauce of the Washington fruit grow\nern against, the Consolidated Mining\n&  Smelting company of Trail, B.C.\nSenator .tones of Washington, who\nhas beueii pressing the claims uf his\nconstituents for compensation for alleged damage done their orchards by\nthe smelter fumes, has made public\nhis correspondence with Secretary Ol\nState Frank Kellogg on this subject.\nSenator Jones received the following letter from the secretary of state:\n'^Referring to previous correspondence in regard to the complaint, of\nproperly owners in the Btate of\nWashington about damages to their\nproperties from fumes emitted by the\nplant of the Consolidated Smelting tie\nMining company at 'IVail, B. C, I\nhave the honor to Imform you thut\npursuant to Article IX of the treaty\nOf January 11, 1008, between the United States und Oreat Britain, (he\ngovernments    of    the   (tilted   Status\nMBRRITT, August 29.\u2014Dr. J. D.\nMacLean, former premier of British\nColumbia, will re-enter the legislature and lead the Liberal opposition\nas member for Yale, it Is understood\nin Liberal circles here.\nDr. J. Glllls, elected In Yale In the\nprovincial election last month, will\nresign almost immediately in favor\nof Dr. MacLean, who is understood lo\nbe agreeable to accepting nomination\nif it is offered to him. Debnite arrangements to this end are understood to he under way among th'\nLiberals of the riding. Dr. Gillls'\nresignation, It is expected, will be\nfiled shortly, and Dr. MacLean will\nbe tendered the Liberal party's support.\nOpposition Unlikely\nThat Conservatives of Yale will oppose the election of Dr. MacLean 1b\nregarded as most, improbable. Leading members of the party henj take\nthe stand that the entry of the lorn,\ner premier imo tlie legislature in a\nseat already won by his party should\nbe facilitated. No move Is being\nmade to nominate a Conservative\ncandidate in opposition to Dr. Mac-\nLean.\nWhen Dr. Gillls' resignation Is died\nj It will be for the government to fix\nj the date of the by-election necessary\n! to fill tho vacancy In the legislature\nthus created.    It Is anticipated here\n', there will, he no delay In the poll and\nthat  the  Liberal  leader  will  receive\nelection by acclamation.\nDr. MacLean Is well known all over\nthe Yale riding, which he represented\nIn the legislature before the last election. Slnco his defeat In Victor! \\,\nYule Liberals, led by Dr. Gillls, have\nbrought  pressure to cur on hlbm Ij\nand  Canada  have  agreed  to  refer  to\nthe    International    Joint commission  accept the local seat, and thoy under-\nthe  following  questions  for oxumlnu-\nappeared  in  European dress. A dec-l ganized with military precision, nurd-\nthe  amir  introduced   Euro-   her thousands of camels and  a  pro-\nortionate    number   of   guides    and\nnde ago _^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\npean uniforms and suits for himself j pr\nand his whole staff ot officials, \u2022 -\nlinn ami report, together with sum\nrecommendations as the commission\nmay deem it appropriate to make:\nExtent to which property In the\nstate of Washington has been damaged.\nAmount of Indemnity which would\ncompensate United States interests\nin the state of Washington for past\ndamages.\nProbable effect In Washington of\nfuture operations of the smelter.\nMethod of providing adequate Indemnity for damages caused by future operations.\nAny other phase ot the problem\narising from drifting of fumes on\nwhich the commission deems it proper or necessary to report and make\nrecommendations in fairness to all\nparties concerned.\nKhyber pass is open for caravans\ncoming into Afghanistan, and in the\nafternoon for those routed in the op-\ncamel-drivers.    In   the morning the posite direction.\nstand now he will be prepared to do\nso.\nTo Consult Party\nDr. Glllls, when Interviewed as to\nhis attitude In resigning lnfavor of\nDr. MacLean should the latter he returned by acclamation, stated that he\nunderstood the Conservative party\nhad decided not to contest the seat\nIn event of his resignation, but that\nhis actions would be guided by the\nconsidered opinion of his supporters\nthroughout the constituency. Before\nany action is taken, a meeting of the\nexecutive of Yale Central, representing the whole riding, will be held.\nHe is quite agreeable to follow whatever course would best serve the\nparty.\nWhile Conservatives here have not\nopenly stated that they would not oppose Dr. MacLean, it is generally\nknown that they are not concerned\nwhether Dr. MacLean or Dr. Glllis\nholds the seat and that they will raise\nno objection to what seems to be n\nuniversal wish that Dr. MacLean bo\ngiven a seat in th\u00ab legislature.\n THE SUN: GBAND FOBKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nZJnze\nJf^rss\nrmt&Jbrfciii#\u00ab!n\n--^G. A.\"i^\u00bbf^-E0fTORT\u00bbrNe f\u00bbtrBLISHEH\ni'i\nSubscript\nOne Year, ln Ca\nOne Year, in th\nAddress all communications to\nPHONE 101\nOffice'\n[ii niVfrc?3fLFo\n[028\nNOTABLES\nieilA-T.es    JeirgnA    .AIJHOTOI\nfour\ne\nIf frequent attacks of tonsillitis occur, the tonsils should\nbe removed even in a professional singer. Specialists in\ndiseases of the nose and throat who have had a large\nexperience and have removed tonsils from many professional singers state that they have never bad anything\nbut favorable results.\n^-T^tr^Uoa^in be accepted as authentic, the St. Ber-\nrks Sun,        y*   -\"Vfiurd ,*)g I* a product'Of the Alpine section of Switzerland Forks, B. ij.  land.   W^i^aboul^OUvvars ago, the monks of the Hos-\nLake  Street |m;e <>rotT wriiurd'WeSmi* to have created the original\ntype from tho cross of a mastiff, dog of the Pyrenees\nwith a Danish bulldog bitch. Later it became necessary\nto outcross with the Newfoundland and the Pyrenees\nsheep dog ln order to refill the hospice kennels, which\nhad been practically destroyed through the ravages of\ndistemper \u00abnd'accident.' Credit is likewise given the\nEnglish, mastiff and the bloodhound, used in bringing the\nSt. Bernard to its present stage of development. The\nout Rome, of this' heterogeneous mixing of the blood of\nvarious breeds has been tbe lirodtletlon of a Very extras\nordinary dog, un animal in which Size, strength, bravery, loyalty and devotion are traditional characteristics.\nTN r1?M[!%.:lPrJltl^MVKdlh,>to 'Wto'1 service, fou\nlcHft;V\/\/q'#nuyM!,4')*'!} BaJOsoTBl flood lights ar\nused^at^g^ujai;^^^) $y$ the, pilot,#fs\\ rflp^ly-.aS; possible, ^le |i.siarn'el!f;i(Uuwiuatiaft,,9,l',lth(i diekli atinj'&'i1'f3 is\navailable' Jn|d#yli|f\/j\/..);,iliMs.jK, acponipjUs.ta*dil};|l a.'powerful UDjIi-lnjA^dJt^r^tjo^^geaflild, light, all buildings\non the. fieldid. aro, b<o\/|d|l^itc.d;..,,b!y.smaller; units. ; Tbe\nbeaoonr lights .jiraiP^uceil^oii ,^\u00a3oqt. ;ito>Y(6r$ ,*n,<dj feli-ye to\nguide tne pilot ajd ,shpw,;,h;UM,, thp,;|oqati6n(.';ctfl.rekuiAis\naud emergency, luudjug, fields..,A reypNing projection\ntype .pjjbeaco.u,,js'used, \"r:iie,,dnim..r;<iivolvje8 with a frequency,;, wbicl),' gives,.,\u00bb .ff^sl\\,,,^yei;y-,.ten fceeonds, -'The\nrouting beacons ,aJi;e)jO).; Lwo p(u\u00a3\u00bbes, eleclirld and gas. Tho\nelectric .rptat^s .$*' ynje^.a minute, and the ,gae becomes | ^\"^'the'watch' alcV'the\npilot agjfov!V<Wi...%|,\u00abV\u00ab\u21221Pi.al.'-re^.and ,Wflc     ta g[f ,f      ^ *\nemergency ,,lipids, ,,11,1:0 .outlined with, wliyte electric; .lights f\nplaced ,i,fib. to^ou I'eut.. apart.       ..,,..,    ,   I.   niHui\n:,..\u201e'!>\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0    '\u25a0.   od    I    r HU   I-\"''!\n._.;ll   . \u25a0  gliyl  \u2022'.\u25a0    ;.':.'\u00bb \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 r   ' \u2022 \u2022    1\n',HE|MWl.ing,.el<2iiipi)ti in-l'liiuii'-liuBibsen training' figlit-\ning crickets. foriiuindrQils., of yours.: iHiige hums'art\nstill liejl-jon.iHi'wkwt lights-- aiidi.thtii owners ofl!champion\nciicko(JS:..ur'(.uatiioually iknowniioifln i-hls- bpok,'''Cricket\nI'SI'NiG the praise of the unknown teacher. Great generals win campaigns, but it Is the unknown soldier\nwho wins the war. Famous educators plan new systems\nof pedagogy, but It is the unknown teacher who delivers\nand guides the young. For Mm no trumpets blare, no\nchariots wait, no golden decorations are decreed. Ha\nborders of darkness ..and\nenches of ignorance and folly.\nPatient in his daily duty, be strives to conquer the evil\npowers which are the enemies of youth. He awakens\nsleeping spirits..  He quickens the .Indolent, encourages\nthe eager and steadies the unstable.   He communicates\nrpHE^wting,,element, in-(.'hiuii-liua-ibecn training' fight- -\u201eig own joy m;! learning and shares with boys and gilrls\nI hue ci.k.is  lor. huiidroil,-.  ol. v,,;,rs.    Ili.K*  sums  are ' the Dest''treaB'ureH 0f hlB mind.   He lights many candles\nwhich, in later years, .Will, shiue back to cheer liim. TIiIb\nis the reward.    Knowledge may be gained from books;\nbut'the,'love of knowledge,, is, transmitted only by per-\n.History, -IMS iJg0nai contact,   No one has, deserved better of the nation\ne -Chinese in j'\"tlian\"the unknown teacher.\u2014.Henry Van Dyke.\ntraining these scrapping insects.   Even in ancient times j \u2022\u2022'\u25a0' \u25a0\" |\t\nthe   trainers   prescribed   strict   diets\nChampions of Qhiuui\" . JJr,. Jjeittbold .Lauferj famous Sin\nologlst-|Ol,'\u201eltbfl.i|lr''iiel.dr' Dliisaumiiof. Natural\ncloses  then interesting  niethuds .used, by  Uie -Chinese\n,,.,,,    ,   ,t-    sU ,_,,-....,    ,. 11  WISU.RB is no more4-gone where the spinning wheels\nThe usual dtet.consist <>i $ dish of. rice nifted With fresh \u25a0\u25a0]_,\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   \u25a0 . ,. ,   . , .v.     ,\n'   I u ' riitrh   (i lii    ,,are.gone,,and the pack'horses, and the slow wagons,\nol.-, 1 _^ ^ peddlers who brought bargains to the door on\nHuiiy,afternoons.) Ingenious philosophers tell us, perhaps, that the great work of the steam engine is to create leisure, for mankind. Do not believe them; it only\ncreates a vacuum for eager thought to rush in. Our idleness ;is eager npw-r-eager for. amusement; prone to excursion trains, art museums, periodical literature and\nexciting novels; prone even to scientific theorising and\ncursory peeps through microscopes. Old leisure was\nquite,a different personage; he only read one newspaper,\ninnocent of leaders, and was free from that periodicity\nof sensation which we 'call pastime.\u2014George Eliot.,,\nPOEMS FROMTHEFAREAST\nPERSIA\ncucumbers,' bailed; chestbtits; lotus .seeds,am\nSome of the-dwntrs audi fanciers allow* themselves to\nbe  bitten  by mosquitoes, and  when the lnpsquitdeB arc1'\nfull of .bipod .thJey^are:$vo)i, to ' their; favq'rite 'crickets.'\nTJhe fighting, crickets ;|aljp:iie^| in;' ^ijeilally jdevise'd \u25a0jttts,!|\nwhich rareJ riiadei to serve *irs' hotli' 'sdminer \"and'wlhtei\"\nhomes.   The jars are furnished with tiny beds'iind: water'1\njars.    Tha champion .crjokets an\u00ab, Wanspoijled  Hi finely\nwrought cogps, some \u00abf, wl|icb:are UJjigree gold.'\"1 ''\u25a0''''    I\n;.,:\", ,|        ;.'',,'-,-^-    l.irM.'.,  .|-^'\u00bb'-';      H\nEVERY ONE knows, aim .circus lure and .'appeal to all'\nages,\" and'Of the' ihrlll<'t>ba1 the adTartfeJ faflfb'oarcl no-'\nDices give.   Hut it was' ma'little 'hamlet fai off from tii'e'j.\t\nmain lirte.iin NiMw Sdotia that'MiB billboiirdi wer^ giving]''' ^Pgm!i'n,ay.,is.t^. name given in Scotland and parts of\nall thdithrlllte.   miehiidvaiiue'tnanfor the' c^u^ tad ovi-^ e,^],,,^' t0 t],e last day of the year.\ndently lost; his wily' and \"gist fa* away from jiis roiite.'but, ' \"' l'\"\"'\nhe had put up >lwo posters otr un old shod in this place,\nwhere even the niii'row almorit linpentitriiblo; road showed I\nthat ita few'people' wbultl Irnever travel to a town  flfiy\nmiles distant.   Hut); at leakt he hod'given the childcm),. i\u00bb. 1\nfeeling- of ther atrcUC.'\" Pori 'sitting on I seveijql rypckaMawJ\nstumps'-sHele nlhe ointfen children from the1 houses In tho\nvicinily goizing at'Wiei.bllldoiii'ds niili'imagining, tbeisUQW,\nand lobkingiioii >*B'. the world as 'thioudh!tli:\u00aby,,op1uld ,,see\nthe woll-uigh.uiibelievabld wondter'of a benutrfful!iady ou\nthe back of u beautiful horse. iWI '. ,,,{\u201e\u25a0.   \\Mi\nX'3rl\\it,\\.> naiua \u25a0 ;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- -vehfl auibfli\nTHERE Is,Ms cours'e, no'^bliic iblood,'' but the town,'generally used in'a cbiniflinieiifriiry suiise' as denoting geli-\ntie birth, does reMiy'blii-k liack to! ciildr origin; Not-of\nblood, thtough;\"l'Hhe'reference is to the'cdldr 08 the'veins.'\n'Families' who through seveial' g'eiieVatlbn's - possessed sufficient'Wealth ito enables them to escape manual work\ndeveloped' skins''of a ^ery'fine texture, and through tho\nlatter Bbb veins showed blue. 1'hat''would be especially\napparent in the builds' and rore-urms.: The skins of those\nwho, unbiessed1 Willi -\"weflltbV had Ib'Work became' hardy\nund the veins wero hardly discernuble. ifcusi' although\n\"blue-veitned\" or \"fViie-skiniifii\" would'liavc been more\ncorrect, the term'\"blue-blooded\" tamo into use to denote\nthe aristocracy; aiid -It'\"Would seem, from old writings,\nthat it was'the popular betlW that the term'expressed'\nthe literal fact. '     '\"\u25a0\"        ;l      ' : lioiU  01\nl-.ir. r\u00abJ -s uLi.u_ii^.\"   \" ,1'    vd I; nil\nul    \u25a0       j i;i|   \u25a0\ndee Is of virtue and this frail spirit\n,' ...    A3TJ;  f,\n01    33AMAC\nrutoi. i \u25a0\u2022\nOh!  where arc the\n,-\u25a0   i,:,where?' : \u2022\u25a0:\u2022   ,\nHow wide,the space tliat: sunders the bounds of Here\nand TDierel\nCah toping aught  in cpmmon with works and worship\nown?   , ;...\u25a0:!\nWhere is regard for sermons, where is the rebeck's Tone\nSUNSHINE\nYou Tell 'Em\nGeorge\u2014It Isn't the amount of\nmoney that a fellow's father has that\ncounts here at college.\nGene\u2014No, it's the amount of the\nfather's money the son has.\nThe Knowjng Clerk\nCustomer   I'd   like   to   see   something in the way of an enlarging device for a camera.\nrClerk\u2014For\u2014er\u2014fishing    purposes?\nJr\\\nBRITISH\n!\/ v\nCOLUMBIA\nProvince of Carada\nThe Mineral\n\u00ab., ,\nTQ THE ElND OF DBCEMBFR, 1927,\nHas produced Minerals as follows: Plac r Gold, $78,174,795; Lode\nGold, |1J0,\u00ab8Ji^9; ,\u00bbilver, 186,689,046; Lead, $f21,S50,734; Copper, $221,-\n482,079; Zlne; 859,808,192; Coal, 8271,294,668; Structural Materiala and\nMlrrcellaneous Minerals, 163,602,296; making Its mineral production to the\nend of 1927 show an ,,,..,   | \u201e.\u201e      vjla   \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0-   h.ti-iO\nb.ioK\nA^regate Value of Mm,m$*$\nProduction for Year Ending December, I927, '\nftbvf.yZy.oDo . .   .\nThe Mining Laws of this Province are; more liberal and the fees lower\nRealiam  -\nFirst Diva (behind the    scenes)\u2014\niHow should 1, make up to look old?\nSecond Diva\u2014Just wipe  the  powder off gently.\n, th\u00abn **\u00bbe\u00bbe of any other Province in the Dominion,' or any Colony In the\nBritish Empire. '' '  ,9W\"1\never      Mineral locations are  granted to discoverer* for nominal feet.\nNo Telling\n\"Am I the first   girl   you've\nkissed?\" ..    .\n\"As a matter of tact, yes.'     '\n;\nWhy He Missed Her\nThe widower had just started in to\ntell a story when he suddenly broke\ndown and began sobbing like a child.\n\"Why,   What's   the   matter?\"   we\nasked him.\n\"Why, how can I tell a story without my wife here to butt in with corrections and advice and finally taking\nover the job of finishing It herself \"\nhe wept.\nPromising\nMy heart abhors the cloister\nWhere ls the Magilan's ! cloister,\nwine?.\naud the false cowl its sign:\nand where is his pure\n: ;\u2022      \u25a0   :   \u25a0     ..   ' '...      : ',    .   ill, \u25a0 .\nA PARTY of ineii and w\/unon landed on an uninhabited Island, and proi,i'i'ih'd lo found a slnti;, Because\nthe women outnumbered ,lhe men,, and .heuutise Ihe bleu\ndidn't cure lunch Bltliet \u00ab;ij, .the puiipii grubbed, all the\nIIIst, ai;( >'i)s lo ,lmilii, a good Btoilt Jail, ol'\n'\"it'hul.'s, ,the wen's,,uup\/tors,\" said the ma,\ndttmu pre\u00bbkiiri|it . of the, H.tuij, .,,\"f\\vboru> .the women's\nquarters?;; uslied a., muoculiuo; sub^ecu , \"pii,, there'll\nnever bet any ,wp|uoii iu ,too ,'jiijj,\" repiled tlie p'resideni,\ncomplacently.\noffices.    Tli\none    room\niUi>.\n-Tr\nrriHBRft ui,c pomie, .^lurft | babliul (4ip counters of husiimss\n*\u25a0 places who, are very oloyeif, '4'he: other, dayi I ,saw, a\ncounter tuau ii| a ,locurl,lijfljiflj..roftni, pujl olfa prqt^y gppd\nstunt. The mau was waslijud cups, and i noticed he did\nnot dry tlieni with a. towel or.machiun.: .lie :Bimp,)}(,placed\na dry towel pa, al^Fga, n\u00bbetaJ,rjtray;.i)IJie BJ(pla4ned,,J\u00abi[mp\nthat as,,)ie turned ,:tb,i*;>\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb.\u00ab* -upside r dvw.ui tio^j^at^rj or]\nmoisture uli ,raii!.:tp; the htowel Sfiabthf) tr,ayt The towel\ntook up all the ;uojstupe, leajvius tiiei.(fups,)diJiy?, '. (ppkpd\nover some of the^cuim :Wjiiclv, thsirwwitejr;isaid he,.had\nstanding for a Mmu.i. Th8y:were: peilfectly-dry,;! i'acbapft\nthe idea will b\u00ab- cop-led by hojewivosMnSarem .News.\n-\u25a0-.   !\"v    'i-:iIi;t    iWii \u25a0'     *jr! I      \",n :\nTHKRE' are houses \"irt ''#Jiilr>ThTtiH ''\u00a3W6r' ivinfloiVs1 of which\nhave never been counted: ' Th'tfse irtclilde Windsor Cas\ntic and Wentworth Wooilhouse, the YoriifeSire Home of\nEurl Pitewilliam. A- fm-iii'er dhlfc of Afarlborotigh said\nthat putty for repairing'tlio\"win'dowH\" ot rileiihelm 'palace\ncost him $2500 a year. '\"\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022'\u25a0 '*\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \"'-; -\"\nin   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u2022' \u25a0!\u25a0   \u00bb\u2022 f:i  a \u25a0\n:   \u25a0\u25a0'  Mil-\naffects\nREMOVAL of the  tpiisils ' rarely nffects\" ,the:, alnglng\nvoice,  if the  oiieralikmyts, performeii  by! afl ffxvnri-\nenced surgeon.   In, maijy cases' 'improvement has,, resulted.\n.\u25a0puilr, \u25a0 .  ' \u25a0      :'    ';\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0 ,   n-jyi^ |\n'Tls, flpd; may memory sweetly mind me of Union's days!\nWhere is, that voice of anger,  where those ' coquettish\nways\nCan a! foe's heart be kindled; by the friend's face so\n\" n    bright?\nWhere Is a lamp'unlighted, and ths clear Day-star's light?\nAs dust, upon thy threshold supples my eyes with balm,\nIf 1 forsake thy presence, where can I hope for calm?\nTurn from that chin's fair apple;\nTo what, O heart, asplr'st thou?.\nSay!\na pit ia on the way.\nWhither thus quickly?\nSeek mil, O friend, In  I lull\/.\nJiniii'iici', nor rust from care;\nPatience and rest- what are they\nWhere Is culm slumber, where?\n-liaflz.\no4NCIENl HISTORY\nTWENTY YEARS AGO IN GRAND PORKS\nW. u. Bower, of tbe Eastern Townships bank in this\ncity, hits returned: from Midway and gives a graphic ac-\n'c'riunt'df the'Holdup'ot the Commercial hotel in that town\nby two-masked Dandrfts; last Tuesday night, in which the\nproprietor of the house, 0. i\u00bb Thomet; was killed.\n'''An1 iWiiokaW tire'bo&s has-been encountered in the\nridI(fe'h'ESigl\u00ab!,:niIue, located on Volcanic mountain, adjoining R. A. Bfowh's famous. Volcanic mine; near Ban^\nfiock'cilty, oh tlie ^fbrth t'ork of Kettle river. ,\nJosepH'tr. ^Manly'dh' Monday last brought into the city\na do'zBh boxes of very''fine peaches grown on. his fruit\nranch on tile eovert estate.  ,\nA' obris'ervative estimate places th\u00a9 .fruit yield this year\non the Covert estate at twenty-five carloads.\nThe dlnliig room of Al Traunweiser's'new;hotel was\nopened for business al rioon on Tuesday last. In point\nof furnishings the new house surpasses the old Yale.\nThe-only thing. Jacking,to make it superior to the latter\n(s more, room.,and we understand this will bo forthcoming iu the near future.\n,,:\u25a0\/ \u25a0'\/\u25a0: . ''\u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0       ,-,,:\u25a0\u25a0\nAnd   It Seemed Such\nScandal   .\nA conversation between two women, one of whom was hard of bearing, interested ibe passengers of a\ncrowded car. ,\n\"I saw her on the street downtown\nwith a man.'!\n\"Is that so?\"    ;\n\"Yes, and It was after ten o'clock,\n\"The very Idea.\" ,\n\"I never suspected her of flirting\nbefore.\"\n\"No, nor me, either.\"\n\"But pou can never tell.!'\n\"Ain't it the truth \"\n'lit Is that.\"\t\n\"Do you know her husband\"\n\"No, I ain't never seen him close.\"\n\"Well, he is a big fat man.\"\n\"Does he wear a brown suit?\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Smoke a pipe?\"\n\"Uh, huh!\"   |,\nThere was deepest disappointment\nin t he woman's voice as she fit-\nclaimed:       , ,\n\"FiddileftUcks,!, Then it was only\nber husband after all.\"\nGathers His Own\nConstable\u2014How did you come by\nthat pot of honey?\nTramp\u2014Well, X admit I don't keep\nbees, .but wot's to stop a bloke\nsqueezin' it out of the: flowers disr\nself? \u25a0   ,...;,.-..\nIt Is Disappointing\n\"What's the matter with Wombat?\"\n\"He has been disappointed in love,\n\"Whp hasn't?\"\nj    Absolute Titles are obtained by developing  such  properties,  the securi-\n, ty of which is guaranteed by Crown grant*,\nj    Full  Information,    together    with Mining    Reports   and Maps, may be\nObtained  gratis  by  addressing:\nTHE HON. THE MINISTER OF MINES,\nVictoria, British Columbia\nI i.i ...       \u25a0\u2022\u25a0-, [,i\nN. B\u2014Practically all British Columbia Mineral Properties upon which\ndevelopment work has been done are described in aome one of the Annual Reports 0f the Minister of Mines- Those considering mining Investments should refer to \u00abuch reports. They are avaaltable without oharge\non application to the Department of Mines, Victoria, B. C. .Reports of\nthe Geological Survey of Canada, Wlnoh Building, Vancouver, are recommended as valuable source* of information.\nReports   covering   each of the Six Mineral Survey Districts\nI .shed aeparately, and are available on application.\ni.i\nCITY REAL  ESTATE\nFOR SALE\n. !\u25a0\u25a0 |qi\n. '   '\nit\n. It ill..-,\n,        , .il,      '    i-i-r,   \u25a0-.    ni ilia I:..';\n,, \u2022\u2022 \u2022 \u25a0 i:    .1 .-.;,.    ,' \u25a0 dm    Ii kJJji\nAmplications for immediate purchase ol Lots\nand Acreage owned  by  the  City,  within the\n..     , ,, . .     .     .,     . '..''':;'...       Ill  :    )  |U    ......r.)    Q|\nMunicipality, are hr. ited. uuu\nPricesi\u2014From $25.00 per lpt upwards.,   ^,\nTermsi\u2014Cash and approved payments.       ' '\".\"i\n,^r i ,-.r* i..?,.    Uirjqoiq    .-.\u25a0.-.-    \u25a0;:;i.-\nmay  be seen at tlie\n u     [d .: ->;!,   erioDuiusai   SI\nCity|Office. --'-i   \u25a0\u25a0'<'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ui ^hii\nList of Lots and  prices\n\"'.-\u25a0I     ',11'.    r.i    '\u2022',;   tilt, 1*1\nio   laAfouw .i.-n   idJ   -'i\n31\nUfe in Fort Mink\nA young Englishman had brought\nover Borne glass beads for which ho\nexpected to obtain furs from the Indians. After many failures he was\ntalking with Toofus, the Fort Mink\nphilosopher and guide.\n\"You may get rid of the beads\/'\nexylalned Toofus, \"but you must expect to take a loss. You are not living in tbe days of Captain Marryat.\nIndians are foxy traders in these\ntimes.\"\n\"Then what do\ngluss beads'\"\n\"For beadwork\nwith.\"\nthey   Want   with\nto   trim tourists\nSeasonal Jest\nAthle11c authorities' declare , that\nbut one man ' has ever 'iwnejt^ tjfo,\ntriple slqmersauit. fco ' we presume\nthat records ma^e\/Wbile trying to\"\ncarry an armload of canned fruit\ndownstairs1 We\"undMciar'ihd db'ndt\ncount. \" ' \u25a0''\" \u2022''\u25a0\" '\u25a0''\u25a0' ':;' ' \"\"'\u2022\n,:.,,      Thanks to the Schedule     \"\"\nMaleTfoUrlsti\u2014What day is this?\nFemale TouMs(H\"M>onday-.i    ''i noi\nWale'\u2022 Tourists-Then   we   are   in\nBorne, Italy,      ''-\u25a0 I'I  I \u25a0'' '' \u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0'\u25a0\nHHI\u00bb Uttle Jeke\nWife (at WiIesden)-<My husband\nnever says how much he earns; be is\nreally a most funny man.\n\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u2022Adept., i ,.. \u25a0\n\"That. fellow, knows his onions.\"\n\u25a0'He wias born ln Bermuda.\"\nbone Saves\nD        \u2022 .-  .    Mi,- il. \u25a0 t n        :\u25a0    ||     -n llfO'!i|\nDestruction By Fire\n\u2022lOlflA    rl,    ;\u25a0\n\u25a0      :\n\/rto\ni \u25a0. iiluo-j\nH. , .'   ..  A!   '    || .,1      IV\nome rrom\n\u25a0   II    (Jl .\u2022,.-\u25a0--\u25a0;    lail'J    !\u25a0-,IUiiI |X1\ni\nidT     ill\t\n..\n'\nIn\ni 11 .nil\n,.n..i\n*\u25a0!,.:\u25a0 I  '\u25a0       |0     -lil.li,,'.,-     I).     ,,'!'.\n\u25a0-   ' <|l\/l    '   IU       ,'l      ...il  ll..i|\nI   \u25a0   ,\n..       ,       .'ill     HU\n|.|     )\n..        \u25a0.\n'      \u25a0        \u2022   \u25a0 .\nwin      -I'll.\n....   i ' is\n|  r|    \u25a0III!     |l\namong seme\nA few mln-\nIn the   house\nA cigarette butt fell\nlitter in the basement,\nutes later the people\nsmelled  smoke.    A  quick   Investigation disclosed ths faet that the basement was on fire.\n. . Ti HI'10 I'pUl 'II    '\u25a0 \"   \u2022\u25a0   '\nThe telephone\u2014a ateady, ready servant\u2014was waiting on the wall. A\nshaking seised the telephone receiver and an \u00abcl^ volv. placed the\ncall for aid. Qulekly It oarn. and\nthe flames ware \u2022ubdusd,,efteTi a brief, \u201e ,\nIl   l   \u25a0   \u25a0 .   '.;!.     ,   :.,.'!      . IHI -.,\n,'l    nilirjil   -nil   r,:m   .jilii\ntill    \u2022 Mill    ir.lll    ll'r   ., |\u00ab   i,||i    JO\nuu1  if)  -n.lii.ir -i.\/iiin -ui oj a\n1 i \u25a0    i tuii utiyitu saad | :.,, ..lid\nIlhe music of an accordion is sweet\nness long-drawn oit.     :-..,;, -.,,,:.\u00ab- \u00ab\n\u2666arllvoiq  uiij ao-iiV  i,illu ioK Js\/\\\nthe JM3SIE S9| K\u00abS\u00ab\nand tarries a rm^t&XMMMfflg\nfcat^s |cmiT(4 in M ither i&uriiir|\npaper   $1,00'per year\nlUIMMIIMMBIIlffimilBiil\n.7 Z\nlorli.l\nft\nitdmnnJ\nnorjsaup\nI   Minis\n r\nmsmujoo iiamfia ,zwiQ'i dHAflO\nRamsay MacDonald jlours Canada\nlunoiru  suoli\ni.'o.i  Ibb-i isfio  bus --eif.1\"\nniiO  \\e> ncrJfto!lqqA\nnfroJ\n\u25a0   \u25a0-,\nPeck,\nfjuo .\nOftT.HE.QArtAPlAN MEDICAL\nle\u00bb5    ; AMOGIATKW    KifrtTO\n.,,', r,.' MEASLES '  -\nMpASI^Ef3 is ii, child killer\/ This\ndisease:'which' so mady regard\nas of no seriousness and wftlch\nis thou'gTJt ,'6f. as a'neceiissary^evij.i.aci\ncompa)i|ed,,b!y.iCprtalnrinolnvenienceB^\nis, as a. matter of fuct, a serious menace to child life'.' and1 because \"of the\nnumber 'of':cbirdr'en \"it klila, it ranks;\nhigh among those .diseases that take\nlife tn .early-childhood. ' r\\ niloiluti\nIn 1986, there 6ccUt'kiiy'in,,panat)(i\n893 dlilths'J'fr|oifn',''measles, pf Which\n264 wieje;eWidien.under oneiyear of\nage. ..Moat.'deaths from measles oe-\n3.;\u00a7f.,ag?,;.: Tfip.dl'p-\naway from other children, not only\n\u2022toi prevent the spread of colds, but\nbecause the cold may be the first\nstageY   the most contagious atagei of\nIn-..\nm'\nPart of the' protection of child .life\nthe protection  of the  child  from\n- 'Questions ' cb>ic6rhln'g ' hbfefth\/' ad-\ndressed t0 the..Canadian iMadlflft), A\u00ab\nsp'fiation, 184 College Street, To-\nrontdi' will be answered by letter.\nQuestions as to diagnosis and treut-\nhient will not be answered.\n.ds\n'ir\ncur urider\"Bve yea\n^9,309 VOTERS CAST THEIR\n'     BAIiLOT   IN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\n. VICTORIA, August '27,\u2014Of .U.e .35,'.),-\n3fli9 rotes cast in .the.recent provincial election' 191,1174 were Conservative   \t\n\u00ab127; Independent.\nTn order-to give a truer lno>Vof-\ntiig 'number- who\nease va|(flckp psppclaUy those under lioweVcr,-Jt.inust\nthree,years. .\"VtoHi older the cblld.-thei lb''Vancouver the votes were dlstrib\nbettemosaa.ce'ho has of recoveiryi ' f iltdtl; among six candidates and jn\nMessfesT'*'i8 ' a db'b^tolcahie, disv.yic.tDrla among fgir. Ill VancoHye]\nease^^n^lSiJja^'ltiifriOni.ibe.sioki to I#.8,382: CoW\nthe wjsl)-.,, It* Isiiireryrj.easiljr spread^'awd -lb Vlclfola'^iUmo'l\nand pivetlcall^,,Bllli'Whoi'drbl'ejcp'6sed VtlXOGr: IJberal votes were cast and\ncontraW'rhe0 ofretise','1 uniess'tney^pljsUn Victoria. Thejactual num-\nhave '\u2022'been Pgo\/aptadj bjriBiltrevious ber ! fjf voters who 'eyferclsed their\nattacljdjbo'wxn 'on .swta lis^s'nuturTljanbttise, therefore, is 16 397 Con-\nIt iwJ|f\u00bbJintMta\u00bb!eii-'mea that\"eVeTV!,,%etV^|ves in Vancouver an\u00ab W2G In\nchild m0l ..h$e'$|y i^easiejs;'., ^\u00b0fe]iwf' Ul 11.707 t'ij^MHsMit j\u2122>\u2122\"\ncrlmlf^^^jbxpp^e^ \u00abIli|drpn: to ma&s.-.i.ver u d 6269 in Victoria. Iheso fig-\nles, bB\u00abHiUejta.do solsntoi-rlsk tthelry-ui'fe. I o  not, of  course   accountt'fpr\nIflBfieltsplittffll\/IJL J SlVPl\nwhich\n; \u25a0.\u25a0.\u25a0'.'      soli ;.'\u2022'--:\"\u25a0\u2022\u2022  l;ni;\n'. iBy lEr.win 'Greep-;-      -Jin'\nS 'Til tiliti 'fn a^mofole: \"HeaVe'ii\n|\u2014a place whoro may repose the\npersonality  of  the_ worn-out  par,\nthe  i^sri's  ma,u\/ nor\nlow, has seWe^fJJ^Jr u'^iaps sev-\nthrough\n,X? '\"\nmlM&exVi'a.mMl\n'jane,'Hv'6ritieVsl'Jth'ls,'aiiAlViolide;r<tiljat\nasjjj hV^gaJteB \"Wnerb i't'las'i:'earthly\nremharltT'1 of InMmera'Me' o<r& iand\nends' ;mftfcnBD6Wy  'Wei'e   automobiles\n1 ...i ii62.Liberal, ,6,2.1,; LaiiorundOiSi , fXstfJWAbHWtA\nTuway.'-'\u2022-\"   Bla \",UJ   \u25a0\"   \"\"    \"  '\nIf itJui;a\u00b06ii't\"b'elie've'!a'n antomohlre\n\u201e\u201e. ,\u201e ..o\/\/V. ,hasi:a-'MiWo'hailty,'Vlhif ' the \"\"ant\nwent to. thelriolrsr'iJTi .1\/i.iaij'i -u^ -D-..-;:-.j-^-k: -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0iyi in;\nh. -,\u00bbjCA..\u00abXS\u00bb\u00bb- jKryvroHrfl\" ami see for yourself.   ,\nlives. bets\n\u2022Measles . Is.( aejfbiig. Vol ,oply., ba.L; Th]e following returns, Including\ncauseJjkk|ilB.i,(b'U. because it seamsutosaatoBn :e votes, Plmay bp subject, to\nprepare ,thai\u00abroujid for other diseases minor1 corrections -^lien \"the muil&E'\nIt is the pneumonia .following meW'^kii'viceis anqsrefcbivedir'-J'i -' M*3<| *\nles which, nrnkus It so.dangerous, | i Alh^rnir-iiarnanl;,-. '85:1; Uaniia,\nT^ber^^s^i'mayirbecoma active.af-j Mil;! RuidjUjn, .1,^4.,,;.,_ ;,....,,,,, ,,.'\nter measlesu' bDiaiiXuMaha u niii    iljl i\"^,tU{\u2014'Valcoper, \u00a342:. Kergin..\"!*!!\nCon\u00ab#Hnint(:'Wie' -conttbr 'Ut':,nitea,B|e}i',', M'i^ljt. 132. \\J\"4\nit  muBt'^'^er^p^Derleu'.', ,t^a't! in#\u00bbr    ,;Bl^r{abS^iJ^l#6wllQ-:, '^S'aofiiSrrcIvor,\nBles  lijiltlmpBit  contagious , during \u25a0 thof 177fl;! putradgef 2144.: \u25a0: u ;~i .t.-11 - - - \u2022\ndays  before tho mash -appears;'- For! ' CarliooyTClimpbelJ, ;Ji4Utli   MuckaU-\ntills rtastoaf'* Is 'ttdflsted ^hat every  zip,,'92\nchild MlJ;'i\u00bbJ'6]^]i^^e,U,eai},!b'u .iChll\nStoddart, 393.\nIwack\u2014Atkinson\n2594;    iBar-\nMiicli\nahodtr\nore\nhain\\\nion\npresent iprest is\nlOilBi DTfifllTu utwai|\u2014\ntural J?elorestation\n\" u\nsaid recenuy\nin B.C. 'Iflie\nresult oiViia-\nlien Uic^.liiii\nw*\ndefeat nature.\nNatura\nlands\nseen al\nture   w:\nferests\n<\u00ae40'&\n>t present to\nst'ialuo4\nHitir.ii'^\njn, as.-uriayiT.lie\nojckin\ngJ^^irywHere, ancj..na-\n_.!..*,. ......ll- \u25a0   V,||jt\nPREVE\nKoaaaTODDH .0 j\nBRITIStt^OJaUMBIA FOltesi^RVICiT\nliVac* 'ivhrn'-'e \"fee 'c'iV M|' Is' 'to WJRS-\niji'untle,d\"''aii',d ' wre'c'k'edl\"Boe8l ttfougli\nS'pijst'rlrMarWi: 'A'ii livbrage1 of ten\nVb:a\"'diay,ls\"taken ldM0ne?elJ !f ho\na<)r\\ Is Tolled- orrto- ft- steel rack and\nlafteri a surprisingly few minutes'\nwojjB m*.|pbtrre ibbduls deEJJy'iflij|t\u00bba'.\noff!tlJ<rCl^ilBii tit^'iveanciaiid SVhfe-\nacijpits tifiiliiSiiiriirm;? Tlie;,:i|iaiit|r;\nwrHcjcer nofcMii^ TulfV\\vA\"parEs\"\narajio be take^ojg. ^'hftle-ia^ld; that\nparts are lo be mutilated.\n1^ ithe engine hnflibeen^Und to he\nin I, jinusually good condition, it It\ntakjen out and left intact. The vari\nbus\"! Units, such us the transmission\ns^Luniyeraal joints and rear axle are\nsorianated and set aside for examin-\nati^n| by an expert, who quickly determines whether they are top badly\nworn for any further Service!\nWhere a) phrt'-ls' found to be badly\nwor|i or broken, It is promptly con\nslged to the scrap pile.\nlii Jtho event that the motor Is to\ni\" M; idlsm^tled, and flol) m;es\u00abrv9d, .for\nrosslle intact, it ^s, contrary to,, t'lie\nproyiale'rif'ofilnlAfi'-iior'sm'a'ifhed apiii-l\nbut carefully placed upon iu im\u00bbt*<r\nslaiiil and taken down piece by piece\n1 ifvish  lhat some automobile own\nerajjopuld stand around and witness\n1 Iin silent lecture thai Is unfolded, 0,1\nsoii^e ,y|| ,|hu\u00bbeJp\u00bbotoli-ij..eoiuT. ibnvpl\nThdi words abuso and oarelessBSSS\nwuiild take on a now mbtining 'tci'the\nmotorists who could see a sturdy\nmasljehilcce lu bronzu und aluminum\nand Ijltjon thut was hurried to an un-\ntlino|(y; end by the owner's heedless-\nnossjirif Its many wumlngs of Impending jfouble In its vitals.\nYen, iiuAiHdsions< limy- bo learaeJ\na visit to the automobilo gipve-\ninr.fvi fu \u25a0 Ti.-i.-i-'\n2079.\nIlu^ubia-\nBuchanan,   659;     Cross\n26;  fe(lovTf,-\"627r\"\" \" \"\"\t\nCofebjtTrI^awf.e6-'iv ^IpKentle, .J,4\u00bb7^;.\nMcNkugBto'n! \"20T?8.\nCow^an'-^\u00abcd\u00abtjl6^*-D*vle;'     2360;\nGrayjj 90; Guthrie, 1607.\nCrbifbrook\u2014MiacPhersoii   jP^-W.al\ntare!?, i 1661. ' I \":    v     ,\u2022\t\nI Creston\u2014Llsttr,' 'ili'ty Putnam, ,'97*f;\"?\u00ab\nDelta\u2014BevfeyC^Zi  Paterson. 303|.\nDeVdiieyJ^oiiBieed;  2749;   Wnlta1;\nside\/\/l?47. fe*J.\/vi fj]\u00bb      \u25a0,,      ;.\nl^uimaltllglirltHir,^.: li;,,-  Pootey\n180if  Mrs. grS\u00bb, 1078.*^\/^\nFernie\u2014'McLean,      110r,--aipblll,\n.1639.,\n-Jpinrt GBorSe+i-Bur'dien, Httilt- 'Pen*\nrT394i -' '\n-Ofand  MkS^feenwoodiiKingston\n-8;  McPherson, 79n.\nThe   Islands\u2014Jackson,   683;\nnig.       R3W8H\/ e\"e\\of .'a  nM\n'' ...l\\aihlilr,fwi- Oofieyi   ir.lfi;   \u2022' Mticholi,\nl.\",::n. \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022 \" . - .-\u25a0,\n'l.-moftJUorH.-r --lllzHlmniiiiiS.     1IC9;\nl^:-'.v. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0M.i.; \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nl.ilt.^r |:^(-.;,r.\u201er|,- |2i|i;:    Jflltlll,   102\",\n\u25a0 '\u2022M:wi:t-jfU-  r,i illiiliirlt.v rerMnnsoii\n\u25a0 Niitiiiii'ini  firn-iWiii'.   i::irt;   PoarSon\ni:ii;c;.ii.'iiti\",;.:,v;: M(ntM$940IS!\n\u25a0Kr.iKivrii. niinicii..     :i:;:;s:'   McLean,\n9jbM.1T \u2022\u2022\"     (II i-:i      \"    |\nliKuwi.    Wi.Miiiiii:;fH|i-<iray,\nSaoford, SfoBldhtslb ehisiq 91\nn:Niailb  (jli\u00abni\u00bb\u00bbil<4fi   -Hiiwi-.,  '|tffl\n.avIlyUr\/.iili; 'iVi.ii.,,KlAck,''*\u00bbSl. \u25a0 '\n\u25a0 : \u2022i\\(uiii oA'atfUblflle^  (MufSt,'\nJrJiiel\u00ab\u00abi.ti:-.i jli'lS\"; !'mr.MIII\u00abn,' 396.-\nbniOJBSIneosvOSMtoian.'ie '889; \u2022 Shelford,\nfi&n. \u25a0'\u25a0!':-\u25a0 .;:\u25a0''   I'll Ino l   \"i   ,\"te ''--'\ni.'-Pi-iiiff      \u25a0Riipii-a'--f'att(ilIo,-    1370:\nThomrfiitiii...1270.'    i-'   '\u25a0\u25a0 - -\n,.iiatim!lHtiike--lteflv 906;' \"SutheMlirtd,\nrn.70.-ir widj  -nil. locml   .-- in |i\niltiebmunrt-lioliit-.Oi'ey\u2014Carson,929C;\n'\u25a0liowo,ir.-n(4i.v'   ism   \u25a0\u2022'i'iii'ijii.!.     id    i-\nHoKBliin>l,'lItlilWlMeDd^ald1;'   'J'1215^\nBchbfleld, 1686.\ni \/'Siianich\u2014Tolmie,   2378;   Wbittaker,\n3262;\nKeii-\n2466;\nl\/rV\n;\u25a0       ll\n-        \u25a0\nTEA\nBoa\nTwo hundred years ago a tea like \"SALADA\"\nwould have cost $50.00 a pound\u2014but such tea was\nthen unknown today millions enjoy the fragrance and satisfaction of \"SALADA\" for a small\nfraction of that cost.\n.\u2022'\u2022rr>.-:\nSurprise\n-Mamma, I have a sur-\n1-835.\nR3JA33JOHW\n.. \u00a3iilitt\/!|i A'Aii'Wr- aw3)P,H l-TOCt   Smart,\n(!2<'- :.';: I. r,II.-i'''    -.',\u25a0:    ]<::,\u25a0.:.I        <;\\.i,\\\\\\;,\ni,i6iniill(iiuieW\"MelCeniie, '2079:;Tuiv\nilisr, l|i6r\"\u201e, ,    \u25a0:.:\u25a0,.-1.,,  ,;, . ujilr\nv:.'Skeeua.-.TlPoe)ii'i|l,.:(765.; .iVVrinch,910.\n-   Soii|;U;   . Wtaiunguil-tiJones,      -214.\");\nSw.lbprUi.nd.uimiid.ii .i| ...:        .'.I.'\n\u25a0   Boutbi.yiiucouv.er-iCoi-iie.tt,    2452;\nrTdrflst,;,. 6(16,1 <i\u00aby, 39;..NoolandB, 1981. i\n,'Vunif.ouvifi-,, CHy-r-j\\lmond,   11,818; .1\nJJonajjijy,,', j :;,.L7.8;-, I iiosg, i .10.948; Smith\n.'lit.rrll.;. (j,U\u00bbVli0\u00ab,i 11,0.47.;  ThomnpsonL\nJidPl;    Diok,    16,968;    Kirk, 15.94;i>|\niM\u00bbitl:iai)(,,,,.|J,0,4i|Sl,i ;;,iSliell.v, .:lT.it86: j\nSpencer,;,, 1,6,7.17;, ii'WHlkom.   . :1G.769;\niSWiinor, 4?i3; .^Miitslnnes, 6026;   iPel-\nton, 97,7,,.i   8(1;  oj   I, \u201e, ilde    i'i\nVictoria i6Wy-UjDe\\|jaa,ii I6180;' \u00abra-\nham, 60g\u00a7y \u201eMtt<:|.,eau)ii66.7\u00a3;.:Stralt]i,\niSaO'l; iBentftT, rfJaM;ojHwr*\u00bbM\u00bbp ^764;\nllineh|ifro,\u201e76,l-l;\u25a0Twi\u00abg;(723a:;, Mathe-\niBon, ,7\\iiii,i,J\u00bbflGregor, 349; Inward,\n^316;   fs'ovtli,^^..!-,   taiiffl  \u25a0 :i \"   ., \"     It!\n.,i,,aalq-tiiUiB, iWiW;. Aialme,r,i 1188.-I\nbasl\nII i\"\nUU1 PLAYGOERS INSURED\ni-JSver.v now and then somebody\nlaiJghs himself to death at the ui'o-\nViefi. Kulalitics also have occurred\nttH'ii result of other strong emotional\nIfSBlipg\nthouIers\nand they may laugh their heads off\nor-t-cry their eyes out safely, il'or tbey\najre insuered by a policy wliijsh reiro-\n^jiuitees the victim for any moBioal attention.\n--'\nI.ittle Lucy-\nprise .for. you.\nMother\u2014Yes, darling, what is it\nLittle Lucy\u2014I've just swallowed a\nnail.               i\n\u25a0\u25a0',:., \t\n\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0'\u25a0\nCorrect\nSmith\u2014What   musical   instruments\ndo  burglars  like best\u2014the lyre?\n. Jithel\u2014No\u2014the loot.\n. -      \u25a0 . - .\n. \u2014\u2014\u2014-\nThe  Explanation\n\"Vou have  a  cupful  of hot  water\nevery day?\"\n''Yes; my  iaudlady  calls  It  soup.\"\nI \"E--\" MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\n\u25a0  .':    !l '     \u2014\u2014.\u2014\u2014.\u25a0\na     MtTS.it.\nI    I'uiiiinioi, Mo.iliTireiltal >VorliM\n(UAalirslfM I'rotinc \u00bb Cn. ICxiling\nESTIMATES FURHISMED\nmm        GniNnforks, p. c\n. ! ii'.iiri  nvcd  1   riHllB:...d  tiol.\n,   , . ,  I     :\u25a0:.-.   \u25a0-;;\n(IIUNa'F^KKS.i-.\nTraiisfor\u20aco,\nDAVIS S HANSEN, Props\nCity fiiitfuiiiacuiMi Gcnoral\nTr;inst'er\nHis Final  Mistake\n\u2014\n\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0\u25a0.\n\"You've been a most faithful husband, John. I believe that not once\nsince you married me have you hone\na wrong thing.\"\n\"No, ray dear, that was the last.\"\nThe bearing and the training of a\nchild Is woman's wisdom.\u2014Tennyson\nSeveral       eastern ,'picturo , \"P^jj |'\nnow    insure their patrons,'\n:0.n\nWood  find\nf tM-j Snle\nR.  F.   Petri*'*\nPhone 64\nI<\nSte\nMOST people know this absolute\nantidote for pain, but are you careful\nto say Bayer when you buy it? And\ndo you always give a glance to see\nBayer on ' the box\u2014and the word\ngenuine printed in red? It isn't the\ngenuine Aspirin without it I A drugstore\" always has Bayer, with the\nproven directions tucked in every box:'\n\u25a0 'i\nv, \u25a0\n.:'\u2022\n i.\n.   \u25a0 I\nin. ,'i.\nii,., I\nAspirin\njrsjriSsftlffTn. CsSsds)\ntadkstini Bsnr MsnpJ\nwell known that Aspirin \u00ab,\u00bb.,\u00ab\n THE SUN:  GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nTHE CITY\nNorman Mclnnes, aged 74 years,\nwho has made' his home in this vicinity for a number of years, died in\nthis city last Sunday after a short\nillness. Hi- is survived by his wife\nand n sun. The funeral was held\nfrom ihe Presbyterian church at 2\no'clock yesterday afternoon. Interment was made in Evergreen cemetery.\nThe 'hall storm last Sunday afternoon noun was not general all over\nthe valley. The ranchers on the Covert estate were not affected, anil only from isolated sections has damage been reported. The Doukhobors\nappear to have sustained the heaviest loss from the storm, but. even\ntheir estimate of the dnmage dona\nmay  he  exaggerated.\nThe building at the Grunt Northern\nstation, used during the past twenty\nyears as an ofllce by the immigration\nInspector and for detention purposes\nof undesirable Immigrants, was\nmoved to LttUrier Ibis week. Mr. Ms-\nCallum, Immigration lnspector-ln-\ncharge, now has his office in the\nGreat  Northern  station.\nThe case of the woman 'Lee, alleged to have been implicated in the\nraid on the Greenwood liquor store,\nagain came up for a hearing before\nMagistrate (McCallum on Wednesday, and a further remand of eight\ndays was made.\n'Ilhe public anil high schools reopen all over the province next Tuesday morning for the fall and winter\nterm. With the exception of the\nprinclpnl of the public school, tho\nstaffs of instructors in this oity rare\nthe same as lasi year,\niMrs. .1. It. Brown and .Mrs. Winter\nand a group of girls from the United\nChurch Sund|iiy school arc enjoying\nan outing at the Henniger cottage at\nChristina lake.\nJudge .1. It. Brown returned on\nSaturday from Ontario, where he\nvisited his brother during the past\nmonth. '\nIMr. and Airs. A. 1). Morrison and |\nsou Arthur left on Wednesday lor a |\nmotor car trip lo Spokane.\nNat Taylor, caretaker of the post\n(idlce building, is taking his annual\nholidays this week.\nCity  Clerk  John   Hutton   left  yes\ntorday morning for a motor car trip!\nto the Okiiiiugjiiii.\nGeorge .Massle Ihe tailor has moved j\nInto Ills new Bhop mi Bridge street. |\nWexi. Monday is Labor day and a\nstatutory holiday nil over Canada.\nIMrs. A. Benson left on Wednesday\nfor a few days' visit to Nelson.\nBruce Brown Is spending a few\ndays in Nelson this week.\ngoing on. Their representative in Calgary knows that it is being done, but\nhe seems unable or unwilling to do\nanything and the board members in\nBritish Columbia appear unable to\nmake any correction.\n,\"It looks to me as though they were\nafiyiid lo do anything for fear that\nthe legislation will be uled out. Iu\nmy opinion the legislation was wronk\nln the first place and now Ihe members of the board are afraid to do anything for fear they will lose their\njobs. Anyhow, they don't do a thing\nto rectify it, apparently,\n\"I   don't  think   they   will  get   nny\nlegislation for high duties,  because I\nbelieve their duties are high enough.\nTired  of Policemen's  Duty\n\"We have been doing the pollen-\nmen's duty here long enough without\nany assistance, and it Is getting under the skin of the wholestler and\njobber. We belles that it is tivme\nthat the consumer knows what is\nwhat. The same situation existed\nlast year, but did not appear so bad\nbecause there was a smaller volume\nof produce to handle, but this year\nthere Is a big supply and the thin?\nhas assumed  large  proportions.\n\"Either we want to see the board\nregulte the proposition properly or\nelse pass up the legislation. We are\ngetting tired of the way the business\nis being carried on at the present\ntime. Prices have been very erratic\nthis year in spite of the board.\"\nSuggest  Reciprocal   Pact\nMr. Savage declares that the British Columbia growers are obsessed\nWith the idea of American compotloii\nand relief, through higher tariffs.tlie.v\nhave spent thousands oi dollars In\nOttawa lobbying for tariffs, he says,\nwhen they might be belter employed\nseeking a reciprocal agreement with\nthe American growers and realizing\nthai, the distribution of fruit and vegetables  Is a year round  proposition.\n\"I have made public what I think\nof the situation because I have been\nunable to get any satisfaction from\n(lie board of control. Now I want lo\nsee what kind of a reply they will\nhave.    I may have some more to say\non the matter later,'\nSavage.\nconcluded Mr.\nMR. BLACK'S ANSWER\nIKELO.WNA, August 27.\u2014Replying\nlo the charges made by S. S. Savage,\nof the brokerage firm of Savage &\nflunked, produce brokers, Calgary\nthat the marketing board has lost\ncontrol ol' the situation on the prairies and that a system of secret rebates Is in operation, F. M. Black,\nchairman of the committee of direction, says that Ihe conditions referred to appear to be due to competition\namong some prairie distributors.\nThe committee, he explains, has\nauthority to, and does, check all\ntransactions of its shippers, to see\nthat these are ln accord with Its rulings, but has never professed, nor\nhas it power, to control competitive\nconditions on all the prairies.\n\"I suggest,\" says Mr. Black, \"that\nassistance to growers and consumers\nis of more Importance than to Jobbers such as Mr. Savage, whose ends\nwould be admirably met with the\nelimination of the committee of direction.\"\nCHALLENGE   OF   WHOLESALER\nfornla and Texas, which raise a tremendous amount of fruit and  vegetables and offer real competition.\nApplication of Dump\nReferring to dumping duties as sug\ngested by growers, Mr. Savage expes-\n| ses the opinion that the \"dump\" can\nbe applied today if it can be shown\nthat goods are being sold at less\nabroad than they are sold for home\nconsumption.\n\"My belief Is,\" declared Mr. Savage, \"that we ship more potatoes and\napples to the United States ot America than we buy.\" j\nCommenting on the general fruit-\nproducing system In British Colum-|\nbla, Mr. Savage states that the horti--\nculturlsts directing the production in,\nthe coast province are Inexperienced\nand that the province Is growing\nwrong varieties. The majority of the\nvarieties grown in British Columbia,\ndo not keep long enough, he explains,1\nand that accounts for one reason why,\nGet Your\nGroceries\nat the\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25\n\u2022'Service and Quality\"\nWashington and Oregon get as many\napples into Canada as they do.\nProtection   for  'British   Columbia\nGrowers\n\"So far as duties are concerned, I\nmaintain that British Columbia growers have a substantial protection  in\nTO   OKANAGAN   GROWERS' lower freight rates and icing charges\nCAUJAIKY,   August   27.\u2014Following  \u00b0yer  their  Washington  and   Oregon\nIncreasing Laboratories\nThe value of research work In tlie\nindustries is attested by the fact that\nthere are now 1000 laboratories in\nthe United States devoted to Investi-\ntional work of one kind or another,\ntheir number having been almost\ndoubled within the past six years.\nreceipt of word from Kelowna that\nthe British Columbia interior committee of direction, in reply to charges\nby S- S. Savage, wholesale fruit dealer, disclaimed responsibility for\n\"bootlegging\" of fruit and vegetable-;\non the prairie markets and laid the\nblame on jobber competition, Mr.\nSavage Issued two challenges to the\nfruit growers of British Columbia on\nFriday.\n\"I challenge the shipping organizations of British Columbia to produce\naudited returns to the grower ou apples that were shipped to the Euro- j\npean market during the last eight\nyears after deducting all charges.      I\n\"1 challenge them to show that the\nposition or the  Okanagan grower if.! be  has  been  credited  with  a state-\nworse   than   growers   In   Washington ' ment he did not make In answering\ncompetitors. They have approximately lVfe cents per pound advantage without any duties.\n\"As a box of apples weighs a bit\nmore than 40 pounds net, this means\na protection of 60 cents ber box without any duty, which certainly ought\nto be sufficient, The same thing is\ntruo of peaches and vegetables. Yet\nthey are nsklng for as much as 2\ncents a pound on celery, lettuce and\nsimilar products.\"\nP. M. BLACK DENIES\nPART OF STATEMENT\nATTRIBUTED TO HIM\nF. M. Black, chairman of the committee  of  direction,  points  out  that\nand Oregon, who must compete with\nother producing states such as Call-\nS. S. Savage's charge. He explains\nthat while he did say that his organization checked up on transactions\nof its shippers, but had no authority,\nand had never professed to control\ncompetitive conditions on the prairies, he had not made any statement\nto the effect that the ends of jobbers\nwould be admirably met by the ellm\ninallon of the committee of direction.\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPhone SO\n'S\nLOST- CONTROL\nCALGARY, August 27\u2014 Thut (he\nBritish Columbia market Ing\nboard, formed by provincial legislation to regulate the price of coast-\nprovince produce coining into the\nprairie provinces, has lost control of\nthe situation and that \"bootlegging\"\nof fruits and vegetables, and private\ndeals with rebates are prevalent at\nthe present time, is charged in a\nstatement issued by Sam S. Savage,\nof the firm of Plunkett & Savage.one\nof the largest wholesale fruit distributing firms in Alberta.\nMr. Savage states that prices disclosed on the Calgary market and at\nother points in this province show\nconclusively that rebates o some sort\nof return are being made In many Instances by growers and that the marketing board is either unable to cope\nwith the situation or is afraid to\ntake any ruction.\nHas Complained to Board\n\"1 have written at least a dozen letters of complaint to the marketing\nboard,\" states Mr. Savage, \"and ha\\o\nnot received more thiiin one or two replies.    They know that this thing Is\nTake a Ride\nand you will know\nONE of the most spectacular achievements in automotive history is the\nmanner in which today's \"Bigger and\nBetter\" Chevrolet is increasing its margin\nof leadership as the world's largest builder\nof automobiles.\nCome, take a ride I Learn the reasons why people\nprefer Chevrolet.\nKnow Chevrolet performance! Wherever hills\nare steepest, the fame of the Chevrolet motor is\ngreatest\u2014because it is built on the valve-in-head\nprinciple, which provides all the power advantages of overhead direct firing.\nChevrolet's delightful smoothness is achieved\nby the use of invar-strut alloy pistons, and by\nthe accurate balancing of reciprocating parts.\nChevrolet flashes out and away when you open\nthe throttle because it offers the advantages of\nlight invar-strut pistons, large valves, and carburetor equipped with an acceleration well.\nCome, take a ride\u2014today! ucu-s-iec\nThe G.M.A.C. . . General Motors' urn deferred payment plan efjnrds the\nmost convenient end economical way of buying your Chevrolet on time.\nRoadner    .... |623.00\nTouring     .... 625.00\nCoups        .... 740.00\nCoscb  740.00\nSedan  SJJ.00\nAll Prices at Faetory, Oshtnce\u2014\nGovernment Taxis, Stumpers end\nSparc Tire Extra.\nImpsrisl Sedan \u2022 - 0S9O.OO\nConvertible Cabriolet S6J.00\nCommercial Cheeaii \u2022 470.00\nRoadilor Delivery \u2022 625.00\nUtility Truck Chassii 663.00\nRoadster Express \u2022    \u2022    630,00\nAll prices at Factory, Oshawe\u2014\nGovernment Taxes, Bumpers and\nSpare Tire Extra.\nTry our Special Tea\nat 65c per lb\nShoes. Shirts, Overalls\n-jood values for your\nmoney.\nCall and see us before\npurchasing.\nJOHN  DONALDSON\nGeneral Merchant\nPalace Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\nCHEVROLET\nGrand Forks Garage\nJ.    R.    MOOYBOER,    PROPRIETOR\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nPRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED\nE. C. Henniger Co.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplier\nGrand  Forks, N. C.\nOur\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\nrIWE value of well-\n\u25a0*\u25a0 printed, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBall programs\nBusiness cards\nVi  'ng cards\nSh'    ing tags\nLetterhends\nStatements\nNotelicads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes;\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNew Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\n..FIRST ST, NEXT P. BURNS'\nTHE SUN\nColombia Avenue and\nIjike Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nSYNOPSIS OF\nLANDACT AMENDMENTS\nHRE-EMPTIONS\nVucuut uureservod,aurveyed Crowu\nlauds may be pre-empted by British\nsubject* over is years oi age, and by\naliens ou declaring luteutiou to become liritlsli subjects, conditional\nupou residence, occupation aud im-\nuieut tor agricultural  purposes.\nFull information concerning regulations regarding pre-emptions is\ngiven in Bulletin No. 1 Laud Series,\n\"How to Pre-empt Land,\" copies of\nwhich can be obtained free of charge\nby addressing the Department of\nLands, Vrivtoria, U. C, or any Government Agent.\nRecords will be made covering only\nland suituble for agricultural -purposes, aud which is not timberland,\ni.e., carrying over 5,000 board feet\nper acre west of the Coast Hauge,\nand 8,000 feet per acre east of that\nrange.\nApplications for pre-emptions are\nto be addressed to the Land Commissioner of the Laud Kocordiug Division, ln which tne land applied for\nis situated, and are made on printed\nforms, copies of which cau be obtained from the Land Commissioner.\nPre-emptlous must ue occupied for\nfive years and improvements made to\nthe value of jiu per acre, including\nclearing and cultivating at least live\nacres, before a Crowu Qraut cub be\nreceived.\nFor more detailed information sue\nthe Bulletin \"How to Pre-empt Land \"\nPURCHASE\nApplications are received for purchase of vacant aud unreserved\nCrown Lands, not being timberland,\nfor agricultural purposes; minimum\nprice of ilrst-class (arable) laud is\n15 per aicre, and second-class (grasing) land $2.50 per acre. Further\ninformation regarding purchase or\nlease of Crown land ls given in Bulletin No. io, Laud Series, \"Purchase\naud Lease of Crown Lnuds.\"\nMill, factory, or industrial sites ou\ntimber land, not exceeding 40 acres,\nmay be purchased or leased, on conditions including payment of stump-\nago. -atv-sOU\nHOMESITE LEASE8^^^\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding\n20 acres, may be leased as homesites,\nconditional upon a dwelling being\nerected in thei flrst year, title being\nobtainable after residence and improvement conditions a\/re fulfilled\nand land has been surveyed.\nLEASES\nFor grazing and industrial purposes areas not exceeding 640 acres\nmay be leased by one person or ai\ncompany.\nGRAZING \"*\"\u25a0'\"'\"'\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province is divided into grazing districts\nand the range administered under \u2022\nGrazing Commissioner. Annuatf grating permits are issued based ou numbers ranged, priority being siven to\nestablished owners. Stock owners\nmay form associations for range management Free, or partially free, permits are available for settlers, campers and travellers up to teu head.\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\n\u2022alar in\nHavana Cigars, Pipes .\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks. B. C.\nPICTURES\nMD PICTURE FRAMINB\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds,\nUpholstering Neatly Bone\nR. G. MoCUTCHBON\nWimiNQAVMUl\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1928_08_31","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0380140","@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":"1928-08-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1928-08-31 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\/1.0380140"}