{"@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":"9ce2db31-0607-4568-bd90-a041e9fa48df","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-07-23","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1928-08-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0380149\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u25a0\nKmi\nLots of men manage to sneak out the back door when duty calls\n1\nLEADER OF \"SONS\nOF FREEDOM\"\nJohn Fomllyant, alleged to be the\nleader of the tanatical sect of Doukhobors known as the \"Sons of Freedom,\" was deported lest Saturday by\nP. T. McCallum, Immigration inspec-\ntor-ln-charge at this port, who handed the man over to the United States\nauthorities at Marcus.\nThe arrest of Fomllyant was made\nlast week at the Graham ranch, ten\nmiles north of this city, by Sorgt.\nDurch, R.C.M.P., Constable Klllam ol\nthis city, and Special Customs Offlcei\nBllodeau. After much persuatlon,\nFomllyant decided to submit to arrest peaceably, and he was brought\nto this city and lodged in the provincial jail. He was followed by a\nchanting band of his followers t<>\nthis city.\nSubsequently a board of enquiry,\ncomposedof Immigration Inspector\nMcCallum, Customs Collector Cameron of Laurier, and Customs Officer\nCook, was formed to take action on\nthe case. After hearing considerable\nevidence and deliberating for some\ntime the board decidedupon, and\nthis action was accordingly carried\nout,\nFomllyant was provided with sufficient funds by his followers to pay\nhis expenses to San Francisco, where\nthere is said to be another colony of\nhis sect.\nFomllyant Is Bald to be highly educated, being a graduate of Petro-\ngrad university.\nTWRNTY-SKVENTH YE\ndAna KETTLE VALLEy ORCHARDIST\n-No  40\n\"Tell mo what you Know Is tm\u00bb\nM can ftiens as well at you .\"\u00a3\"\nFRIDAY, AUGTST :i, ItWH\nNINE MARKET ACT\nCONVICTIONS ARE QUASHED\nVANCOUVER, August 1.\u2014Convictions of nine Delta Chinese farmers\nfor Infractions of the produce marketing act, as enacted by the legislature in 1927, were quashed In supreme court by 'Mr. Justice Murphy\nThey had been convicted by Magistrate {Harry G. Johnston of New\nWestminster ot marketing potatoes\nwithout the consent of the'Mainland\npotato committee of direction. Fines,\nranging from $10 to $300, were Imposed on the Oriental potato growers, with the alternative of a month\nto three months' imprisonment.\nTQie Ohinamen chose Oakalla jail\nln preference to paying the monetary\npenalties; whence they were subsequently released on bail.\nThe convictions have been quashed\non the first point argued by the appellant counsel. This was that Magistrate Johnston had no jurisdiction,\nbecause he acted at the request of\nMagistrate J. W. Atkey of Delta municipality, whose Jurisdiction\nlimited to that municipality.\n>Mr. JohnBton, according to the decision, should have sat in Delta instead of at New Westminster, when\nthe trials were heard, to have made\nthe proceedings legal.\nThe constitutionality of the statute\nwas not argued and was not considered by his lordship. If he had rejected the technical grounds urged\nagainst the convictions he was prepared to hear argument on the constitutional point after the minister of\njustice was given an opportunity to\nhe heard.\nTo test this question, other prose-\ncottons for \"potato bootlegging\" are\nexpected.\nIn the meantime a meeting has\nbeen arranged for farmers at Ladner\non Wednesday night at * 8 o'clock,\nwhen the produce marketing act will\nbe debated. Ibe gathering will be\njaddreBsed by C. W. Craig, K.C., and\n'*S\u00bb-*A   \u2022\u2022     a     KVnnA\nTHE PRAIRIE\nFRUIT III\nCAILGAllY, August 1.\u2014Favorable\nweather continues at almost all prairie points. Root vegetables are\nhealthy looking. All crops are heavy\nand with exception of hail damage in\ncertain locations record yields arc\nanticipated.\nBusiness has been good, featured\nby heavy arrivals of all kinds of produce from many points. Raspberries\nare about over, but what are coming\nalong are ln good condition. Complaints have been made that many\ngrowers fail to fill the haliocks. Inspectors should correct this at shipping point.\nA car of Yakima tomatoes iu lugs\narrived here this week; also a car ot\niiotihouse tomatoes from Victoria as\nwell as L.C.L. hothouse tomatoes\nfrom Kelowna and Summerland. A\nfew Held grown tomatoes have come\ni'rom British Columbia iu mixed cars.\nFiejd cucumbers are plentiful, but\nquality poor. 'i)The market is loaded\nwith pickling cucumbers.\nThe apple movement is slow. A\ncar of California Gravensteins arrived this week showing a little pit.\nTwo straight cars of apricots arrived\nfrom Washington. Very few peaches\nhave arrived from British Columbia\nso far, and British Columbia apricots\nare not plentiful. A car of Yellow-\nonions arrived from Washington.\nSUN'S WEEKLY  TRAVELOGUE\nMonasteries <f TnessalyMMELAWS\nBAG LIMIT FOR\n1928 SEASON\nKOOTENAY   POWER   PLANS\nNEW  GENl'tlATING   PLANT\nON   PENQ  OREILLE  RIVER\nROSSLAND, Auggst 1.\u2014To provide\ntor an additional 80,000 horsepower,\nWest Kootenay rower & Light company 1b planning the erection of an\nimmense new generating plant on the\nPen dIOreille river. Most'of the additional power would be used for the\nTrail smelter. The West Kootenay\ncompany, which at present operates\nplants at Bonnlngton Falls of 42,000\nand 60,000 horsepower, supplies most\nof the southern interior with power.\nby H. 6. Wood, who is counsel for\nthe nine Chinese potato growers.\niMr. Wood, who has tendered his\nresignation as crown prosecutor for\nVancouver county, says that there is\na strong feeling against the statute\nby white farmers, as well as the\nChinese growers. Mr. Wood was assisted In the case by H. R. Bray and\nby J. P. Hogg,\nR. L. Reld, K.C., appeared for the\nMainland potato committee of direction, and J. W. deB. Farris, K.C., for\nthe attorney general.\nThe Chinese were Chung Chuck,\nLow Guy, John Dong, Jong Sun, Lee\nYoung, Chlng Fong, NIP Jim Kee,\nCbong iFoo and Chin Loies.\n.Tbe convictions were attacked on\nwrits ot habeas corpus:\nThe youthful graduate is the only\nperson who knows enough to run the\nnation successfully.\nA woman Is seldom as strict with\nher children as she is with her husband,\nDon't follow the crowd if you want\njo be a leader.\nCONSOLIDATED   DROPS   ON\nHALF-YEARLY   STATEMENT\nMONTREAL,    July  28.\u2014Consolida-\nWBS | ted   Mining   &   Smelting dropped to\n$250 on the market this morning.\nAn estimated profit for the first\nsix months of 1928 or $3,750,101 w s\nannounced today in a statement covering the semi-annual estimates of\nprofits of the Consolidated Mining h\nSmelting Company of Canada.\nIhe 1928 figure was reached after\ndeducting $665,924- for additions to\nproperty through profit and loss anil\n.other deductions for depletion, depreciation, contingent account and\ntaxes.\nThe statement adds: \"In the first\nsix months of 1928 the net profits before deduction for additional property amounted to $1,416,025. This compares with 5,7:14,167 in the first half\nof 1927.\n\"These computations assume thut\ndeductions for depletion, depreciation and contingent account were\nIdentical in the two periods. It la recognized that without knowledgo of\nthe extent of these deductions exact\ncomparisons are apparent to be misleading. A large doduction for depreciation ln the 1928 period, for ox-\nample, would make the operating\nprofits appear to be smaller than they\nactually would be when compared in\ngross with last year's figures.\".\nHEAVY  FRUIT  MOVEMENT\nFROM OKANAGAN   UNDER  WAY\nKELOWNA, August 1.\u2014The summer shipping season will be in fu'.l\nswing by the beginning of next week,\naccording to Canadian National railway officials.\nFor some time ten cars a day of refrigerated stuff ihas been leaving\nOkanagan valley over Canadian National lines for prairie points.\nThese cars, consisting of early tomatoes, peaches, plums and apples,\nwhile the apricot harvest Is well under way, with the peak peak to be\nreached early next week. Warm\nweather .prevailing has hucried up\nthe harvest and railway officials\nhave sent out calls for Increased refrigerator equipment to handle the\ncrop to prairie and coast points.\nTHERE Is a lugend, lierlinps It is\nhistory, that there was once u\nruler in Constantipoylo who disliked his brother and wished to banish him to the remotest part ot his\nkingdom. Consequently the monarch\nbuilt a monastery on a wellnls'li inaccessible mountain in Theasaly and\nfounded a brotherhood, about lour\nhuuddred years ago, in what Beeinvd\nto be the uttermost corner or tho\nearth.\nThe monastery was called \"Mete-\nora,\" meaning \"domicile of tho sky.\"\nArter the original was built, twenty-\nthree others grouped themselves\naround and were inhabited tor awhile\n\"jihey were, however, finally abandoned, with the exception of three,\nwhich are still on use.\nTo reach this settlement one can go\ndirectly from Athens by train in 13\nhours, or one can cross the Thessa-\nlonian plains ;n seven hours by train\nfrom the port of Volo.\nThe season of good weather commences in April, when the mountains\nare green and yellow with gorse and\nthe sun shines almost continually.\nEarlder there are apt to be heavy\nrains, and the spring thaw causes u\nmist to rise from the frozen mountains which obscures the view, while\nthe Bnow, melting into the earth,\nmakes mud one or two feet deep, and\ntraveling on horseback is almost impossible. If, however, one is fortunate enough to hit the last of winter,\nwhen the sun shines and the mountains are still resplendent in their\ndazzling whiteness, then one sees\nthem in all their glory. The rocky\neminences on which stand the 24\nmonuments of man's erstwhile habitation seem to forbid nearer approach, and yet they lure the adven-\ntuer to them by their danger.\nAcross the Plains of Thessaly\nThe seven hours' trip across the\nplains of Thessaly to the town of\nKalabaka is most enchanting. Range\nafter range ot hills roll up from the\nplateau. The foothills dn winter are\npowdered with snow, as though an\nangel had shaken the down from his\nwings; the higher hills are whiter and\nbleaker, and the highest hills are as\npure as the drifting clouds in which\nthey seem to melt and disappear into\nhighest heaven.\nThe train crawls over the hills and\nacross the plains at a slow speed.and\nthe sheepdogs run barking by its\nside; indeed, one wonders that they\ndo not outrun It. Ilhe villages, invariably set back from the railway,\nare far better to look at in the distance, for the stucco houses are not\nattractive near to; but their flat, red\nroofs add a pleasing touch of color\nto the middle landscape.\nOccasionally a Greek priest, with\nlong beard, long hair, and long garments, rides by. His high hat and\nhis large cross indicate prominently\nhis calling, and, if he is not in too\ngreat a hurry, a pedestrian may stop\nbrim, kiss his cross, and bo touched on\nthe forehoud with a little switch.pre-\nBumably dipped In holy water, and\ntho sinner obtains absolution for the\nday.\nOne loaves tlie train at Kalabaka,\nund there takes horses and guides to\ncllnm to the high-built monasteries.\nFor three hours the horses pick their\nway over hillsides where ln the\nmonth of February no trail is vlsl\nble.\nUp the beds of streams the way\nleads and the rushing waters must\nbe forded. Suddenly one comes upon\na rock formation so awe-compelling\nfrom dts immense height and forbidding steepness that Dore could have\nwark.\nAndromeda might have been chained to one of these sheer rocks, and\nthe eagles that sweep, and dip, and\ncircle among them could have been\nthe only thiing to reach her, until Perseus came to set her free. In those\ndays the valley was evidently a body\nof water and could easily have harbored a monster of tlie deep. Now a\nriver winds along, like a shining\nthread, with wide sandy banks, that\nindicate the presence of a wider\nsheet of water not so very long ago.\nBuildings Cling to Rock Walls\nAs the traveler looks ln wonder at\na detached colossal pillar of stone.he\ndiscovers on Its seemingly unattainable summit, a building!   This, habi\ntation of man, half natural rock und\nhalf artificial, seems most extraordinary. Gurldcs draw attention lo th3\nhigher precipices, and as one grows\naccustomed to their outlines he sees,\non all sides, monasteries 'tucked Into\nthe ledges of the perpendicular walls.\nThe first abode of the contemporary monks is Barlaam, which is said\nto contain a wonderful Byzantine library; entrance to this monastery is\nbarred to women. An hour turther\non lies another monastery, Trinity,\nwhere both men and women visitors\nare allowed to enter.\nThe wkhole ot the west plain of\nI'liesaaly lies behind, and the white\nmountains of the I'indos range rise\nrugged and Imposing behind. At the\nb.ase of the rock on which Trinity is\nperched, like an eagle'B nest, the\nguides halloo and beat with a stick\non a tin can, found in the bushes.\nSoon ail answering call comes back,\nand over the precipice some 300 feet\nabove, the peering races or several\nmonks appear. Then something serpentine Hies into the air, and as it\ndrops perpendicularly, discloses, dangling from a coil ot rope, what looks\nlike a small fish net. When the cable\ntouches the earth the flsh net proves\nto be a large-sized rope bag, which\nopens and spreads out flat on the\nground.\nOne at a time would-be visitors are\ninvited to step into the middle of this\nthis net and squat, Turk-fashion. The\nedges are then gathered together onto a largo iron hook. A shout is given, and the net soars upward, while\nits occupant feels somewhat like an\norange ut the bottom of a market\nwoman's bag.\nHauled Pp by Rope\nThe ascent takes just three minutes. Occasionally the open-work\nelevator swings into the rock with a\nslight bump, but the monks at the top\nwind the windlass slowly, and the\nbumping doesn't hurt, but as a compensation the view grows more beautiful every second. At last the top is\nreached. There is a final swing outward, to get a rebound inward,sever-\nal pairs of hands are outstretched to\npull the net over to tho platform, and\nthen comes a drop on to the stone\nfloor! The hook is detached, the\nmeshes opened, aud the passenger is\nhelped to his teet by the black-robed\nbrothers. They all gather around with\nwords ot welcome and hands ready\nto be shaken in geetiug.\nln their aerie monastery tho monks\nlive comfortably enougn. The visitors' parlor and the room reserved\nfor guests to sleep in are scrupulously clean, and the cells- though austere, are also spotless, the walls covered with whitewash. Visitors are\nrefreshed with jelly aud brandy, as\nis the custom in many parts of\nGreece.\nBeyond Trinity, the monastery of\nSaint Stephen can be visited without\nresort to a windlass and rope elevator. One climbs by trail to a neighboring pinnacle and the crosses a\nchasm to Saint Stephen over a narrow bridge. At the farther end the\nvisitor must puss through u low-\nvaulted   stable   with   Its   pigs,  sheep,\nund goats. Beyond a courtyard lies\nmonastery, equipped much like Trinity.\nRESULT Of THE\nE\nVICTORIA, July 28.\u2014Nearly 7000\nstudents have won promotion from\npublic to high school in the province\nof llritlsh Columbia, as ttic result ot\nlust session's study, according to results announced by the department\nof education In Victoria.\nOf the totul, 4578 won promotion\non the recommendation of their principals and the provincial inspector,\nand 2294 were successful In the examinations set by the department.\nThere 3592 candidates for the written\ntests.\nA number of students who were\npromoted on recommendation wrote\nthe examinations ln order to compete\nfor the governor-general's bronze\nmedals.\nMiss Marjorle Helen Largue, a pu-\nt ions of last year is the complete pll of Nanaimo public school, has the\nclosing of willow grouse to shooting honor of leading the province with\nall over the province in order to pro-; an aggregate of 447 out of a possible\ntect this fine game bird from entire i 500.\nextinction. The gamo conservation i The province is divided into ten\nboard Is planning to keep this prohi- school districts and the student with\nbitlon on willow grouse shooting In, the highest number of marks in his\neffect for several years in an effort j district receives one of the governor-\nto restore the species. It may he no-j general's medals. The ten were:\ncessary also to close blue grouse en-| District No. 1\u2014Kathleen D. Mcln-\ntirely to shooting next year, officials tyre, Lampston Street school, Esqui-\nof tho board stated, and it is hoped; \u00abPgtH\u00ab. Nq  2_MarJor)e ,\u201e   ^^\nNanaimo school, 447.\nDistrict  No. 3\u2014James  D.  McLeod,\nVICTORIA, August I.\u2014Open seasons for game birds all over British\nColumbia this year were announced\nat tlie parliament buildings today.\n'I lie biggest change from the regula-\nsportsmen will ugree in urging this!\nstep. Dlue gi'ouse are in better con-'\n(lit ion than willows but have been'\nmuoh depleted of late years.\nFur Bearers I\nFor game purposes the province is\ndivided again this year into two dls-'\nLivingstone   school,   Vancouver,   436.\nDistrict No. 4\u2014Vera McAllister,\nQueen Mary school, Point Grey, 446.\nDistrict No. 5\u2014Dorothy A. Buchanan, Central school, New Westminster, 439.\ntriets   the  western  district  including      Di8tnl(!t No. 6\u2014Elaine M.  Spencer,\ntricts, the western district inciuuiu0   S[uart  W(jod  8ohoo)i  KBmloop8i  424\nall  territory west ot the summit of.    District No. 7\u2014Bertha    M.    Mills,\nthe Cascade mountains and south of  Keremeos school, 438.\nthe electoral district of Atlin, and the      District No. 8-4tobert P. Forshaw,\n,. , . , ,      ,.       -_-i\u201e \u25a0 Greenwood Superior school, 414.\neastern district covering the remain-,     muloi No. (^Margaret C. Lutes,\ning urea.    Certain specified areas of  Nelson Central school, 439.\nSkeena   and    Lillooet, however,   are  District No.  10\u2014James  II.   Winstow,\nplaced    in    the  eastern district tor! IJooth    Memorial    school, Prince Ru\npert, 429.  1\nGRAND FORK8 CENTER\nGrand  Forks\u2014Lillian  P.  Starchuk,\n321; Mary P. Kleman, 312; Frederick\nF. Wenzel, 303.\nPromoted     on     Recommendation\u2014\nKatie Dorner, Elsie D. Egg, George\nfur-bearing]] Thompson, Florence M. 11 MacDou-\ngall, Mazie M. Henderson, Betty E.\n11. Massle, Earle C. Bickerton, Harold\nV.  Bailey,   Harry  W.  Murray,  Elsie\nG. Scott, Jessie M. Sweezey, Norman\nD. Cooke, Helen E. Baszczuk, Agnes\nLucille C. Donovan, Murjorle H. Taylor, Edna A. Morris, Ian Clark, J. Joseph Lyden, Margaret W. Kingston,\nMadeline A. C. MacDougall, Agnes\nM. Winter.\nBrown Creek\u2014James T. McKclvev,\n310; Gladys M. Zucco, 300.\nCascade\u2014(Mable J.    Phdllips,    378;\nTholma M. A. White, 300.\nSand Creek\u2014Rena M. Holla, 311.\nGREENWOOD CENTER\nGreonwood\u2014Robert     P.    Forshaw,\nHarry   Hallstrom,   383;\nE.   Ritchie,   358;   Robert\nII. Mitchell, 355; Ellen A. Bryan, 346;\nCleo P. Tmney, 339;  John  M.  Morrison,   .133;    Eugene   J. MacGilrivary,\n308; Bertram M. Price, 300; Margaret\nB. Boyce, 300.\nBeaverdell\u2014Charles    W.    Warrington, 378.\nBoundary FallB\u2014Frank C. Krouten,\n327.\nNorwegian    Creek\u2014Alice   E. Watson, 365.\nmigratory bird regulations.\nThe regulations issued today include the big game seasons, announced before, and tbe seasons on fur-\nbearing animals and game birds. In\ntlie eastern district all\nanimals will be open from November\n1. 1928, to February 28, 1929.\nDucks (except wood and eider\nd icks), wilson snipe, coots, geese and\nbrant, from September 15 to December 31, but no migratory birds must\nbe shot before 7 a.m. on September\nis.\nFor band tailed pigeons, from September 15 to September 30, no live\ndecoys may be used. Blue grouse\nonly may be shot in Grand Forks-\nGreenwood and part of Simllkumeen\nfrom September 15 to October 15; 414-\"g, q\nblue and Franklin grouse and ptarmi- Marguerite\ngan, except prairie chicken of sharp\ntailed grouse, in Cariboo, Tram September 16 to November 15, and in the\nremainder of the eastern district, except Creston, Cranbrook, Fertile, Columbia, Rossland' Trail, Omineca,\nSkeena, Fort George and Atlin, trom\nSeptember 15 to October 15.\nPtarmigan\nPtarmigan,    in   Omineca,    Skeena,'    \u25a0\nFort Feorge and Atlin, Trom Septem' 3,     ,n the Highland district September 15 to November 15. j ber 15 l0 September 30.    Quail, ex-\nPrairie chicken or sharp-tailed eopt bob white and mountam qu^i.\ngrouse in foregoing, north and east on Vancouver island south and east\nor the Rocky mountains, from September 1 to October 15, and In Carl-\niboo and Lillooet south of the fifty-\nthird parallel of latitudo rrom October 15 lo October 31.\nQuail,    in    the    Si111ilkan11.cn    und\nSouth Okanagan, rrom Octobor 15 to\nNovember  15.\nin    Soutli\nof Englishman river, except Oak Bay\nmunicipality and on Salt Spring Is-\nlunri from Octobor 15 to November\n30. Dcnman and Saturna islands\nfrom October 16 to Octobor 31.\nCcock  pheasants  on  Vancouver l\u00ab-\nland, except  Oak  Bay and the terri-\nCock  pheasants only  tory norln of 0y8ior nVer and on Ou-\nOkanagan und a specified   hl.|l)la   Texada, Sldnoy, Moresby Pen-\nPLAYER  ON   BAGPIPE8\nSTIRS   CANAIAN   CITY\nWhen William Brand, a 22-yeur-old\nHighlander in Sandwich, Ont., pours\nforth his soul ill the snrill tones of\nbagpipes, neighbors plug their ears\nand call the police.\nFor months he had been practicing\nIn his bedroom. But a Scotsman, to\nbe a finished artist on the bagpipes,\nmust march as he plays, and when\nWilliam decided to tramp around his\nbacg yard to the tune of the pipe;;,\nthat was worse\nportion of Simllkameen, North Okanagan aud Kamluops from October 15\nto November 15. In one portion of\nNorth Okuungun district thu season\niH reduced'to the period between October 15 and October 31. Unspecified\nparts ot Carboo and Lillooet and Yale\nthe cock pheasant season will be\nfrom October 16 to October 31 also.\nEuropean Partridges\nEuropean partridges, in North and\nSouth Okanagan, from October 15 to\nNovember 16, and in the municipality\not Salmon Arm from November 1 to\nNovember 15.\nIn the westorn district all lur-bcar-\nSandwioh police investigated and j ing animals except muskrats on Van-\nreported that Brand, with typical: C0UVer island will be open rrom No-\nScottish caution, did no put a foot, vember 1 to February 28. Ducks (ex-\nnor half u root, outside his own lot.    I cept  W00(j  ana eider ducks),  Wilson\nBut Sandwich has a curfew law. At I Rllil,ei coota an(j feeBei {,.nm October\n9 the town bell sounds the knell ot ,- t0 January 31. Black brant from\nobjectionable sounds. The neighbors \\ November 15 to tfebruary 28. Band-\n.vatched the clock. To their dismay t.lile,i piKeons from September 16 to\nthey discovered that at 8:59 each September 30, with use of live docojs\nnight the bagpipes ceased. forbidden.\n  Blue grouse, except  South Saanich\nWhen Bome one impresses you as and the Highlands districts near Vic-\nbogus, you don't care for any par- torla and Hornby and Denman Is-\ntlcular demonstration In proof ot It. lands, from September IS to October\nder, Mayus, Oaliano and Suit Spring\nIslands, from October 13 to November 30, and on the mainland from October 15 to November 30, except the\nSquamish valley and Point Grey municipality.\nErnopean partridges on Vancouver\nIsland in South Saanich and the High\nland districts and in North Saanich\nand on the mainland in the districts\nof Delta and Chilllwack, except that\nportion of Chillawack north and east\nof Vedder canal, from November 1 to\nNovember 16.\nBAG  LIMITS\nVICTORIA, August 1.\u2014Bag limits\nfor game birds In British Columbia\nduring the shooting season next fall\nwere announced at the parliament\nbuildings after tihe government had\napproved recommendations of the\ngame   consevation board as follows:\nIn the eastern district, east of the\nCascade mountains:\nQuail, 10 daily, total for season 100.\nGrouse and ptarmigan, except prairie chicken or sharp-tailed grouse, 6\n(Continued on Pago 4)\n THE BUN: GRAND FORKS, BBITISH COLUMBIA\nWm (grand 3farha \u00a7tm\nG. A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLI8HER\nSubscription   Rates,  Payable  in  Advance\nOne Year, in Canada and Great Britain $1-00\nOne Year, in the United States  1.50\nAddress all communications to\nThe Grand Forks Sun,\nPHONE 101 Grand Forks, B. C.\nOffice:    Columbis  Avenue  and   Laks  Street\nMil l\/AY, AUGUST 3   IU28\nNOTES, NOTIONS 8 NOTABLES\nNATIVKS of tbe jungles or Africa are likely to be ot\na philosophical turn of mind, as is illustrated by the\nstory of an old Bantu negro, told by Dan Crawford, who\nspent most of his life as a missionary in the wilds of\nthe Dark continent. \"I have lived so long in the long\ngrass that I think like the 'blacks, and I never talk of\nWestern civilisation,\" Crawford told Setou Tompsou,\nthe naturalist and writer. \"But just when 1 was coming\nhome and was thinking perhaps tenderly of old scenes\nand faces, I did one night swank a bit about civilization\nto an old Bantu, who was sitting with me in my hut. 1\ntold him that 1 was going to my own country, where they\nhad ships that went under the water, ships that went on\nthe water, and still more ships that flew over the water.\nI told him that in English houses youturn a tap and the\nwater flows, touched a button and the room was flooded\nwith light\u2014in fact, I gave him a good glowing description of all the alleged triumphs of civilization. When I\nhad catalogued as much as I could remember I stopped\nand waited for the old negro to Bhow his surprise. But\nhe just said: 'Is that all, Mr. Crawford?' 'Yes, I think\nIt 'is,' I replied.' Then very slowly and gravely the old\nBantu said: 'Well, Mr. Crawford, to be better off is not\nalways to be better.' \"\nTHE average old painting has a mare colorful past than\nhas been supposed, judging by X-ray studies reported\nfrom the Roentgen experiment station at the Vienna Central Institute tor Radiology. Ihree-fourths of the pictures that have the reputation of being painted between\nthe fifteenth and eighteenth centuries are not what their\nproud possessors think they are, it is estnmated. Some\nof the \"old masters\" are really not so old, the X-ray reveals. Some are as old as they seem, but the name of\na great artist has been forged over the signature of the\nreal painter, a lesser light of the same period. A few\npaintings wear false color, at a disadvantage. These\ncanvases were originally painted by men ot the first rank,\nand later were stupidly covered by entirely new pictures,\nmuch less beautiful.\n\u25a0is as old as art, and they have advanced together. Another remarkable fact in this connection is that excavations In Italy have brought to light scores of finely finished surgical instruments for certain operations, which\nare almost In every particular of form like those reinvented in modern times and used by the most advanced\nBurgeons of today.\nsunshine BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nJOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, when he was expanding\nStandard Oil into the greatest business phenomenon\nof its era, often gained control of rival companies by\nbluffing with a blank check\u2014because Standard Oil didn't\nhave the purchase money. That 'is the story told me by\nthe oil king himself, writes B. C. Forbes in McClure's.\nWhen 1 asked him where he got all the capital to expand\nStandard Oil, the veteran oil magnate's eyes twinkled.\n\"That sometimes had its funny side,\" was Rockefeller\nreply. \"It seems amusing now, looking back, although\nIt was a matter of grave concern then. After we had arranged to purchase a property I would meet the owner\nand with a lordly air would whip out our checkbook and\nremark, as if it were a matter ot entire indifference to\nme: \"Shall I write a check or would you prefer payment in Standard Oil shares?\" Mr. Rockefeller added\nthat tbore were occasions when if the reply had been\n\"all cash,\" he would have had to scurry to raise the neces\nsary money. However, his unconcerned attitude inspired\nmost of the sellers to take stock In the new concern either\nin full or part payment of their old holdings. \"And very\nfortunately for them, as it turned out,\" added the oil\nmagnate.\nMANY are the towns in Georgia with queer names.\nThere is Agnes, Lula and Helen; there is a Stop,\na Linger and a Sumslo; and Jimps, Poor Robin, Canoe,\nCach, Kuyk, Dot, Ty Ty Joy, Nlckajack, Shin Bone and\nAsbestos, and many more, but the prize for brevity belongs to a little settlement ln Gilmer county, which was\na long time ago named Ai. Whether It is a typographical error for Al or whether the residents ever heard ot\nthe common and convenient little cross-word pusxle definition for a three-toed sloth, the record does not say.\nA WEDDING RING Is not always a linger ring. There\nwas once a celebrated, but nasty, royal wedding,\nwhen a curtain ring served the purpose. At a London\nchurch the bridegroom had left the ring at home, but a\nresourceful bridesmaid cut off a lock of the bride's golden\nhair, plaited It ln a ring, and the ceremony was competed. At a fashionable wedding ln a Lancashire church\nwhen the bridegroom lost the ring a wedding guest took\nthe gold-rlmmed monocle from his eye, broke out the\nglass, handed the frame to the bridegroom and the wedding went on. A somewhat shiftless printer pawned the\nring t e day before the wedding, and the India rubber\nring from an umbrella had to serve; after the knot was\ntied the kindly clergyman lent him the money to redeem\nthe gold token. A ring of leather cut from the bridegroom's glove once served as a substitute. I twas an\nelopement and the harassed lover had otained a libcense,\nhod the minister in readiness and a cab waiting, but had\nforgotten the ring. He took out his pocketknife, cut one\nfrom bis glove and was duly married. The skipper of\na tug was unable to produce the golden circlet at the\nproper moment, though he had it in his hand when he\nstood before the minister. Being a very bashful man he\nhad, in his embarrassment, put the ring in his mouth and\nswallowed it. One of his friends was dispatched to the\ntug, which was lying at a nearby wharf, to see if any of\nthe crew had a ring to lend for the occasion; as none of\nthem possessed such an article of personal adornment,\nhe borrowed an earring from the Portuguese cook and\nthe knot was duly tied.\nCONTRARY to the popular notion, there are ten plagues\nof Egypt. It is a common error to speak of the ' seven\nplagues of Eypt.\" The ten plagues, accordnlng to the\nBiblo, were as follows: The turning of the Nile into\nblood, covering the land with frogs, turning the dust into\nlice, sending swarms of flies, killing of the cattle by a\nmurrain, afflicting the Egyptians with boils, raining fire\nand hail, covering the land with locusts, covering the\nland with a thick darkness for three days, and the destruction of the first born man and beast.\n' Copy book philosophy Is so true that it seems nonsense\nto repeat it.\nA BULLETIN of the American Game association con-\n*\"*\u25a0 tains th following: \"Bear are now prized as game\nIn Maine as highly as deer and moose. The bear is\nequipped with wonderfully keen scent, and can detect\na hunter for at least half a mile when wind conditions are\nright. His hearing is equally good, and it tests the skill\nof the best hunters to approach him within shooting, distance. Its eyesight is not keen. The Maine commissioner of game advises hunters to use a heavy rifle In\nbear hunting, nothing less than the 30-30. Tlie .25 caliber\nfalls to deliver a blow with enough shock to put a bear\ndown for keeps. He says that only .an average of one out\nof four bear hit by Maine hunters is secured, and many\nof the wounded animals undoubtedly die later and are\nwasted. It is generally a waste of ammunition to hit a\nhear anywhere except through the shoulder or head. A\nbody shot will not stop them.\"\nTHE word knlckerhocker lias been traced to the Dutch\nin the seventeenth century, but the first record of Its\nuse in English relating to tho loose-fitting knee-breeches,\ndates from 1850. The namo is said to have been given\nto them on account of their likeness to the knee-breeches\ndesigned by George Crulckshank to Illustrate Washington Irvlng's \"History of New York.\" TBiis is not, how-\nover, to suggest thut as garments, knee-breeches were\nnot worn until so late a period, for the ibreeches worn\ntoward the end ot the reign or Charles II gradually got\ntighter, until William III introduced plain tight breeches\nthat are still worn in England as <a part ot the court\ndress. The breeches of the reign of Charles I were loose\nto the knee, where they ended in a flounce ot bow of ribbon, and they continued so during the Commonwealth,\nbut these wero called knee-breeches and not knickerbockers.\nBEAVERS are wonderful housekeepers, clean and or\nderly. Their beds, which are on the floor a few\ninches aibove the water level, are usually strewn with\nbits of bark, grass or roots left from their food, and while\nthey are always damp, they are clean and well drained.\nThere is no unpleasant, murky odor to their beds. Fresh\nfood is constantly being brought ln and eaten and the\nrefuse carried out. The bed ot the newly-born beaver\ndiffers trom that ot the adult in that it is Bofter, being\nmade of grass, leaves, twigs and rootlets that serve as\nfood when it is old enough to eat.\nIT ho| been pointed out that the statues and plaques\ncarved in stone and wood to be seen in the Flzeh\nmuseum prove that the priest mummlflers of Memphis\n6000 years ago possessed a profound knowledge of an-\natoimy.   Science, therefore, as some one has remarked,\nPOEMS FROMTHEFAR EAST\nPERSIA\nAlthough upon' the moon-like cheek delight and beauty\nglow,\nNor constancy nor love is there:  O Lord!  these gifts\nbestow.\nA child makes war against my heart;  and he in sport\none day\nWill put me to a cruel death, and law shall not gainsay.\nWhat seems for my own good is: my heart from him tn\nguard;\nFor one who knows not good from ill its guardianship\nwere hard.\nAgile   and   sweet   of fourteen years that idol whom I\npraise;\nHis ear-rings in her soul retains the moon of fourteen\ndays.\nA breath as the sweet smell of milk comes from those\nsugary lips;\nBut from those black and roguish eyes behold what Mood\nthere drips!\nMy heart to find that new-born rose has gone upon its\nway;\nBut where can it be found, O Lord?   I've lost it many a\nday.\nif the young friend who owns my heart my center thus\ncan break,\nThe Pasha will command him soon the lifeguard's rank\nto take.\nI'd sacrifice my life in thanks,\nIf once that pearl of sheen\nWould make the shell of Haflz' eye\nIts place of rest serene.\n\u2014From The Divan of Halls\nANCIENT HISTORY\nTWENTY YEARS AQO IN GRAND FORKS\nKept the Minutes\nThe village football club was being reorganised. The vicar was appointed president, and a person of\nparticularly vacuous countenance was\nproposed as secretary.\n\"You know how to take the minutes, of course, James?\" asked the\nparson.\nThe secretary grinned.\n\"Yes, I know,\" he replied.\nAt the next meeting the president\nannounced that the secretary would\nread the - minutes of. the previous\nmeeting. The secretary produced his\nnotebook and stood up.\n\"The meeting lasted twenty-five\nminutes,\" he said, brightly.\nSatirical Lady\n\"So you want a divorce, Rastus?\"\n\"Yes, suh, judge, yo' honah\u2014Ah\nsho'ly does.\"\n\"What's the trouble?\"\n\" 'Cause ob ma wife makin' an\nironical   remark.\"\n\"An ironical remark?\"\n\"Yes, suh\u2014she says, If you don't\ngo to work, I'll hit you in the face\nwid this flatiron.\"\n'Willing to Walt '\nA man was convicted for stealing\na horse.\n\"Yours is a very serious offense,\"\nthe judge said to him, very sternly.\n\"Fifty years ago it Was   a   hanging\nmatter.\"\n''Well,\" remarked the prisoner, \"in\nfifty years' time It mayn't be a crime\nat all.\"\nUnmusical\n\"Are you fond ot music?\" \u2022\n\"Not very,\" confessed Senator Sorghum. \"I never yet saw a brass\nband or an orchestra that wouldn't\nplay as energetically for one side of\nan argument as It would for the\nother.\" I\nArtistic Temperament\nMeek Artist (indicating cobweb)\u2014\nEh-\u2014Mrs. Jones,   have   you   noticed\nthis? '\nResourceful Charwoman\u2014Indeed I\n'ave, sir, but I thought as 'ow, you\nbeing an artist, youd 'be annoyed if\nI destroyed such a work ot art\nThe Mineral Province of Canada\nTO THE END OF DBCEMBFR, 1927,'\nHas produced Minerals as follows: Plac r Gold, $78,174,795: Lode\nGold, \u00bb130,661,919; Silver, $86,689,046; Lead, $121,880,734; Copper, 1721,-\n492,079; Zlne, $89,508,692; Coal, $271,294,668; Structural Materials and\nMlneellaneous Minerals, $53,502,295; making its mineral production to the\nend ef 1927 show an\nAggregate Value of 11,048,837,828\nProduction for Year Ending December, 1927,\n160,729,358\nThs Mining Laws of this Province are mora liberal and the fees lower\nthan those of any other Province in the Dominion, or any Colony In the\nBritish Empire.\nMineral  locations are granted te discoverers for nominal fees.\nAbsolute Titles are obtained by developing such properties, the security of which Is guaranteed by Crown grants.\nFull Infosmatlon, together with Mining Reports and Maps, may be\nobtained   gratia  by- addressing:\nTHE HON. THE MINISTER OF MINBS,\nVictoria, British Columbia\nN. B\u2014Practically all British Columbia Mineral Properties upon which\ndevelopment work has been done are described In aome one of the Annual Reports ef the Minister of Mines Those considering mining Investments should refer to auch reports. They are avaaiiable without charge\non application to the Department of Mines, Victoria, B. C. .Reports of\nths Geological Survey of Canada, Winch Building, Vancouver, are recommended  ae valuable source* of information.\nReports covering each of the Six Mineral Survey Distriets are published separately, and are available on application.\nBoth Stubborn\nOld 'Married Friend\u2014Now remember, dear, the outcome of your first\nquarrel establishes a precedent.\nDon't give in.\nYoung Wife\u2014I won't. But, do you\nknow, I think somie one must have\nvglven Jack the same advice.\nMade Him an Athlete\n\"Yes,\" said one man to another, \"I\nrealize that motoring Is a great thing.\nI used to be sluggish before the motoring erase, but now I'm spry and\nenerbetic.\"\n\"I didn't know you motored.\"\n\"I don't\u2014I dodge.\"\nDoe's Birdie\nBanker\u2014Doctor, six months ago\nyou advised me to take up golf to\nget my mind off my work.\nDoctor\u2014I did.\nBanked\u2014>Well, for goodness' sake,\nprescribe something to get it back\nagain.\nCITY REAL  ESTATE\nFOR SALE\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned l.y the City, within the\nMunicipality, arc invited.\nPrices t\u00abFrom $35.00 per lot Upwards.\nTermsI\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be seen at the\nCiirlOffice.\nJOHN \\. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nMade Him Sea Red\nFirst  Wife\u2014My  husband  becomes\nmurderously angry when I paint my\nlips.\nSecond     Wife\u2014Evidently     makes\nhim see red.\nProf. W. S. Thomber and W. H. Doble, of the department of agriculture, addressed the farmers of the valley\non fruit growing at a meeting in the city hall on Tuesday\nevening presided over by President Rooke of the Farmers' Institute.\nAt a special meeting on Monday night the city council\npassed a bylaw establishing a fire limit area which includes practically all of the business district of the city.\nJack Coryell, who has been living in South Africa tor\na number of years, has returned to this city, and expects\nto remain here in future.\nConstable Docksteder, of Phoenix, was ln the city on\nFriday for the purpose of arresting Ave Italians who had\nleft that camp in a hurry.\nB. j^equime, the lumberman, intends to add a cement\nblock building plant to his other enterprises, having associated with him a gentleman of practical experience\nIn the manufacture of this modern building material.\nTwo masked bandits held up six persons in the Ven-\ndome hotel at Greenwood at midnight last night.\nTotal Stranger\nFirst Actress\u2014Don't you know\nthat actor?\nSecond Ditto\u2014Not from Adam.\nWe've never even denied a story that\nwe'll wed!\nCaught In His Own Net\nCop\u2014You're pinched for speeding.\nAny excuse?\nVictlmI'm the judge end am ln a\nhurry to get to the afflce to fine a lot\nof speeders.\nThe Main Thing\nMrs. Arthur-Are you going to\nsend Harold another $100? Don't you\nknow he's flunked in two subjects\nthis month? I\nMr. Arthur\u2014Of course, but didn't\nhe make tbe football team?\nA Run for Hie Money\nWoman Shopper\u2014See here, young\nman, there's a ladder dn these stockings.\n'Fresh Clerk\u2014Well, what do you expect for 75 cents, a marble staircase?\nIntent on Business\n\"Are you Interested ln airplanes?\"\n\"Only as  an  observer,\" answered\nSenator Sorghum.   \"The aviator vote\nout our way isn't big enough as yet\nto be worth going after.\nMore Like It\n\"My son Is amateur, but he recently sold a picture tor flOOO. I\nthink he Is cut out for ft great\nartist.\"\n\"Say rather a great salesman.\"\nCautious\nTed\u2014Did I ever tell you the story\nabout my hunting dogs?\nTom\u2014Well, I don't know. Is It a\nserial?\nImpressed\n\"That salesman seemes interested\nin the leopard.\"\n'\u00absh! He thinks It's a dotted\nlion.\"\nLightning Hit the W\u00bbes\nELECTRICAL 8TORM3 OFTEN\nCAUSE TELEPHONE TROUBLE\nWhen lightning struck some f our\ntelephone wires in North Vancouver\non July 4, 60 telephones were put out\nof order\nAnother of the many factors wltn\nwhich our ever-alert repairmen have\nto contend in their efforts to keep\ntelephone service up to standard. In\nthis Instance the trouble was remedied within 24 hours.\nOn an average of 25 times a year,\nlightning hits our lines in Greater\nVancouver alone, and causes telephone trouble.\nR. C. TELEPHONE CO\n- ^========\u00bb\u00bb==ill\nWe\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\m\\\\\\\\^\nTrue\n\"One-half the world doesn't know\nhow the other half lives.\"\n\"Well, we can't all figure in the society column.\nWhat He Pel. On\n\"What's wrong, old man? You seem\nto have fallen on evil days?\"\n\"Nothing so soft\u2014tell on the sidewalk Just now.\"\nOffice Girls\n' Are office girls  making good  as\nmessengers around the office?\"\n\"Sure.   They can all whistle.\"\nTHE SUN prints all the loeal news\nand carries a number of interesting\nfeatures found in no other Boundary\npaper   $1.00 per year\nBill\n THE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nReforestation\nMuch has been said recently\nabout reforestation in B.C . Tbe\npresent forest is the result of natural reforestation when the human h-fZiird was not present to\ndefeat nature.\nNatural restocking of cut-over\nlands is now going on, as may be\nIs\nseen almost everywhere, Mid nature will again re-establish the\nferests if only f iie is kept out.\nPRLVENT FOREST FIRES-YOU CAN HELP\nThe fact remains that homes are\nmore charming placeB in which to\nlive, offices are more attractive placej\nin which to work, and women are\nmore interesting human beings, eb-\ncause electrical machinery has come\ninto existence to do the body-breaking, mind-destroying routine tasks,\nwhich for so many years constituted\nwoman's entire field of endeavor.\nPRAIRIE  FRUIT  MARKET\nCONDITIONS   REVIEWED\n(By J. A. Grant)\nCALGARY, July 25\u2014We have just\nreturned from our usual visit to\nprairie points and . will briefly relate what seemed uppermost. The\ncrops everywhere loooked excellent.\nThe wheat was well out in head, well\nstooled out and about three feirt\nhigh. We did not notice 'lodging\"\nanywhere. We noticed very rough\nroads with water on both sides at\nmany points.\n'Markets all well supplied with\nfruit. British Columbia raspberrius\nwere giving satisfaction, but scarce.\nLate arriving strawberries, while\ncommanding better prices, were soft\nand rough ln appearance.   Black currants    were    not    moving very fast.'\nCherries  were arriving in carlots  at\nevery  point;   these   looked   fine,  but |\nplainly showed the effect of too much\nmoisture,   Prices were well maintain-\ned    by    the trade;   peddlers got the:\nbulk of the jobbed stuff.    British Col-j\numbia apricots were arriving in good \\\ncondition;   jobbers   oomplained  about!\nso many No. 2 offering; their custom-,\ners  seek No.  1.    Washington agents\nare offering to deliver No. 1 apricots'\nin carlots. j\nNew potatoes  from  British Columbia    were    iu    great demand and in\nheavy supply.   This demand will con-l\ntinue  for  two  weeks  more.    Prairie\ngrown potatoes are    in    Ilowcr   and!\nhave a healthy  foliage,  indicating  a I\ngood crop,    British Columbia field cu-'\ncumbers and semi-ripe tomatoes were\nin keen demand, with the supply Increasing,     The    British     Columbia.\nI preen   apples  arc   slowly   displacing'\nsimilar stuff from Washington.\n\"SALADA\"\nNever before has such care been used In preparing\nteas for the public. Never before has such a blend\nof high quality teas been made, as In \"SALADA\".\nThis flavour, this unfailing dellclousness Is bringing pleasure to millions.\no\n-\nMen don't worry over their work;\nonly over the possibility ot doing it\nwrong. f I\nJust About\n\"Myrtle tells me she's been offered\na iiuiik! part in Shakespeare. Do you\nbeleve it?\"\n\"Oh, I expect it's 'Nothing' in\n'Much Ado.'\"\nExperienced\nWife\u2014I   wont  stay,  dear.    I  just\nwant to drop in to see Mae for a minute-\nHubby\u2014Fine.   I'll   have   time   to\nread this book.\nSmartest woman Is the one who\nugroes when a man says another woman is pretty.\nLife is interesting;  and the newspapers make it   a   thousand   times\nmore so.\nA    man's    reputation  draws  eyes\nupon him that will narrowly inspect\n. every part of him.\u2014Addison.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST SERVICE\nNEW PLUGS\nML PEP UP\na less intense spark occurs at the\npoint of the plug.\nLoss of power and waste gas and\noil result from a less Intensive spark\nthat causes a lag ln both lynitlon\nand flame propagation. Only a part\nof the gas Is actually converted into\npower and much of it passes out of\nthe exhaust, merely wasted.\nNew plugs will soon pay for themselves in saving gas and oil.\ns   By Erwin Greer\nIP YOU have not installed a new\nset of spark plugs within the last\nyear, or If your present set has\ngone 10,000 miles, you will make certain of quicker starting and better\nengine performance during the com-\nmer if you install a complete set\nnow.\nHundreds of thousands of motorists who installed new spark plugs\nlast year, have enjoyed better cervlce\nsince that time, and every hotorist\nwill be better satisfied with the performance of his car if he makes It a\nregular practice to put In new plugs\nonce a year.\nMany people do not understand\nhow new spark jlugs imprlve the run\nnlng of the motor. The reasons are\nperfectly simple and easily understood. Power is developed by the\nrapid combustion and expansion of\nthe burning gas Ignited by the spark\nat the plug points. Increased power\nand economy result from an Intense\nspark that gives instantaneous ignition, more rapid expansion and complete burning of the gas.\n-The spark plug must furnish from\n600 to 1500 full, intense, perfectly\ntimed sparks a' minute while con\nstantly subjected to intense heat and\nhammerlike blows of the compression. Deposits ot soot and carbon\ngradually burned into the surface of\nthe insulating core, causing surface\nleakage of current, corrosion gradually sets up an electrical resistance\nin the electrodes, slowly but surely,\nVery Embarrassing\nA professional model was one night\nposing in the nude before a dozen\nmen who were Intent on getting\nevery second of the fleeting hour, iu\na silence broken only by the nervous\nscratching of charcoal on paper,\nwhen an incident occurred which\nthrows an odd light on feminine ysp\nchology, relates Walt McDougall.the\ncartoonist, in \"This Is the Life.\"\nOnly a minute or so remained before the period of rest, when, with a\nsharp shriek of genuine alarm, the\nlovely model leaped from the stand\nand fled outside the circle of light\nfocused upon her form.\n\"I saw a man looking down upon\nme from tbat window next door,\" she\nmanaged to explain when her agitation had subsided.\nMACHINERY HAS  FREED\nWOMEN   FROM   DRUDGERY\nIt is a fascinating topic to debate\nwhether man lives up to his inventions, or whether his inventions follow him. One can argue forever in\nprove that women today are ibe tier\neducated and more intelligent, because it is necessary for them to\nknow how to manage the electrical\nequipment which confronts them in\nboth industrial and domestic life, or\nto prove that the electrical equipment has provided the opportunity to\ndevelop the use of their heads in\nstead of their hands alone. It is of\nsmall importance what the answer Is.\nAn Empress\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-v,w*'i\"''\u25a0 IS\u2022,\u00ab\"-' \u2022~*1\nV\n1^5\njAW.%\u00ab\"|lr'\niH\nllpi\n3S8&Pto; 'nril\nm\n^M&9\u00a3it\nKM\nIPtf\nWm\ni'5'i^jfe'JyiijS 5^vri\n^IslSSflifiSrl\nBuSh&3\u00bb'5i^3\nThe Canadian Pacific liner \"Empress of Australia\" in Southampton\nRoads.\nFrom a height of two thousand\nfeet the giant liner looks like a toy\nboat although her registered tonnage is 21,850 gross and she ia one\nof the largest liners to come up the\nSt. Lawrence River.\nOadSand\nBridges\nBRIDGES^ 9he present valuation    ||| _..\nof 63 miles ot Bridges is*a84&000\n^3?\nUPON the arteries of communication depend the\nsettlement and growth of the nation. First the\ntrails... then the rough oxcart ruts... the wagon roads\n... the automobile highways.\nThe scattered population of British Columbia\nhas made the construction of roads between\ncentres a matter of vital importance, yet one\nof almost insurmountable difficulties.\nMountain sides have to be blasted away...\nclefts and chasms tresselled ... rivers bridged!\nWith the opening of the Cariboo Highway\nthrough Fraser Canyon in 1926, the last link\nof British Columbia's great arterial highway\n... a highway unexcelled the world over as an\nengineering feat and one of unmatched scenic\nbeauty ... was forged.\nEastern British Columbia greeted its western\nbrothers! Markets and railways were brought\ncloser to the farmer, the miner, the industrialist. New fields for agricultural and trade\ndevelopment were opened up.\nFor the ten years just past, an aggressive\nhighway programme has been carried out.\nThousands of miles of good roads and dozens\nof sturdy bridges have been built.\nOur roads system now totals 31,900 miles...\nan increase of over 5,000 miles during the last\nten years. Of this mileage, 12,000 miles are\nearth roads; 4,000 gravel  roads; and  1,000\nmacadam, bituminous, concrete and cement\nconcrete. The 5,000 miles which were added to\nour roads system include: 884 miles of main\ntrunk roads, 602 miles of lateral roads, 281\nmiles of industrial and mining roads, 1,133\nmiles of settlement and farm roads, and 2,000\nmiles of ordinary and mining trails.\nDuring the years just before 1917, a large\nnumber of bridges had been constructed in the\nProvince, nearly all of which were temporary\ntimber structures. Since 1917, the problem of\nmaintenance and renewal of these structures\nhas been a serious one, involving a large expenditure, particularly between the years 1920\nand 1927.\nThe policy has been to improve design of and\nworkmanship on temporary bridges and to\nrenew all the large bridges on main highways\nover the principal rivers with concrete and steel.\nToday, the valuation of our 63 miles of\nbridges is nine million dollars.\nThis construction activity has distributed\nwages and salaries over our whole Province\nand has been a material aid in bringing about\nthe current period of British Columbia's\nprosperity.\nRead these announcements and understand your province's\nprogress . . . clip them out and send them to friends. If you\ndesire extra copies of these announcements a note to this\nnewspaper will bring them. Advertise your Province!\nBRITISH COLUMBIA'S PROGRESS\n1CN S28\n THE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nTHE CITY\nNorwood Casey Green and Miss\nGrace Holmes Knight, botJh of Che-\nsaw, Wash., were married in this\ncity last Saturday, Rev. J. Archibald\nof the United church performing the\nceremony.\nWilliam Eureby returned home\nthis week from Marshall, Missouri,\nwhere he has been attcndins an aviation school for a couple of months.\nHe is now quulificd to fly alone.\n\u25a0Kov. J. Archibuld, the now pastor\nof ihe United church, has arrived in\nthe city from Keen, Out., und lie\npreached lis firsl sermon to his new\ncongregation   here  last  Sunday.\nMr. und Mrs. John C. Argall, of\nSpokane, were in the city yesterday\non a motor car trip. They own the\nproperty here in which the Grand\nForks cafe is located,\nHEALTH SERVICE\nOF THE CANADIAN MEMCAL\nASSOCIATION\nElmer Mice returned to Kiimuerley\non Monday, after doing a month's assessment work on his mineral claims\nin Franklin camp.\nJack McDonald came down from\nFranklin camp the latter part of last\nweek, and has been spending the\npast week in the city.\n'Robert Johnson and .Mrs. .McKay,\nof Hock Creek, attended the funeral\nof the late Charles A. .Mix in this\ncity on Wednesday.\n'Miss Vivian McLeod, daughter of\nMrs. J. B. McLeod, Vancouver, is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H.\nM. Luscombe.\n\u25a0Customs Officer Cameron, of Lau-\nrier, .attended the funeral of the late\nCharles A.  Mix on  Wednesday.\nA. G. M. Campbell, of Winnipeg, is\nvisiting hisiting his brother, J. V.\nCampbell, in this city.\nMrs. T. Chapman and daughter returned home this week from a visit\nto Merritt.\nMrs. J. It. Brown and son Bruce\nleft on Wednesday for a visit to\nSpokane.\n! 'Frank Newbauor and family are\nspending their vacation at Christina\nlake.\nFUTURE OF THE RACE\nFREQUENT critioism of public health work is that the\nsaving of infant life Is not desirable, because it results in the preservation of the unlit.\nPublic health work is not carried\non with the idea of preserving the\nunfit. 'J'lie best reply to the criticism.\nis a consideration of what has oc?\n(lined.\nIti England and Wales, a great deal\nof public work has been done, and\naccurate vital statistics have been\nkept for many years. From these\ntill statistivcs, we find that, during\nthe past fifty years, the infant deaths\nhave been reduced by one-half. In\n1875, there were 153 infant deaths\namong every thousand infants born;\nin the year 1926, the infant deaths\namounted to only 70 per 1000 births.\nIf such results meant tbe preservation of the unfit, of weaklings, it\nwould be reasonable to expect an increase in the deaths of children from\none to five years.\nWhat actually results from the\nproper care of infants is that not only\nare many infant deaths prevented,\nbut also a great deal of sickness in\nthis age group.\nThat tlie prevention of sickness\namong infants means healthies children is proven by the fact that the\ndeath rate among children, from one\nto five years, has decreased as the\ninfant death rate has decreased. In\nEngland and Wales, their vital statistics show an even greater decrease\namong the older children than among'\nthe iufants.\nThe protection of infants ds one of\nthe surest guarantees of healthy\nchildren and robust adults.\nTable\u2014England   and   Wales\nInfant Per 1000 Survivors\nPeriod. Death  Rate.     1-2  2-3  3-4  4-5\n18S1-85....139       63   23   16   12\n1871-75....153       59   28   19    14\n1921-25.... 76       21     9      6      4\n1926     .... 70       18     8     6     4\nlocality where game has been shot,\nand the date of killing.\nExemptions Fixed\nAdditional regulations exempt from\nall game open'seasons, Kaien island, I\nthe Colony farm in Dewdney, Oakal-,\nla prison farm and Central Park,'\nBurnaby, a specified part of Nanaimo!\nharbor and a small area around Nelson.\nIt is also provided that no person\nshall kill or attempt to kill any migra\ntory birds with a rifle; that pheasants, quail, prairie chicken (sharp-\ntailed grouse) and partridge must not\nbe shot when there is any snow on\nthe ground; that moose, caribou and\nwapiti a*nd deer must not 'be shot\nwhile they are swlmminy; and that\nno tracer bullets must be used killinp\nany kind of game.\nA new menace to game ln the illicit use of airplanes to drive birds Is\nevidently feared by the game conservation board, for it has ordered that:\n\"No person shall use a powerboat or\nairplane to disturb any migratory\ngame birds with the intent of driving\nsuch birds toward any person who\nis lying in wait for the purpose of\nshooting, killing or taking such migratory game birds.\"\nFELT CALLED UPON TO\nVOICE ONE CRITICISM\nFederal examiners who sit with dis\ntrict judges in the States examining\ncandidates for naturalization have an\neagle eye on those desiring citizenship, to see that none with tendencies subversive of the country's institutions are admitted.\nIn a Kansas town some years, ago\na group of farmers were discussing\nthe warm, dry weather, the prevalence of grasshoppers and their damage to tho newly sprouting wheat.\nJudge Williams was passing the\ngroup, and was laughingly asked to\nIssue an order for the weather nvm\nto be a little more generous with\nmoisture and cold. The judge smiled\nand then told this incident:\n\"Over at La Crosse the other day\nwe had several candidates for naturalization, among others ati'trf* German   farmer   who   has   rafllWa  here\nGeneral News\nL. McDougall left for   Nelson   on\nWednesday.\n.  Miss  Jessie  Downey  left  for  Vancouver last Sunday.\nTwo Bounclaiy\nOld-Timers\nHave Passed On\nQuestions concerning health, ad-j\ndressed to the Canadian Medical Association, 184 College street, Toronto,\nwill be answered by letter. Questions as to diagnosis and treatment\nwill not be answered.\nd. j. Mcdonald\nDan J, McDonald, aged 60 years, of\nBoundary Falls, died in a Spokane,\nWash., hospital at noon on Tuesday\nlast. He is survived by his wife and\na grown son and a daughter. Two\nof his brothers, Jack and Joe, live in\nthis city.\nThe late Mr. McDonald was a pioneer of the Boundary country, having lived here about thirty years.\nHe made his home in Grand Forks\nup till about fifteen years ago, when\n'he moved to Boundary Falls and engaged in farming. He was a highly\nrespected citizen, And much sympathy is felt for the surviving members\nof the family by the people of the\ncommunity.\nThe remains were brought to this\ncity from Spokane on Wednesday ,\nund the funeral was held from the\nCatholic church here at 9:30 o'clock\nthis morning, it was largely attended and many beautiful floral tribul\nwere made, Interment was made in\nEvergreen cemetery.\nCHARLES A. MIX\nChillies A. Mix, aged 65 years, a\nresident of Grand Forks for over\nthirty years, died in the Grand Forks\nhospital at noon on Sunday last after\na lony period of ill-health. He was\na single man, with no relatives in\nthis section of the country.\nThe late Mr, Mix was a native of\nOntario. Up till about ten years\nago he was connected with the provincial forestry service here. Since\nthat time he has been in indifferent\nhealth. He enjoyed a wide circle of\nfriends, and his passing is keenly lamented  by them.\nThe funeral was held at 2:30 on\nWednesday afternoon from the Masonic temple under the auspices of\nrHarmony lodge. It was well attended. Interment was made in Fraternal cemetery.\nWILL   INVESTIGATE  \"COLLAR\nROT\"  IN  OKANAGAN\nAn appointment to the staff at\nwork on the Dominion experimental\nstation at Summerland of interest to\nthe dry belt fruit growers, is the .addition of J. C. Rogers as assistant\nplant pathologist.\nMr. Rogers will have charge of\n\u2022the investigation of \"collar rot,\"\nwhich affects trees extensively in irrigated districts. Formerly Mr. Rogers was assistant district horticulturist at Penticton. >He is a graduate of\nthe Ontario Agricultural College)\nGuelph, and first came to the Okanagan in 1910, locating in Summerland,\nso that his knowledge of the district\nwill assist him materially in tbe work\nhe is now undertaking.\nLumber companies report tne\ngreatest volume of business in Alberta since the boom year of 1912.\nOne hundred million feet of lumber\nIs bjlng cut in Alberta this year but\nthe bulk of the supplies come from\nBritish Columbia mills.\nA precs report from Telfordvtl.le\nslates that the farmers are well\npleased with tjie allocation of stations on the twenty mile extension\nto the Hoadley rubdivisdon of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway. A large\nnumber of settlers are going into\nthe territory which will be served\nby this extension and the old timers\nln the district are now clearing and\nbreaking as much land as possible.\nKyohei Kato, who represents a\nToklo concern, and who has just\nconcluded a business mission to\nCanada, stated that he hard bought\n8,000,000 bushels of wheat ta Canada, or about ha.lf of Japan's totail\nImportations. He explained that\nJapan got more for its rice than\nCanadian wheat cost in their market, benj'j the present purchase.\nHe said, too, that Japanese were\neating more wheat foods and adapting themselves to the stronger diet.\nmm\nFOR 1928 SEASON\n(Continued from Page 1.)\nof   one   species   or 12 of all species\ndaily;   total  for season,  60.\nPrairie Chicken\nPrairie chicken or sharp-tailed\ngrouse in Fort George electoral rld-\niiiy, daily, 6; total for season, 50; in\nCariboo and Lillooet, daily, 3; total\nfor season, 12.\nEuropean partridyes, 10 dally; to-\ntal for season, 50.\nIn the western district, west of the\nCascade mountains:\nPheasants (cock birds only), daily,\n6; total for season, 25.\nGrouse (blue only), daily, 5; total\nfor season, 25.\nQuail (except Bob-White and\nmountain quail), daily, 10; total fos\nseason, 60.\nThroughout the province:\nDucks, daily, 20; total for season,\n160. .   I\nGeese, daily, 10; total for season,'\n50. I\nBrant, daily, 10;  total for season,'\n50.\ntotal for'\nThe man who always does as he\npleases is often displeased with what\nhe does.\n'Wilson  snipe,  daily,\nseason, 150.\nCoots, daily, 25; total for season,\n150.\nBand-tailed pigeons, daily, 10; total\nfor season, 60. *\nThe regulations provide further\nthat upon the request of any constable or game warden hunters must\nfurnish   \"satisfactory  proof\"  of  the\n\"The Maritime Provinces ln particular, and Canada in general, need\nmore commercial advertising,\" was\nthe opinion expressed by Hon. J. B.\nM. Baxter, Prime Minister of New\nBrunswick, when interviewed on\nwrlval on board the \"Empress of\nScotland\" after a month's visit to\nEurope. British settlers ln the\nMaritime* have been quite satisfactory as regards type and quality,\nhe said, and he hoped that we will\nbe able to obtain a great many\nmore spread over a period of years.\nPart of a litter of eight red foxes,\nwhich, together with the vixen,\nwere captured In the tArcola district recontly, have been brought\nto Moos<> Jaw by Mr. W. White, who\nhas established a fox farm east of\nthis city. It is many years since\nred fox have lived at lafge in their\nnatural state ln the southern part\nof this province, where these were\ncaptured. Mr. White intends to\nstart raising patch foxes, a cross\nbstween red and silver or black\nfox, as a commercial enterprise.\nWool crowing in Western Canada\nle increasing rapidly, according to\nW. W. Thomson, manager of the\nwestern branch of the Canadian\nCo-operative Wool Growers Limited. Up to June 30th., he pointed\nout, four carloads ot wool had left\nReglrtk. too Weston, Ontario, (for\ngrading hy Government authorities) aa compared with one for the\nsimilar half year of 1927. This\nyear's shipments represent 108,000\nlbs. from 300 flocks in tbe provinces.\nThe mystic number \"13\" hold3 no\nterrors to the Royal Order of Jesters, an organization within the\nIsmalia Temple Shrine of Buffalo,\nwho sailed on Friday the Thirteenth of July, with thirteen members ln their party, from Montreal\nfor Liverpool. The society meets\non the thirteenth of erfuh m<ynth at\nG.13 In the afternoon, and is aivided\ninto courts of 13 members each.\nThe party of Jes.ers sailed on the\ncrack new Canadian Pacific liner\n\"Duchess of Bedford\" ln a group of\nShrincrs visiting the old world.\nmany years. Tbe examiner asked\nhim If he liked this country.\n\" 'Oh, yah, I like der country all'\nright,' I\n\"The examiner was hardly satisfied\nand countered:\n\">'Are you satisfied with It?'\n'\"Veil, I bin satisfied all right,'the\nfarmer replied slowly, evidently remembering that be was under oath to\ntell the exact truth, 'but I vould like\nit better if It vould rain a leetle\nmore.'\"\nCAU8E OF 8PRING FEVER\nIf people lived as they should live\nin winter there would be no springtime lazipess and loss of energy. In\nwinter time people usually eat as If\nthey were ln Greenland or celebrating Christmas every day, often consuming double their requirement and\ntheir ability to dispose of properly.\nNot only that, but they consume\nlarge quantities of meat and cereal\nproducts, not neglecting \"hot cakes\"\nsailing majestically in seas of syrup\n\u2014to make heat to keep them warm\n\u2014when already they have not enough\nclothing to keep them warm in the\nland of the midnight sun, to say nothing of living in non-ventilated houses\nheated to tropical  temperature!\nGet Your\nGroceries\nat the\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25\n\u2022Service and Quality'\nWhen we have not what we love,\nwe must love what we have.\u2014Bussy-\n1 tabu tin.\nLove lives on, and hath a pawer to\nbless when they who loved are hid-'\nden in the grave.\u2014Lowell.\nTIMBER 8ALE X10148\nSEALED TENDERS will be received\nby the District Forester, Nelson,\nnot later than noon on the 8th day\nof August, l\u00bb28, for the purchase of\nLicence 10148, near iMorrlssey Creek,\nto cut 58 M bqard feet of Sawlogs, 50\ncurds Fuelwood, and 641 fir and larch\nTies.\nOne (1) year will be allowed for\nremoval of timber.\nFurther particulars of the Chief\nForester, Victoria, or the District\nForester .Nelson.\nE.G. Henniger Go.\n(Jruilt, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCei iciUaiul Plaster\nPoultry Supplier\nGrand  Forks, It. C.\nTIMBER 8ALE X1O203\nSEALED TENDERS will be received\nby the District Forester, Nelson,\nnot later than noon on the 8th day\nof August, 1928, for the purchase of\nLicence X10203, near Archibald Siding, to cut 41 M board feet of Saw-\nlogs and 2400 Hewn Ties.\nTwo (2) years will ibe allowed for\nremoval of timber.\nFurther particulars of the Chief\nForester, Victoria, or the District\nForester .Nelson.\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPhone tO\nS\nTry our Special Tea\nat    65c per lb\nShoes. Shirts, Overalls\nGood values for , your\nmoney.\nCall and see us before\npurchasing.\nJOHN DONALDSON\nGeneral Merchant\nPalace Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\n..FIRST It NBXI P. \u25a0URNS'\nGtiANl) I'   KKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS \u00bb HANSEN, Props\nCity llaggngc and Genera'\nTransfer\nCon I,   Wood and   Ic<\nfor Sale\nOffice  at  R.  F.  Potric's Store\nPhone 64\nOur\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\nTill! value of well-\nprinted, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult um before going\nelsewhere*\nWedding invitations\nHall programs\nBusiness cards\nVi    ng cards\nSh     iug tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNo teh end 3\nPamphlot9\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes,\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNctw Type\nLatent Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nCVumbU Avenue and\nIjakt, Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nSYNOPSIS OF i j\nLANDACTMNDMENTS\nr>RE-EMPTIONS\nVacant uureserved,surveyed Crown\nlands may be pre-empted uy British\nsubjects over 18 years of age, and by\nalieus ou declaring intention to become British subjects, conditional\nupon residence, occupation und lni-\nlneut for agricultural purposes.\nFull information concerning regulations regarding pre-emptions is\ngiven in Bulletin No. l Laud Series,\n\"How to Pre-empt Lund,\" copies of\nwhich can be obtained free of charge\nby addressing the department of\nLands, Vivtoria, B. C, or any Government Agent.\nRecords will be made covering only\nland suitable for agricultural -purposes, and which is not timberland,\ni.e., carrying over 6,000 board feet\nper acre west of the Coast Range,\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 Recording Division, ln which tbe land applied for\nis situated, and are made on printed\nforms, copies of wblcb can be obtained from tbe Land Commissioner.\nPre-emptions must be occupied for\nAve years and Improvements made to\nthe i value of $10 per acre, including\nclearing and cultivating at least live\nacres, before a Crown Grant cab be\nreceived.\nFor more detailed Information see\nthe Bulletin \"How to Pre-empt Land-'\nPURCHASE\nApplications are received for purchase of vacant and unreserved\nCrown Lands, not being timberland,\nfor agricultural purposes; minimum\nprice ot first-class (arable) land is\n$5 per mere, and second-class (graiing) land $2.50 per. acre. Further\nInformation regardiug purchase or\nlease of Crown land is given in Bulletin No. 10, Land Series, \"Purchase\nand-Lease of Crown Lqnds.\"\nMill, factory, or industrial sites on\ntimber land, not exceeding 40 acres,\nmay be purchased or leased, on conditions Including payment of stump-\nage.\nHOMESITE LEASES\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding\n20 acres, may be leased as homesites,\nconditional upon a dwelling being\nerected ln the, first year, title being\nobtainable after residence and improvement conditions efre fulfilled\nand land has been surveyed.\nLEA8ES\nFor grazing and industrial purposes areas not exceeding 640 acres\nmay be leased by one person or a>\ncompany.\nGRAZING\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province is divided into grazing districts\nand the range administered under \u2022\nGrazing Commissioner. Annuad grasing permits are issued based on 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 ten head.\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\n\u2022.tier in\nHavana Cigars* Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks* B. C\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nAgent\nIxmilnion Monumental Works\nAabcotos Products Co. Hoofing\n:estimateTfurnisned\nbox 33}        grand forks,j. c\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAHIM6\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds,\nUpholstering Neatly Done\nR. C. MoCDTGHBON\nwunnairuoi\n<v\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1928_08_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0380149","@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":"1928-08-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1928-08-03 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\/1.0380149"}