{"@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":"d0265930-eed3-4996-b74c-fd9c4470f34c","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-03-14","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1931-07-31","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0407177\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 1^ GRAND FORKS SUN\n30th Year=No. 38\n\"Ten me what you Know le true,\nI can guess at well at yon.\"\nGrand Forks\nCity Council\nProceedings\nThe regular meeting ot the Grand\nForks city council was held \"in the\ncouncil chamber on Monday evening.\nMayor Henniger and Aid. McCabe,\nSimmons and Willis were present\niS. T. Dlnsmore made application\nfor the renewal of the pipe line from\nthe pipe line on Mill creek to the\nWest Kootenay substation, but the\ncouncil felt that ik It involved a considerable outlay of money and that\nthe available cash for tbe present\nyear had already been expended for\nother work, it would be Impossible eo\nreplace this line, and that the council would prefer that the West Kootenay comply would prcure Its water\nfrom some other source.\nThe council decided to make the\nnecessary arrangements to have the\nSmelter Lake properties included In\nthe tax sale lists for tbe present year.\nNotice was received that three\ndairy farms supplying milk in the\ncity did not conform to the government regulations, and had been prohibited from selling milk for human\nconsumption until their premises\ncomplied with the regulations for\nconducting  dairies.\nThe purchase of (600 ot Grand\nForks bonds and $4000 of Dominion\not Canada bonds as a sinking fund\ninvestment was approved by the\ncouncil.   -\nThe local government agent will be\nasked to supervise the registration of\nthe unemployed in the city as well te\n, In the district.\nIhe clerk was instructed to again\ncall the attention of the water con;\ntroller to tbe seriousness of the situation ln connection with the sediments ln the water ln tbe Kettle\nriver, especially in the damage to the\npumping unit and the filling ot the\nwattr mains ln this cjty.\nJ_\nFriday, July 31,1931\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nuncalled for and I venture to say the\nprime minister would not have supported them.\n\"I am going to take the position\nin this parliament that while speaking in opposition I am as much entitled to respectful hearing ife the\nprime minister. I will look to you,\n.Mr. Speaker, to see that during tbe\nremainder of this parliament tbat\nhearing is given myself and to all\nhonorable gentlemen on this side of\nthe house. If we cannot get that\nbearing ln the parliament of Canada\nwe will helve to be heard somewhere\nelse.\"\nOne of the interruptions Mr. King\nevidently objected to wee when\nsome member on the Conservative\nside broke Into his speech by shouting \"Beauharnols.\" Mr. King bad\nbeen discussing sources of revenue\nof the provlncee.\nHe retorted: \"The honorable mem\nber says the provinces have derlvod\nrevenues from Beauharnols. Does lie\nmean to say that is the way Beauharnols hae been spending its money\nby paying to the province of Ontario. I itm quite Interested ln hearing that from a Conservative member.\"\nSays Tolmie\nExploits Idle\nTo Save Cash\nOne More Pioneer\nOf City Passes Away\nMary Hnrttager, aged 67 yetke, 6\nmonthh and as days, died at. her\nhome, the Grsnd Forks hotel, at 11\no'clock Saturday, n^^ofcJIw\nThe late Mrs. Hartinger was a\ntlve Bavaria. The faintly emigrated\nto Minnesota when she was fourteen\nyears of age. forty years ago she was\nmarried to the latd Frank Hartinger,\nwho died while on a visit to Germany\na few years i|go. After passing\nthrough the panic in Spokane in the\nnineties, 'Mr. and Mrs, Hanrtlnger\nmoved to Grand Forks ln 1899, and\nthey were prominent members of the\nbusiness life of the city up the time\not their passing away.\nThe late IMrs. Hartinger Is survived\nson and a daughter, Frank and iHitt-\nUe, both of this olty. She also leaves\na sister, who lives in Bellingham,\nW|ash\u201e and a brother in Minnesota.\nShe had a wide circle of friends, all\not whom extend sincere sympathies\nto the bereaved ftlnily.\nThe funeral took place from the\nGrand iForks hotel to Holy Catholic\nchurch, Where services were held at\n9:30 a.m., on Wednesday, July 29. It\nwas oae of the largest funerals held\nln the city for some years past, and\nthe uoral offerings were numerous\nand beautiful. Interment was nufle ln\nthe family iplot in Evergreen cemetery.\nThe pallbearers were: 'Frank Scott,\nWilliam Llddicoat, A> E. McDougall,\nC. (P. R. Plncott, B. Vant and William Hocman.\nVICTORIA.\u2014 The Tolmie gov\nernment is deliberately exploiting\nthe unemployed to save money,''\nopposition leader, on Saturday.\nHe flunded the charge on two\nfacts:\n1. Maintenance work on provincial\nhighways is not being conducted\neven up to the ordinary amount\n12. Tlhe unemployment situation\nwas used to justify taking more\nmoney than ever from the taxpayers\nyb] the Jones 1 per cent levy.     .\nV'They are spending Uttle or 'no\nmoney on the roads and they refuse\nto disease the amount of taxation\nby way of the new special tax,\" he\n\u2022i|ld.\nAlthough he has Just returned\nfrom a three weeks' tour of central\nBritish Columbia, from Queen Charlotte Islands to Prince Oeorge, Mr.\ntPattiafr^tesiter- nggfU TuMarp-fOT\nRaser River, where a heavy 10-day\nprogram has been arranged for him\nby the residents.\nNEW   LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR\nVICTORIA.\u2014John WllllaBn Ford-\nham Johnson of Vancouver, president and managing director of the\nBritish Columbia Sugar Refining\nCompany Limited, has been appoint\ned lieutenant- governor ot British\nColumbia.\nUsed Stock\nCertificate for\nLighting Fire\nTRA1Y.\u2014During the past week,\nshareholders of t the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting company, Including p large number of emplayees of\ntbe compsiap In Trail, have received\nln addition to tbe 5 per cent cash\ndividend a stock bonus, one-twentieth of a share for each full share in\ntheir name.\nIt would appear that some, part'e-\nuiarly small shareholders, hi.ve attached little value to these fractious\nof share and lt Is reported that lu\nat least one Instance a fractional\nshare was used for lighting a flre,\nanother man ls reported to have used\nhis fri lotion ofa share to wrap his\nlunch.\nThese fractions of shares have a\nmarket value and in an effort to prevent loss through destruction oi\ncarelessness S. O. Blaylock, vice\npresident and general manager of\nthe Cosnolld.lted Mining ft Smelting\ncompany, nakes the following statement to employees:\n\"T0 shareholders of Consolidated\nMining ft Smelting company's stock:\n''During the week you will havs\nreceived a dividend of one share of\nstock for each 2d shares which you\nhold In pour name, and another cer\ntifici|te good for one-twentieth of a\nshare for each odd share you own\nThat Is to say, if you hold 27 shares\nof stock you would receive a fully\npaid up certificate for one share of\nstock and a certificate good for seven-twentieths of a sht<re. Tlhese certificates are worth between $4.50\nand $5 for each fraction they represent. In other words, the certificate\nfor seven-twentieths would be worth\nbetween $31.50 and $35. Do not\nthrow these certificates away but\nconsult pour banker as to their disposal.\" \t\nThe miirket value of a fraction of\na Consolidated share today Is ap-\nproximately  $4.60,  which  would  net\nThe question of whether or not\nscantily-clad bathers at some of Canada's fashionable resorts might sot\nbe ln danger of three years imprisonment under the act. was raised\nby  Mr. LaPolnte.\nWhat about performances In the;'\nters, asked S. W. Jacobs, Liberal,\nCartier. Would they be subject to\nthe penalties?\nThe minister replied that they\nwould be only if so lightly clad as\nto  offend  public  morals.\nAlmpd at (Doukhobors who occ|a-\nsionally scandalize 'communities by\nIndulging In nude par:(des, the bill\nimposes severe penalties for exposure while naked. Formerly persons\nguilty of such abts might get off with\n(    fine.\nGrand Forks\nHigh School\nStudents Pass\nThe   Brit sh   Columbia  high school\nJune    matriculation  examination   results, both junior and senior, as announced    last      Saturdap by the department      of    education,    Victoria,\nshow    that    1822    out of 3728 candidates for junior matriculation (Grade\nXI)    passed    In all subjects and  in\nsanor    matriculation     (Grade    XII)\n232 out if 752 candidates passed   In\nall  subjects.\nGRAND   FORKS  HIGH  SCHOOL\nGrade  XI\u2014Mazie    M.    Henderson,\nKatherlne    P.    Henniger,    Violet  A.\njonneton,   t.   Wlnnifred   Llghtfoot.\nGREENWOOD.HIGH   8CHOOL\ntirade   Al\u2014Kobert   P,   Fonshaw.\nBARLEV   FOR   EGGS\nEntrance to\nHigh School\nExaminations\nAs experimental work continues\nsuitability of barley as a feed for\nlaying hens tteepmes increasingly! Fori\"88-\n:|,iparent. At the Dominion experimental' station at Morden, Man., ihe\nresults of a series of studies conducted  over  a  period  of five  yean\n       show  that  barley  will  not onlp  re-\nto the holder some $3.50 after pay-! Place corn in the ration tat that bai\ning brokerage and other charges In-\ncurrer in marktting.\nSummary of\nFruit Market\nBennett Is\nRebuked for\nInterrupting\nOTTAWA.\u2014Sharp rebukes for tbe\ninterruptions he was receiving during his speeches on the vocattlnal\n-education bill were made last last\nFriday night In the house of commons by Rt Hon. Mackenzie King,\nopposition leader. Mr. King hikl been\nreading a memorandum when Premier R. B. Bennett interjected:\n\"Those are functions ot the Dominion.' Mr. King replied that he was\nciting them for that reason, and\nadded: \"May I- read again without\ninterruption.\"\n'Mr. Bennett: '1 extend my regrets\nfor having interrupted.\"\nMr. King: \"Three very insulting\ninterruptions occurred i this (afternoon from the other side ot the\nhouse. If my Rt. Hon. friend Is to\nlead the house, I would expect him\nto set mi example to his followers,\nmutt Is the reason why 1 took exception to his interruption. I do not\nbelieve the prime minister meant\nanything discourteous, but the interruptions thta afternoon were -most\ntjlscourteoua.    They   were entirely1\nVICTORIA,- JuTy 31.\u2014The following\nreport Is issued by the department ot\nagriculture, 'Victoria:\nVANCOUVER\nThere Is Uttle change to be noted\non   the   Vancouver produce market\nsince the last report.\nApricots\u2014The deal in i|?rloots is\nsomewhat {Inner, yesterday's average\nprice being $1.10 per box as against\n$1.00 a few d>ys ago. The supply ls\nls entirely from the Okanagan. Those\nwho Intend to do some home bottling\nln this fruit have no time to spare as\nthe detp. will be oB in \u00bb few days.\nPrices are as low as tbey probable\nwill be.\nGreen apples are now on 'the market ln abundance and prices are lower. It ls difficult to give a price on\nthis product as there ls much Independent produtlon and house to houso\nselling at almost any price up to $1,25\nper box.\nPeits as yet are supplied from\nCalifornia and prices remain at $3.50\nper ibox.\nPeaches\u2014The bulk of the peaches\non the market are ot the Siberia variety and also come from California.\nThe quality carlot lots from tint\nsource being now received.\nCherries from various British Columbia points are still on the market\nat extremely low prices. There ls too\nmuch competition from other fruits\nat this late season to give cherries\nmuch ot a chance on the market.\nPotatoes are still on the doldrums\nuntil the early crop Is cleared up.\nThere is little hope of recover\u00ae.\nTnough locsfl production of this root\nmakes duties and other deterrents of\nou'side competition ot very little effect It is purely a matter of supply\nand demand which can be very much\nupset by -rush marketing on the part\nof the growers.\nlII Scantily\nClad People\nTo Be Jailed\nOTTTAWA.\u2014Visions of scantily-\nclad bathers serving three years In\njail were raised in the house on Friday when a* government bill, designed to curb nude parades by west-\nem Doukhobors, was up for consideration.\nThe bill made no specific reference to Doukhobors, and Hon. Truest LaPointe rilsed the point. The\nbill set forth this definition of nudity:\n\"Anyone shall be deemed to be\nnude who is so scantily clad as to offend against public decency or Order.\"\nIt will be tbe duty of judges and\nmagistrates to determine tbe degree\nof scantiness rendering an individual offensive under the la|w.\nley fed birds produce larger eggs at\na lower cost. This Is particulikiv j\ntrue at a time like the present when\nthe bulk of the corn supply, for poultry feed has to be Imported, and\nwhen barley is available at the lowest price in many pears.\nBarley used for poultry Bhould be\nplump, heavy and cf good quality;\nrind when barley ls fed lt should be\naccompanied by a good grade of\ntested cod liver oil to supplp the\nvitamin deficiency in the barley.\nLARSON LOOKS OVER\nPAULSON   MINE   8ECTION\nAndrew Larson, at one time in\nchare of the Le Hoi No. 2 mine at\nRossland, and well known among mining men, arrived ln Rossland last\nThursday froin his home in Vancouver for the purpose of examining the\nMolly Gibson Burnt Basin Mining\ncompi^y's property for some interested parties.\nIlaper is being produced from tlie\nrefuse ends of asparagus at a cost\nof about half that of similar qui ill ty\nmade from rags.\nVICTORIA, July 28.\u2014Of the 28.10\nvuplls ln the province who wrote\nhigh school entrance examinations\nthis year 1278 were successful, the\ndepartment cf education at Victoria\nannounces today. This makes a total\nof 5472 new students eligible to enter high schools and superior schools\nin British Columbia in September,\n4194 already having been promoted\non recommendation, as provided lithe school regulations. \u25a0\nWight of the ten bronze medals\nawVirdi-d annually to entrance students securing the highest marks in\ntheir school districts were won by\ngirls this year.\nAnother triumph for the girls Is\nthat Wlnnifred Odetta Hicks if Agas-\nsiz school leads the province with a\ntotal of 527 marks out of a possible\n600.\nMedalists\nDistrict' 1\u2014'Frank Onm.nd, Morris\nWilliam school, Oak liny, 513 marks.\nDistrict 2\u2014Georgette Albertine Len-\nnart, Sidney school, 402 ni,arks.\nDistrict 3\u2014Gladys Eileen Corcoran,\nGeneral Brock school, Vancouver, 494\nmarks.\nIDlstriit 4\u2014Nancy. Doris Draper\nBentley, Klngsway We3t school, Bor-\nnaby, 495 marks.\nDistrict 5\u2014Wlnnifred Odetta Hicks,\nAgasslz school, 527 mcrks.\nDistrict 6\u2014Douglas James Struth-\ners, Sullivan Bailey school, 476\nmarks.\nDistrict 7\u2014Muriel Ruth Smith, Vernon Consolidated  school, 496 marks.\nDistrict 8\u2014Ida Lois Imbem, Ma-\nlakwa school, 494 marks.\nDistrict    9 \u2014 {Margaret     Elizabeth\nPassmore school 595 marks.\nDistrict 10\u2014Dorothy Louise FriHer,\nBorden Street school, Prince Rupert,\n526 marks.\nThe following is the result of the\nexaminations In the Boundary district:\nGrand Forks Center\nGrand Forks\u2014George C. OIboh, 446;\nThora Robinson, 422. Promoted on\nrecommendation: Lloyd R. Bailey,\nLillian M. Btbblecome, Catherine\nChahley, Wlnnifred V. Cooper, John\nK. Crisp, Catherine V. Di|vis, Wilma\nM. Davis, Albert P. Deporter, Freda\nH. Dcrner, Williamina M. Gpay, Fred\nW. Greenwood, 'Nora J. iHalisheff,\nClara F. Henniger, Irene 8. Hutton,\nNils K. Johnson, Robert L. Kidd, Josephine E. Kleman, Irene A. Llghtfoot,\nJack A. McDonald, Elaine A. MoFar-\nlen, George J. O'Keefe, Eunice M.\nPatterson, Benjamin C, Rella, George\n\u2022K. Robertson, George W. ,Roper\nGeorge V. Ruzlcktl Annie Starchuk,\nHelen M. Stewart, Mary M. Talarlco,\nCarl F. Wolfram, T. Edward Wright.\nChristinaLakc\u2014C. Myers Waugh,\n424; Albert Maida, 383.\nFife\u2014Christina    J.  Fernelli,\nGreenwood Center\nGreenwood\u2014Promoted   on\nmendation:    James  Forshaw,\nJohnson,     David     Nicholls,\nNicholls.\nBoundary    Falls\u2014'Ev,a    A Johnson,\nRichter,    464;    Ida D. Walker,    426;\nDesmond Roberts, 398.\nMidway\u2014O. Philip Pansell, 439; C.\nHenry Holmes, 387; Bernardine\nBrown, 371.\nRock Creek Center\nBeaverdell\u2014Christine R. Dubar,\n418;   Albert Warrington, 388!\nChristian Valley\u2014Marjorie M. de\nLautous, 377. ,\nKettle Vcjley\u2014Victor B. Cane, 472;\nPearl M. Lindsay, 440.\nRhone\u2014Gladys M. Mitchell, 368.\nRock Mountain\u2014Adele M. DuMont,\n432;  Marguerite O'Hara, 367.\nWestbrldge\u2014Charlotte W. Mac-\nCutcheou, 4'9.\nDistribution\nOf Motor Fees\nGrand Forks will receive $2083 from\ntho distribution of motor license receipts for the fiscal yera 1930-31, according to an announcement of tlie allotment made at Blclorlo on Saturday. The tot:a amount to be dlati-iliu\nted is $570,000, the allotment being\nbased on a total estimated population\not 491,962. The compltte list ot the\namounts alloted follows:\nAlberna, $992; Armstrong, $1393;\nChilliwack (city), $2505; Courtenay,\n$114i8; Cranbrook, 3862; Cumberland, $14'9; Duncan, $1670; Enderby,\n$U10; Fernie, 6158; Grand Forks,\n$2083; Greenwood, $526; Kamloops,\n$6382; Kaslo, $1347; Kelowna $3673;\nLadysmith, $2789; Merritt, $2440; Na-\nnaimo, $12,587; Nelson, $7416; New\nWestminster, $20,564; North Vancouver (cltp), $10,830; Port Alberni,\n$1497; Port Coquitlam, $3046; Port\nMoody, $1460; Prlnct George, $2911;\nPrince Rupert, $9065; Revelstoke,\n$3945; Rossland, $2073; Salmon Arm,\n$889; Slocan, $449; Trail, $4282; Vancouver, $239,057; Vernon, $5225; Victoria, $54,916; Burnaby, $18,254; Chilliwack (town), $7799; Coldstream,\n$723; Coquitlam, $3474; Delta, $4537;\nEsquimau, $7090; Friher Mills, $1094;\nKent, $1559; Glenmore, $382; Lang-\nley, $5672; Maple Ridge, $.1672; Mats-\nqui, $6381; Mission, $4963; North Co\nwioben, $4235; North Vancouver (district), $5588; Oak Bay, $6381; Peach-\nland, $710; Penticton, $5672; Pitt\nMeadows, $598; Richmond, $7090;\nSaanich, $16,307; Salmon Arm, $6026;\nISpallumcheen, $2576; Sumas, *#50;\niSummerlands) $2604; Surray, .$7,799:\nTadihic, $276; West Vancouver, $6381\nAUbotsford, $480; Burns Lake, $211;\nCreston, $604; Gibson's Landing.\n$177; Hope, $574; Mission City, $1311\nNew Denver, $507; Quesnel, $709;\nSilverton, $482; Smlthers, $971; Stewart, $703; Terrace, $374; Vanderhoof,\n$460; Williams Lake, $426.\nThe Sun prints the news up to the\nminute of going to press.\nWill Keep as\nMany Men as\nPossible on\nThe Payrolls\nAnnouncement has been made that\nSteps are being taken by the Consolidated Mining & smelting company to\nkeep as many employees \u25a0 \u2022> possible\nut work.\nVice-President uud General .Manager B. (i. Blayliok ha., issued tbe fol-\nlowng statement:\n\"In older to keep as uiunp as possible of the old employees on the payroll, (lie Consolidated Mining A\nSmelting oompsfiy l\u00ab dividing up such\nwork as tthere Is over the whole\nnumber of employees instead of It-tying Off a portion of tbe men and keeping the rest employed full time.\n\"This will he accomplished in most\ncases by building up four shifts Instead of three, each shift working '5\ndays and laying off five before returning to work tor u second period of 15\ndays.\n\"It will take some time to put the\nnew scheme into operation, as the\nputting on of the fourth shift will\nhave t0 coincide with the laying off\nof men from tlie other departments.\nThe scheme will be started on August 1 und it ls hoped to have it in\nfull swing before September 1. In\nstarting of tlie new system one shift\nwill work live days before their first\nchange, thu next shift will work ten\ndays and the third fifteen days. After \u2022\nthut, each shift, will lay off five days\nand then go back for the regular 15-\nday shift.\n\"In departments where this scheme\nis not feasible, tho men will be given\n,| definite number ot days' work per\nweek; lor instance, in the mechanical\ndepartment the week will consist of\nlive days instead of six.'\n392.\nru corn-\nErnest\nWalter\nNorwegian  Creek\u2014Alexina  E.  Gid\nen, 374; James W. Riley, 360.\nMidway Center\nIngram    Mountain\u2014Inez     Frances\n<gAG^i3>QANI \u00ae\u00ae<\u00a7KQi;\u00a7 LSgKl\u00ae\nK0K1L \u00a9'TrWE tP>0IF>g\u00a9\nAfter   all,   The   San   Is the only\nworthwhile newspaper printed In th\nBoundary district :\nFrom the four corners oi\nCanada and from across\nthe seas, men, women and\nchildren of Scotch ancestry\nare preparing to meet at\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway's palatial Banff Springs\nHotel, Banff, Alta., for the\nannual Highland Gathering, August 27-30, 1931.\nThe event, which has be-\njk*t_   \u00ab-\u2022. j     x \"\"P* \"ktorfc, is under the\ndWnprfshed patronage of H.R.H. the Prince of\nM^no&sT11 \u2022\u00bb.\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u2022% opened by H.R.H.\nS!22^SlrtS\\S,?\u00bbIB- AJeetint of this year's\nprogram will be the intei-regimeutal piping com\npetition between representatives of the 17 Highland\nRegiments in Canada. There will also be the other\nbagpipe competitions and displays which have made\ntbe Gathering famous, aB well as dancing and highland games. The meeting always draws a large\ngallery, in addition to the army of costumed participants. Juvenile competitions in piping and\ndancing are particularly attractive. In addition to\nthe regular events, two Scotch light operas: \"Prince\nCharming\" and \"Prince Charlie and Flora\" will be\npresented by members of the resident company.\nThe setting is ideal for the Gathering; the peaks of\nthe famous Canadian Rockies, with their gracious\nvalleys and sprayflecked streams forming a magnificent background tor the Banff Springs Hotel,\nwhkfc ja butt? ia the 8eoteh baronial style.\nBERNARD SHAW AND LADY\nA8TOR PUZZLE 80VIET PEOPLE\nMOSCOW,  July 28.\u2014Serious  workers  among   Soviet   leaders   were   Lie\nwildered   by  George   Bernard   Shaw,\nIrish wit and playwright, here on U\nholiday tour.\nShaw and Lady Astor, member ot\nthe Brinish parliament, listened to\nserious speeches b|p their Russian\nfriends and their counter remarks\nleft the Russians puzzled.\n\u2022 Shaw, blue eyes twinkling, for example, at a Russhm factory commented :\n\"The more I see It the proletarians, the more I thank God 1 am not\none of them.\"\nLater, at a garden party at the British embassy, Karl Radek, Soviet leiU-\nor, remarked:\n\"America gave the world only dentistry.\"\n\"How About the American machinery 'pou're Importing?\" retorted Lady\nAstor, herself from  Virginia.\nThe Soviets had expected better\ntreatment at the tongues of their\nguests, for both Shaw and Lilly Astor have been inclined toward liberalism,\nONE KILLED, FIVE HURT AS\nAUTOGYRO PLANE,HITS AUTO\nALAMEDA, CAL., Ju'y 28, \/five\npersons Were reported In a serious\ncondition today from lnjur.es received in an autogyro-motor car crash\nthat ended fatally for .Mrs. '.Nollla\nOrouoher, 48, ot Alainedl\nThe accident occurred when Claude\nOwen,   2   7,of   Spokane,   Wash.,   pilot\nof the autogyro, misjudged a landing\nami crashed into a row of automobiles parked at the edge of the Kan\nFrancisco ; irdromc.\nMrs. Broucher and her fouwpear-\n0ld granddaughter were sitting in one\nof tho curs. The grandmother was\nkilled instantly and the girl wus cr.ti-\ncally lujurod. Louis Courtoia, 17, a\ncripple, was standing nearby i\u00bbir was\nstruck tiy a piece of Hying metal that\npunctured his chest and lung. Mrs.\nArne Kursbig, Alarneda, aud Mrs\nBernlce Hart, Oakland, othor bystanders, were Injured und William\nQulyle of San Francisco, passenger\nin the \"skip hug\" airplane, incurred a\nwrenchod  back.\n-Owen disappeared after the accident late on Sunday, and il wus believed he wifs unburt. Tho piano was\nowncl by C. llaynes ot Coeur d'\nAlene, Idaho, and was bown by Owen\non a barnstorming trip.\nGRANT TO MANAGE FRUIT\nMARKETING BUREAU\nIN THE OKANAGAN\nVICTORIA, July 29.\u2014J. A. Grant,\nforiuerlp British Columbia markets\ncommissioner on the prairies and\nnow un oflh.ial of tho department of\nagriculture, li.|< been arlointed aa\nmanager of tlie new Okanagan fruit\nmarketing bureau at Bernon.\nMr. (irant will leavo for the Okanagan Immediately to open the bureau\nand get it operating in t.'me to issue\nits first reports on August 1, after\nwhich daily reports on fruit marketing conditions will bo Issued.\nlu announcing Mr, Grant's appointment, the government made it clear\nthat while it was bearing tlie cost bf\nopening the bureau it expected I the\nfruit industry to assume this expense\nnext year, if the bureau proved p sit-\nisl'uctory experiment.\n'liie original estimate of the first\nyear's cost wus $0000, but this has\nbeen cut in half by the use of government o ces in Vernon and other\neconomies.\nTho government lias the written\nassurance of cooperative and independent shippers that they will support\ntho buret iu and supply it with daily\ninformation on fru.t movements. This\nis counted upon to produce orderly\nmarketing In the industry and to prevent  disastrous  price   cutting.\nSIX LOAVES FOR  FIVE CENT*\nOFFERED IN BREAD WAR\nPENTJ,CTpN.\u2014Tha bread war\nwhich hus boon raging In town for\ntho past two months, has just about\nreached an end. The bakers ure getting together and deciding on their\nprices while the groccers will soon\nre ch a fairly iinaii inii'.is decision, lt\nis  oxpocle.\n'i'lie bakers wore soiling bread at\n', cents a I af to the grocers, und\nthey In turn were selliug it to the\nOOnfiumers as a leader al the same\nprice and even less.\nI i I.  week  Ihe   bread   war reached\nIts pe Y< when one chain store nil the\nprice to Iwo Ioiivuh for li cents, then\nuotiier chain .store  itnmediatelp un-\nersold this price and gave one free\n'hif with every purchase of any article.\nEVERBLOOMING ROSE\nAMPLY PROTECTED BY\nUNITED STATES PATENT\nWASHINGTON \u2014 An overblooom-\ning rose, developed by Henry F.\nRosenberg of New Brunswick, N.J.,\nhas won the II,r\u00bbt plant patent granted by tlie United States patent oflWo\nunder the new law providing such\nprotection.\nThe owner of the patent has the\nexclusive riglvlit to reproduce, use or\nsell the invention or discovery\nthroughout tlie United Slates am) its\nterritories for 17 years, or to license\nothers to do so.\nThoy siy th\u2022\u25a0{-. soma people am so\n..xpert al peddling hot air that they\ncould keep alloat in an airplane aeci-\ndenJU\n The Grand Forks Sun\nu,n? (tani Jnrks #un\n0. A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER\nSubscription   Rates,  Payable   in   Advance\nOue  sear, iu Canada und Great Britain  i-.X\nOne year, in the Lulled States. _    \u2022 L'sO\nAddress alt communications to\nPHONE   101\nOffice:\nThe Grand Forks Sun,\nGrand  Fork*, B.\nColumbia  Avenue   and   Lake   Street\nC.\nI'ltlUAl'. JULY 8i, L.\u00bb31\nPk.--.sii.-.it rOLAUH says that the new .Australian t^de\ntreaty is a groat thing for British Columbia, 'ihe\npoulUv men of the province ure protesting against lt is\nbeii-fc decidedly detrimental u their Interests. President\nChambers) 01 the Associated Growers clams that, it will\nnoi hell, tne fruit growers of tlie province. If, therefore,\nthe treat) is ol any material benefit to anyone in British\nColuiuUu 11 must ba to the big interests.\nai tociation villi men of decidedly limited vision. He e>.-\npressee an intarest iu the perforniance of your motor car\nand you leclte ti. him numerous statistics relative to the\ncost of operation, the number of miles attained on a gallon of gas, the mileage got out of your tires, tiie periodic\nreplenishment of oil, and 0ther less Import; Pt detail:.\nBefore ha leaves you he Inquires also about your parents, your brothels and sisters and other intimjate mat\ntors. Hut when he does depart it suddenly occurs to :\u2022 ot:\nthat in your enthusiasm in talking ahout yourself am!\njour own affairs you have neglected to reciprocate by\nasking alter himself, or his health, or his f:;mily, or his\nbusiness, or his possessions, which gives the impression\nj of your having been most ungracious. However, there is\nat least < no consolation\u2014in all probability tho civil man\nhas not listened to half you said to hun tfiyway.\nHealth\nservice\nRESIDENTS of iJeriin, Germany, recently listened to\ntne Strains of music from a loud speaker 25 miles\naway. 1'ae speaker's voice was said to eiiuul the volume\noi an orchestra ol 2U00 pieces. Placed on a roof for the\ntest uy .1 Herman electrical concern, it produced air\nwavos ihut could be felt on the skin 100 feet awfi;. A\ncurrent Of li-U .nepers wa. rcuu.rod to operate it. Its dia-\nphngpi >i..,t.ied ti lull inch to produce Its voice.\nrai BLEPHONLMU from a moving train is made possible\nA i,j mu) ui ii.c lines of telegraph wires that parallel\nall railway tracks). Ihe conversation is brm(least to\nthem, runs along the mires t0 a central station .and is\nthen transferred lo ordinary telephone wirus. Tiie instrument looks not unlike a ividio broadcaster. An ordinary telephone is used und thu voice tr. insm\/itled iby tne\nbroadcasted iu ilic telegraph wire. Ihe-process Involves\ntne disintegration aud reahsseuibliug of the human voice,\nfor tlio words spoken into the telephone ou the train van-\nish into h.gh Irequescy cycles ana are precipitated from\nthe train to the. carrier current telegraph wires. At U)e\npickup pickup stations the voice is reassembled uid so\ntransmitted further.\nTlJEisL ls\nuho mt|u be termed a good-natured man.\niie lives in a nearby town, and Is ihe divorced husband of a refi-hesded woman by whom he had five children. Does the laci that she lias married another make\nhmi sore? Not at all. And to cap the climife of good-\nnturedness Willi dog-like devotion, this good-natured\nman lives with his former wife and her new husband and\nsupports the entire ljamily, botli his own children and\nthe other fellow's children without a whiimpur and seems\nto like st. This lias been going on for some years and the\nfamily sooms to be a wholly Irieiidly couiblutjtion.\nA SMART British gentleman has invented a new way\nof malting u nvelinood. it consists ln going to church\nand iorbidding the banns of any prospective uewlyweds,\nHe merely rises .mu says iu a hollow tone, \"1- objects,'\nand goes outside and waits. If eitner principal baa anything to conceal- any most o; them have\u2014a crushed individual generally comes out, gives him all the money\nin Uie personal exchequer and implores him to keep the\nsecret deep and dark. Sometimes both the bride and tne\nbridegroom fork over loose cht|nge uud even jewelry.\nOt course, 11' both the man und tlie woman are confident\not their respective rectitude, he does not get a cent, but\non the whole, there is u decent living in the business.\ni RESH ferment in the underworld of Berlin draw?\nattention  of  iaw-t tbiging  citizens\ntho\nto . tho romantic\nsounding, yet menacing \"lodges\" and \"gang clubs\" of\nthe city. More like Chinese tongs in their structure than\nanything else, yet resembling American gang syndicatoc\nIn their significance, and not altogether unlike pla'.n old-\nfashioned lodgee, thu Germain underworld \"vereins\" are\nlip no means all of one sort. A soci: 1 scale prevails, and\nIhe lines ure pi .'tty finely drawn, in Berlin tliero may he\nhonor among thieve , but there ls also snobbery,, social\n'climbing,\" and rnul blng. At the top of the scule aro the\nregular \"kolanne\" \\ \u25a0reins, two of which, tlie \"Inunei-\ntreu\" (always true) und the \"Hand in Hand' ure prion*\nlily the best known. When Immertreu, for Instt >K'e, has\na celebration un att ndanco of 3000 can bo counted on.\nMo mere \"touch guys\" these\u2014they wtur \"simiklngs,\" as\nHermans null n tuxedo. For the recent celebration of !in-\ninertreii'i tenth anniversary, the manager of tho lucy\ncafe figured On selling $30000 worth of liquor, for the\ngangsters nut for :i big time do even their drinking in a.\nbig way. These gangsters are the ones who do the better\ngrade work such as safe cracking and jewel robberies.\nToo far below them to be considered capable of giving\n\"satisfaction,\" In n matter involving the gangster's code\n.of honor and revenge, lire the \"Rubenjungen\" (raven\nboys). They are - cailed so in gangdom's lingo because\nthoy ure always flitting atout, from one place to sanothor,\nnot continuing to \"do business from tlie same old stand '\nove.- long stretches of time like tho verein member*:.\nAlso, the upper crust thinks that these members of tlie\nhoi poloi have b'ack characters, d;|rk and dismal us can\nbe. because they don't abide by the code. The raven laddies account for such things as auto robberies, show window thefts, purse snatching, pickpocketings, and such\nsmall fry- activities, just what gives the Berlin police the\nmost trouble. The \"ravens\" are t|lso organized, but in a\nrough usd-ready sort of way, into \"cliques,\" simply for\ntho pi'l'oso of furthering! their \"t(u:-lness\" activities biy\ncooperative marketing of their loot through fences. They\nare mostly young fellows, but many a one from among\ntheir number has in the past managed to graduated into\nthc upper crusl of the verein' groups, and they are etigcr\n10 get on in tho world. The ambitious raven looks forward to the time when he will have wormed his way\ninto a \"ktilonnl.\" There he will have to start at the bottom, of course, posted as a watch whllo some old-fashioned safe is balng \"persuaded,\" or acting as cnf(lffeur\nlor driving the collected boodle to the merchant who\n:ooks after such details of the \"kolonne's\" activities. But\nwhatever it Is, he is a made man and he won't look at\nhis old raven  buddies.\nCARE OF THE SKIN\nThe skin is nut merely a covering\nfor Uie body; it is pn important body\n-1 sccrfclion. It is iu the skin that the\neat glands are looted. It is chiefly\nthrough the.pouring out uf the secro-\ntlona of these glands on the sun'act of\nihe bod:-', with subsequent evi'.pera-\nlion, that the ten.peiature of the body-\nis controlled.\nIt is ia the skin that we find hte\nnerve endings which give us the scullions of he.tt, Cold, touch and pain.\nIt isvihe skin, when it is iu a normal,\nhealthy condition, which acts ao aba-\nlit r to prevent oisaase germs from\ngaining entrance to thoce parts of the\nbody which lie under the-skln.\nTlie above remarks are sufllclant to\nshow that the skin is something more\nthiln'a mere covering. Ab one of the\nImportant organs of the body, it Is\nlinked up with ull 'the other orguns\nand systems, lt is for this reason that\nihe skin, becunse it is not a thing\napart from tha lost of the body, re-\nllect\u00ab tlie state of the whole body.\nit should be clearly understood that\nit is not possible to huvo u| healthy  would  not  let  mu\nskin unless the body is healthy. 11 Is   demanded      my\nthis simple truth which is so common-j through.    I\nly overlookeu or forgotten by  those   lng,'\nwho are worried about their complex-\nlens or about, skin blemishes.\nThe person who wishes to have a\ngood clear complexion must observe\nthe laws of health. No un-cunt of external applications of number of treatments will overcome the effects of improper food; lack of rest ipid exercise,\n- SUNSHINE.\nThere   Was   No   Other\nAmerica is lacking in clmfortable\ninns, as ilr. Chesterton correctly\npoints out, and it confesses an equal\ndearth of the interesting type of\ninnkeepers.\nA bibulous friend of Alexandre\nDumas, it isi dated In a recent biography of tho great romancex.\nstopped at \"The Sign ef the Two\n.'.lies\" on his wily home late at night\nand, pounding on the door, roused\ntho  proprietor  from  slumber.\n\"I want to see your partner,\" he\nannounced.\n\"My partner?\" exclaimed the astonished 'publican. \"1 am tlie sole\nowner. 1 have no partner.\"\n''No partner!\" cried tho bibulous\none. \"Then what do you mean, you\nscoundrel, by deceiving tlie public?\nYour sign here says that this Is the\nInn of The Two Apes.\"\n9 \u25a0' 9,     9\nSlur  on   Movie   Magnetos\nHoltpid   l'ertwoe,   the   novelists;dra-\ninatlst, ls finding Hollywood pn umii-\nin.i  place.\nT started reading three of my stories  to stars,\"  ho  writes,  \"and  they\nfinish    them   hut\ntermtj      halfway\nTllhi  Better\nan agency\nBetter Business bureau in the United States Is\nami-public iu character that aims to protect tne puol.c uguinst merchants who make l'aise or mis-\nleauing statements In their advertising and against the\npromoters and tellers cf lake stocks i|ud other alleged\nsecurities. 'J his organization, which is a unit only lu the\ncommon purpose end methods-of operations, is composed\nof tne .National Letter Business bureau and local bureaus in bouii forty- ciid c.ties. liac-li local bureau is a\ndistinct entity supported by und owing allegiance to only\nits own community, and it is not a member of or sub-\nsidiiiiy to the i\\atiunal Better Business bureau. The bureaus are financed by merchants, manufacturers and other\nfinancial ' Interests \u25a0 'iheir activities are furthered iin-\nmeisurably b'y the cooperation ot newspapers and\nmonthly publications. The siugan of the magazine of the\nnational organization is. \"To increase public confidence\nin business by promoting lull- play iu advertising and\nsoiling.\"\nM\nA cockatoo's \"lunge\" was worthx$3.r>0 to Mrs. Julia\nChambers of Syracuse, N. Y., Judge B. 13. Parson decided.\nMrs. Chambers, in her suit against the Salinu Jefferson\ncorporation, operators of p theater in th-. It city, alleged\nthat the cnckatf'O lunged at her while s'ho was watching\nit lu the lobby of the theater; that she fell backward;\nthat she suffered a severe head injury and l'ri)Cturo of a\nwrist.\nEfforts to announce the time were many and date bach\nto ancient times. The first alarm clock was a combination of a sun dial, gpn and lens. Tlhe heat of the sun\nthrougli tho lens ignited the powder each drfy when the\nray reached a prearranged point.\n\"We give admiration to one who haB great wealth.\"\nwild Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown. \"It costs nothing,\nand if v.(i.lth returns the compliment in its own terms,\nwe may find tho bargain profitable.\"\nThe difference between p swank neighborhood and a\n\u2022poor one is that in the former the kids act like children\n:md in the hite, ihey act like kids.\nThe Japannese name for the di ly known as the Feast\nof tho Dolls Is Hinnno-Sekku, celebrated on March 8.\nAYOK JULIA B. PLATT, seventy-three, of Ocean\n-Grove, Cal., oldest woman iui,yor in the United\nStates, may ruie that seaside community with scienuiii.\nlogic and she may rule it with a crusading axe. She smil-\n' iiifciy BUinltted recently tnat, though she regards the tush.\nof city government just another scientific problem, she\nhas known the expediency ol d.rect action tJad would\nnot lies.tute again lo employ it. She referred to two occasions,\u2014once when she protested against an attempt to\naggrandize public beacb property for private gain by\nsmashing a bathhouse b.lrner with au axe; Mother time,\nw'uon she urged beaiitihcation ol p scenic spot spot and,\nfailing i0 get quick act.on, led a crew of volunteers With\nspades and wheelbarrows until tho littered spot was\ncleaned uud planted in flowers. Miss I'iutt w.|t m practicing biologist in Germany and iMfiplua helore settling\nsetiiing in Ocean Grove ill years ago. \"Aly training in\nthe laboratory,' sho says, gave me a foudnesB lor problem. I lind tills training very v.,iuublo on ih.s uew joo\nI hope to work out tlieis town's problems as I would any\nproblem arising In tlie laboratory. Sometimes that can i\nthe done; then we'd try something t.;,\" s-.iu laughed,\nSho ran for mayor, she Bald, because politicians were\nthreatening to undermine her favorite reform, tho oltj\nmanager form of government, esttibllsbod four years ago,\nmainly through liu efforts. Shu doesn't mind see.ng nay-\none tuke u iirlnk, hut hates to sue anyone get drunk. Sho\ndoes not object '\" women smoking, though sho tools it\nIs unheal tlit'ul in excess. Sho is u staunch humanitarian\nand her arch bote is the \"eye for an eye\" theory of punishment. She believes tin it many are thus penalized for\nhereditary und epvironmenlal accidents beyond their control. She believes instead in correctional and educational metlhoda, which are, she says, in their infancy. She is\na New lingkliiiier. born in Burlington, \\ l. She was graduated from the liniversity of Vermont in 1SS2.\nHK MEETS on the stereet and asks how you have beer,\nand you tell bim, with duo emphasis on the pain\nthe small of tho back, the'headache cf Wednetd. y and\nthe eyestrain of the day before. sNothing daunted, he in\nquires about your wife, and you describe firlly her state\nof health, her present interests and occupations. Then he\nexprcs es a dosha to know about your children, which\nleads . i tu launch forth upon a discourse relative to\ntheir to Is ilnd udesoids and general physical condition,\ntlir ir la; if np;i;tlte, methods of discipline und punish\nmo.it a. i problems that arise from school and play.\nThanks to ill' continued attention, yuu are reminded o:\nsome of the.. I right sayings which bear repeating. Next\nlie asks nfter y. r business, and you enter at considerabl\nlength upon :| : .\u2022 nmary of your achievements, of yyur\nInline  prospects i.  d  tho discouragement romltiiig from\nIf Adam had been wide awake he would not have lost\nthat rib.\nThi\nhappy.\n\u25a0 nape woman would rather   be   mt(i-rled   than\nANCIENT HISTORY\nLIFE IN GRAND FORKS\nTWENTY   YEARS   AGO\nJI\nthe other simple needs of the body.\nThe skin of the face is the same as\nthat of the body. It is raoer exposed\nand so it becomes more dirty that the\nrest of the body. Hie skin of the face\nshould be kept clean by the use of\nsoap and water, just as the skin of\nthe body is kept clean by tht |t mean's*.\nGrease does not take the place of\nsopa and water.\nEvery part of the body is nourished\nby the food which wo oat. After it has\nbeen digested, it is carried ln the\nblood stream to overy part of the\nbody, Including the skin, so that the\nskin is fed by the food which enters\ntrie stomach. This is the only ww in\nvhieh the skin ctfci be nourished. In\nwinter, some' bland grease may be ap-\npiled to a skin which is very dry ln\nu;-P5r to BHPPll' it with the Tat needed\nto l:eep it soft and pliable. There is\nr.u sneh thing as a sicir. food; the\nSkin cannot be fed by means oi lo-\ncal Uppl.cations. Local explications\nban,- as we iui\\e stated, soften tha\nsVin, but tho skin cannot absorb\n3--.il digest food tor its ow use.\nKeep your skin clean by regtihr\nwashing with a bland soap and water. sCoep your eyin healthy and\n:uur complexion clear by eating a\nwill balanced dlet,_ gottiut sulltcii nt\nsleep, and by taking exercise out of\ndoors in tha tresh .th' and sunillht.\nQuestions conrerrmg health, ad-\nii: ssed lo the Canadian Medical As-\nsoclAtlon, 181 College Street, Toronto,\nwill be answei'el personally by letter.\nFACTS THAT YOU\nMAY NOT KNOW\nIronng Sheer Things\nSheer articles of clothing can\nho stilieiifid without' starching by\nplacing while damp on a well.\nsUu-ched p:liow case or towol. aud\nironing with a hot iron.\nrtoast   Lamb\nHoast lamb should bu basted constantly to give tho best flavor to it.\nlt getts tasteless and dry If this is\nnut done.\nsupposs  that  is  uus.ih'-\nOne of the stories deserves dis\nsemination.\n\"Don't take no notice of them\nguys ln the big o cos,\" some one\nadvised   him.\n\"They will all tailors five years\nback. Why, If you hang your coat up\nfor   ten   minutes   they   start   sewing\nand TRUCKS\n1.129 CHEVROLET'COUPE, \u00a7575.00\nJust the car for a salesman or a traveling man.\nIts famous six-cylinder engine has been tuned\nup to deliver uew car performance. Its body\nprovides big car riding ease. No car on the\nmarket offers such value at this price\n1929 FORD TRUCK with cab on platform aud  6-\nspeed transmission. In A I shape....$450t00\n1926 DOOGK LIGHT DELIVERY TRUCK\nfor quick sale. It has a nice engine \"with lots\nof power, in first class running order. .$125.00\n1927 CHEVROLET COACH\nA snap for\t\n$200.00\nThe Grand Forks Garage\nJ. R. Moo)boer; Proprietor\nTuesday morning at 4:10 o'clock firo broke'out In the\nroar of \\V. If, C. Munly's hardware store, ilnd two hours\nater, whos II lind been got under control, one-half block\n>r business houses and $125,000 worth of property hail\nbeen reduced lo nshos.\nTwolve out ol twenty cundidates passed thc entrance\nexaminations, The successful candidates were: Linda Mc\nIRae, liTorence Murrey, Lillian R. Pell. Bora McLeod\nIi.roid Molnnse, Luverne Walker, Muy A.Syinos, Robert\nNewtauoi', JUraes C, .McCallum, Doris Korman.Mny 13,\nBllpln, Herbert VV. Bower,\nMr. und  .Mrs.\nextended   vis-it\nSprings,\nJohn McKie rotiirnei! on Krliluy fn m tin\nto    the    count  cities and 'Halcyon  lint\nII. A. Sheads tinil VV. E. lladden huve formed a part\nnet-ship to trans act a general Insurance and ret| estate\nbusiness.\nVV. S. Murray end Jack Coryell Will leave tomorrow\nfor Jacijn:', Sonoru. Mexico, where they Intend to purchase land and locate- permi nently.\nMr. anil Mrs. 3. L. Manly and Mrs. A. Campbell left on\nWednesday for a camping trip to the Oroville district.\nScissors\nA oiair of scissors ls a better uten,\null thim a knife when used for cutting meal, chicken or fruit.\nPOEMS FROM THE FAR EAST\ni HINDtJ\nAbsent,  flatterers'   tongues  are  daggers\u2014ipresent,  softer\nthan  the silk;\nShun them, 'tis a jar of poison hidden   under   harmless\nmilk;\nShun theru  when  they  promise little!   Shun  them when\nthey   promise much!\nFor, enkindled, charcoal burnetii\u2014cold, It doth defile the\ntouch.\n\u2014From the Dook of Good Counsels.\nBurnt Stains\nBurnt stains can be removed\nfrom aluminum, and any unsoldered\nvessels of tin, by placing the empty\nvessel over the gas Hume or lire until lt Is red hot.\nRipping Seams\nWhen u razor blado Is used for\nripping the seams of a garment,\nwrap about half of the blade with\nadhesive tape to prevent cutting the\nlingurs or  Iho garment.\nWrinkles\nFor wrinkles apply once or twice\na day a mixture of one ounce ot\nmelted , white wntx, two ounces of\nstrained honey, f|nd two ounces of\njuice  of lily  bulbs.\nstrawberries.\njlihe appearance of a Bftrawiberry\nsometimes indicates its flavor. ' A\ngood strawberry is Arm and free\nfrom decay and a bright red. If a\npart of the berry la green, It ls underripe or poorly developed.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMay Be True\nWalter Damrosch was praising negro  spirituals.\n\"Our negroes are wonderful,\" he\nsaid. \"Their talk Is as good as their\nmusic.\n\"I heard two colored porters quarrelling in a railway station.\n\" 'Ah knows wot Ah's talkin'\nabout\/ BEiid the first porter. 'Does yo'\nfink Ah ain't got no brains'.''\n\" 'lirains,  huh '    said  the    second\nporter.  'Niggah,  if  brains  was dynamite yo' couldn't blow off yore cap.'\"\n...\nNatural   Art\nThe Victorian grandparent disapprovingly gazed un his young granddaughter.\n\"Art, my dear,\" he observed sen-\nteutlously, and pointing an accusing\nAnger at her lipstick, \"art csmno:\nImprove on nature.'\n\"Oh, rot,    old    bean,\"    she    cried\ncheerily. \"Think how perfectly comic    you'd    look    without your false\nteeth.\"\n~ *   \u2666 *\nSufficient   Reason\n\"Why do you object lo having\nyour remarks printed lu the .Con-\ngresolonal Record?\"\ni\"i'm afraid,\" answered Senator\nSorghum, \"that I might be suspected of trying ti mjike the gond old\nRecord serve the purpose^ of the professional  colyumlst.\"  \u2014  Washington\nStar.\n* *   \u2666\nKeeping the  Home  Cheerful\n\"'Who won the g:|me?\" psked the\nwoman.\n\"We did. Are you baseball euthu-\nsiastr\n\"Not exactly. But 1 make It a rule\nto find out about the game so as to\nknow whether tl mention it to my\nhusband when he comes home.\"\n# *   *\n\"There always 1h some other fellow wirse off than you aro,\" said tho\nJob'B comforter.\n\"Ves,' admitted the Job. \"I am\nluck I don't have to exist on the income I get from n midget golf course\nright   now,   the    way some of them\ndo.\"\n\u2022 *   *\nThe  Futility of It\n\"Ground hogs,\" he read, \"were on\nearth 30,000 years ago.' Imagine being   just   one ground hog after another for 30,000 years.\n...\nHard Boiled\nI'erkins\u2014!He ls the inosll unscrupulous man I ever knew.\nDorklns\u2014Say, after pulling off tlio\nstuff ho does during the day he must\nraivn to chloroform his conscience\nto ho nblo to get to sleep.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nCame  In  Handy\n\"Did Donald take it very much  to\nheart because Marion g#ivo buck his\nring?\"\n.\"No;   he took it to a  pawnshop.\"\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nWhy Is It\nMy radio works perfectly\nWhen we are at thome alone,\nBut If a  skeptic,  happens  in\nThe' wave lengths moan and groan\nii  CITY REAL ESTATE FOR sSALE\nApplications for Immediate purchase of Lots and\nAcreage owned by tbe City, within the Municlnality, are\nInvited.\nPrices:\u2014From 125.00 jier lot upwards.\nTerms:\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and (trices may be seen at the City Offlce.\nJOHN A. HItTTONj,\nCity Clerk.\nI\ne~-\nTHE CONSOLIOATEO MINING & SMELTING\n1C0MPANY OF CANAOA, LIMITED\nTll.lIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of . . ... .\nAmmonium Phosphate\nELEPHANT    Sulphateof Ammonia\n, \"K^\u00bb Triple Superphosphate\nChemical Fertilizers\nB. C. AGENTS BURNS & CO.   LTD.\nProducers & Ketiuers of\nTADANAC\nJ UitlNJ>\nElectrolytic\ntin\nLead-Zino\nCadmium-Bismuth\nV=\n=J\nOne Little Goose\nHp\u2014You certainly are a little\ngoose.\nShe\u2014Well,.,I'll admit I've led you\na wild-goose chase, all right.\nVision  Unnecessary\n\"What    are   your   views on kiss\ning\nThe  Needle    -.\nWhen  it is difflhut    t0 thread\nneedle,   push  the   needle   through   s j eyes.\"\nSheet of white paper, about a quarter inch from the edge, until the eye\nonly is visiule. '\nI haven't any\u2014i always shut my\n'  Even a \"red-blooded he-man recog\nnizes thejt he can acquire polish.\nTouching a Tender  Heart\nVlctimBut  my watch  Isn't a good\none.   it's  value   Is   tnly   sentimental,\nfootpad\u2014That      doesn't      matter.\nguvnor\u2014I'm  sentimental. . ,,\nWhat the Rural Weekly\nPress of B. C. Can\nOtfer\nTillfciltii are fifty - five regular weekly newspapers In Bril-\nIsh Columbia. They are published in a widely-scattered\nfield in communities with populations of from 800 to 400 te\none of 10,000. Sixteen are published In communities of less\nthan 1000 population; fifteen In communities of 1000 to 2000\npopulation; seven in communities of 4000 to 5000; four in\ncommunities over 5000 to 10,000. These weeklies appeal to\n145,000 of British Columbia's population. Tbe news in these\nnewspapers Is mostly all local, because that Is what Interests thc readers, and the advertisements for the most part\ntell what local merchants are doing. Tbe country editor\nknows the people he serves; they are farmers, lumbermen, miners, fishermen, prospectors, laborers, all. It Is estimated that the average farm family spends $2000 every\nyear for things which are not necessary to raise crops. The\ntotal sum that is spent by farmers In the United Slates for\nthose things with which to live well ts the appallng sum of\nthirteen billion dollars. Seventy-two per cent, of ell automobiles sold go to people living tn towns and comunlties of\n... less than 5000 population. Using the same proportionate\nfigures to estimate the buying power of the rural population of British Columbia served by the weekly newspapers\nof the province, and wc have something like 70,000 automobiles purchased by residents of the province in towns end\ncommunities of less than 5000 population, and 26,000,000\nspent every year by these rural families for things which\nare not necessary to raise cops. If one Is Inclined to think\n.that only a few people, and an Insignificant few at that,\nlive In country communities served by the weekly newspapers let him study these figures or consult the last census statistics.\nCloser Cooperation  Between Rural and\nIndustrial British Columbia\n <J\nThe Grand Forks Sun\nPlane Crashes\nAt Vacouver\nCelebration\nVANCOUVER\u2014His controls Jamming less than 300 feet up. Pilot Officer W. E. Bennett, R.C.A.F., stationed nt Jericho Beach, dived into\nthe ground at Sea Island airport\nduring Thursday's program\u2014and\nlived to tell the tale.\nThousands of people In the staid\nwere stunned with the suddenness\nof the disaster, which occurred ln\nthe middle of the carefree exhibition\nof bombing staged by three R.C.A.F.\nplanes from the Jericho Beach sta\ntlon.\nSeaplanes of all ships were dlv.ng\n\u25a0nd zooming in the center of the\nHeld, opposite the grandstand, drop\nping sandbags, at a frame \"Arab\ntort,\" when Bennett, circling low\nsuddenly took 11 spin earthward. As\nthe crowd screamed Its horror, his\nplane hit the ground and Instantly\ncrumpled.\nThousands of c>es were averted\nas emergency crews rushed to the\ncenter of the field, but Bennett, coolest of all {among the throng, climbed\nout of the wreck and sped away in\na roadster. A moment later he was\nreassuring tbe crowd over the radio.\n\"My controls jammed on me,\" he\ntold the newspapermen as he ulet-\nly smoked a cigarette tn the administration   tjuilding.\nkept the* men moving out of there\n<-)nd n0 payments were made from\nthat city.\nAt Kelowna representatives of the\ngovernment were Issuing tickets\nsimilar to the ones used here. Hr.\nMcGusty advised them of the action\ntaken here. It Is not known If payments are stilt being made there.\nMARKETS   BUREAU   WILL\nPROBABLY   BE  LOCATED\nIN   BERNON,  8AY8   REPORT\nVHRNON.\u2014Although there has\nBeen no official announcement that\nthe new markets branch for the\nOkanagiln fruit and vegetable shipment wsill be located In Vernon, it\nIs believed that such Is the dec'sion.\nAn advertisement in the Jul;p Issue\nof Cpuntry Life, now off the press,\nsets forth that \"a seasonal bureau\nthentlc data regarding fruit and\nvegetable stiles In tbe Okanagan valley has been established. Addretis\nCDssununicatioss to Bureau of Markets (Information, [Department of\nAgriculture, Vernon, B, C.\"\nOeorge Ileggie, member tor North\nOkanagan, has not been advised officially of any action, lie states, however, that W. W. Dunc.(n, markets\ncommissioner, and J. A. Grant ot\nthat branch are leaving Victoria\nsoon for tbe Okanagan and they will\nopen the office. There will be no\nhigh salaried officials and no appointment has been mi fie, although\nthere are rumors that several gentlemen would capably fill the post.\nIt ls expected that the offlce will be\nestablished in the court house, Vernon.\nYAQUI   INDIANS  IN  THE\nUNITED  STATES WOULD\nLIKE    (O   RETURN    HOME\nPHOENIX, ABIZ.\u2014Arizona may\nlose one of Its most colorful Indian\nceihmonlett If e-iles of the Yaqui\nIndian tribe of southern Sonora.\nMexico, succeed in winning amnesty\nfrom the Mexican government tor\nrevolution! try activities.\nLikewise the United States muy\nlose the only Indian tribe whose\nmembers ln that country are officially classed as aliens.\nThe Yaquls of Arizona are homo-\nsick, poverty-striken and tired of\nfighting for a livelihood in a highly\ncompetitive tabor market. 1|iey witit\nto go beck to their native lend,\nAll agree that returning home wou'd\naid the Yaquls, but, ln one respect at\nleast, Arizona will be the loser. It\nwill mean that no more shall the ku'l\nroarer's challenge roll out over the\ndesert, calling Yiftul tribesmen together for a passion play In observance ot Holy week and Easter.\nThe Easter ceremony, during which\nthe closing phase of the life ot Jesus\nls pantomimed in detail, attracts thousands of tourists eachi year at the two\nYaqui villi |ges\u2014one near 'Tucstro and\nthe other near Phoenix.\nAbout 1500 Ynqul Indians are in\nArizona.\nRepresentative Lewis W. Douglas,\nDemocrat, Arizona, has taken up the\nYaqui fight. He will ask the United\nStates and Mexican state depi f-tments\nto cooperate ln gaining amnesty for\nthe Indians, which would permit them\nto return home.\nYaquls ln this state, although hundreds ot miles from the main tribe,\nmaintain contact with tho Sonora\nchiefs by runners who cross the desert on foot. Thus the Arizona unit pf\nthe tribe, despte its isolation, hi? rej\nmalned Yaqui in spirit and tradition.\nWATER  DIVNING\nFarmers and others who arc in need\nof water fod domestic purpose', etc.,\nare requested to notify the district\nagriculturist at    Grand    F;v'<s.    Ar-\nG. Stewart of the Dominion department of agriculture to attempt to locate underground streams of water\nwhen In this district. Mr. Stewart has\nbeen quite successful ln this work in\ntht paht t,nd has kindly offered  his\nrangements have been made with T.' services free to the farmer\nBoiled Puddings\nTo overcome the difficulty of making a boiled puddisg perfectly round,\nenclose the bag containing the pudding in one of the globular wire lettuce drainers while cooking.\nTvery man has oongatlons which\nbelong to his station.\u2014Whewell\nGENERAL NEWS\nThe am at Toledo. Ohio, has son-red a mammoth sturgeon captured in I ,akc St. Clair, Canada. The\nfish weighted 239 pounds and was\nsold to Tolodo for $100.\nFeeding bees on sugar end milk\nat the Government Experimental\nFarm at Agaastz, B.C., has resulted\nin an average of 23 pounds more\nhoney than on ordinary diet This\nmay mean a further Impetus to\nCanadian honey production.\nUUVbHNMENT     AGENT   REFUSES\n)U   UIHfc      TRANSIENTS      RELIEF i\nVERNON,\u2014Use  of   tikets  entitling\ntransients to 40c worth ot food or\nmeals,   as   pawns ln a crap game, I\nwas tbe deciding factor which result- j\ned   in a   refusal by R. M. McGusty,'\ngovernment agent,  Vernon,  to Issue'\nany more relief. Transients were Informed  Saturday   when  the   tickets\n, were  Issued for that day and  Sunday,   that   there would be no more.\nThey sent a delegation to Interview\nMr. McGusty,  but his decision was\nunchanged as a result ot the representations  made.  There  was  no denial    that    the    system    has    been\nabused.\nOn Saturday 98 new men registered tor relief. Of these, a majority\nhad but a few days ago left the prairies. Most of them were young and\nmany obviously should have been at\nhome with their parents.\nRelief payments were Issued beginning July 7. At first there were\nless than 45. A steady Increase was\nnoted noted and among the newcomers was a hoy ot 14. On Saturday tickets were Issued to 289 applicants, 678 tickets for that day and\nSunday.\nThe statement has been frequently made by these men that they qan\nget all the food they want; what\nihey need is money. Merchants were\neon\/stently bothered by men who\nwanted to trade In the order for pob-\nsibly half Its face value ln cash.\nOn Saturday evening the city was\nfilled with these transients, some of\nwhom mode themselves objectionable about the streets and at Kala-\nmalka  Lake  beach.\nCity   police   at.  Armstrong   have\nCapital amounting to $100,000,000\nis Invested in the development ot\n13,000,000 horse power electrical\nenergy In the province of Quebec.\nThroughout Canada electric power\ndevelopment investments total 81,-\n400,000,000.\nBast and west of Sues as also In\nLondon, Berlin, Paifc and other\nfamous centres, canned and frozen\nsalmon from British Columbia was\nsuccessfully marketed last year.\nMost of the shipments went from\nVictoria.\nMonday, August 10, has been officially set aa the opening date of the\nfourth \"Buyers' Week\" to be held\nIn Montreal. The first Buyers'\nWeek brought 251 buyers from all\nover the continent to Montreal; the\nthird brought 1,100 buyers. Indicating the growing success ef the\nplan.\nIndividual' holders of . Canadian\nPacific Railway common stock numbered 21,186 on September 2, 1880,\nend by the 1st June, 1981, 'there\nwere 34,872 holders, an increase of\n13.886. This shows the growing\npopularity of this stock since Its\nsplit Into four new snares for one\not the old stock.\nACHES\nThere's scarcely, an ache or pain\nthat Aspirin will-not relieve promptly.\nIt can't remove, the cause, but it will\nrelieve the pain I Headaches. Backaches. Neuritis and neuralgia. Yes,\nand even rheumatism. Read proven\ndirections for many important uses.\nGenuine Aspirin can't depress the\nheart. Look for the Bayer cross:\nUnity of all peoples who live on\nthe shores of the Pacific was the\nobject behind the repent visit to\nBritish Columbia and Alaska of the\nPortland, Ore., Chamber of Commerce who took a seven-day cruise\non board Canadian Pacific steamer\nPrincess Charlotte In northern\nwaters.\n. Completing a coast-to-coast holiday trip, Viscount Duncannon, son\nof Canada's Governor-General, the\nIHarl ot Bessborough, and his\ncousin, the Hon. Arthur Ponsonby,\narrived in Vancouver over Canadian\nPacific Lines from the east recently.\nThey went on to a six-day trip of\nBritish Columbia waters aboard 8.8.\nPrincess Maqulana.\nLadles evidently\u25a0 also prefer\nblondes, judging by tha decision of\nthe Alpha Delta PI sorority who\nelected Miss Margaret Jensen,\nblonde beauty of Hunter College,\nNew York, as the sisterhood's most\nbeautiful bathing girl at the convention ri\u00abently held at the Chateau Lake Louise, in the heart of\nthe Canadian Rockies.\nEffective July 1, the Toronto Terminals division of the. Canadian\nPacific Railway was merged with\nthe Bruce division of the company,\nthe combined divisions being known\nas the Bruce division. R. W. Scott'\nwas appointed superintendent with\nheadquarters at Toronto.\nVisiting the Canadian Rookies\nfor the second time In forty yean.\nColonel R. Stanley, of Alverstok,\nEngland, said he was astounded at\ntlie progress and development attained In that comparatively short\nperiod. He was a guest at the\nBanff Springs Hotel, which was not\neven thought ot when he was here\ni-r, ,\u201e  i |UMt   0(  Ufri MooBt\nStephen. .\nNew Lakeside Inn is Opened\n'mi,\nJY_\n\u00bb4ssp^S\u00bb^l-\nBeautifully set In one of tho\nmost picturesque sections of\nNova Scotia, combining murine\nand landscape vistas which bid\nfair to bring lt fast into line of\ngopularlty with its sisters at\nHgby and Kentville, tlie new\nLakeside Inn, nt Yarmouth, N.S.,\nwas formally openod on June 1(1,\nas the newest link in the Canadian\nPacific Railway's, great chain of\nhostelries from Atlantic to Pacific.\nReadily accessible from Saint\nJohn,   through   Dlgby,   via   tho\nluxurious .. steamer \"Princess\nIlelene\"; from Halifax, over the\nDominion Atlantic Railway; and\ndirect from New York, Boston and\nPortland by Eastern Steamship\nLines, the town of Yarmouth\nund its new hotel aro destined to\nplay an important role ln tourist\ntraffic to Nova Scotia, with its\nfamed AnnapollB Valley and historic Land of Evangeline. Sport\nand recreations arc plentiful and\nvailed. Canoeing, tennis, fishing,\nswimming   and   innumerable at\ntractive excursions are only a few\nof the offerings. There ls good\ngolf available near Yarmouth and\nthe hotel and Its cottages form a\ncomfortable base of operations.\nTaste and comfort have been skilfully combined In Its spacious\npublic rooms, broad verandahs\nand airy bedrooms. Its cuisine\nand service are conducted on thc\nestablished standards, known tn\nguests of tho company throughout\nCanada.\nFirst Photos Alaska-Montreal Telephone Link\nThe first telephonic conversation between Alaska and outside commercial lines took place a few days ago,\nwhen G. H. McLean transmission Engineer of the British Columbia Telephone Co. and H. A. Robinson\nRadio Engineer of the Northern Electric Co. Ltd., on board the Yacht \"Belmont\" in the harbour at Ketchikan, Alaska 900 miles north of Vancouver, B.C., put in a long distance call through Vancouver to Montreal\nand in a few minutes v.-crc carrying on a two way conversation with Major James Hamilton, Vice President\nPictures show, top left:\u2014H. A. Robinson and C. H. McLean with others in the operating room of the\n\"Belmont\". Right, Thu \"Belmont\" in Ketchikan Harbour. Lower left, P. F. Sise, President Northern\nElectric Co. looks on while Major James Hamilton, Vice President and general manager B.C. Telephone\nCo. talks to the Belmont. Right aeroplane view of KetchikanHarbour. Inset, C. H. McLean, transmission\nEngineer B.C. Telephones.\nTo Bring Bermuda Next Door\nAlready the winter playground of many Canadians, Bermuda will be 'brought even closer to\nCanada by the inauguration, January 31st, of a\nweekly sailing from New York by the Canadian\nPacifie liner Duchess of York.\nThe island\u2014or, to be correct \u2014 the 365 coral\nislands that form Bermuda In addition to being the\nclosest summer-weather resort to Canada is famous for lilies, golf and bathing.\nCanadian professionals from Toronto and Hara-\n, are familiar faces on two ot the many flue\ncourses of which Bermuda boasts, and excellent\nbathing both on beaches and In open-air sea-water\npools ts a feature.\nPictured above are:    (1) Captain R. N. Stuart,\nV.C., D.S.O., commander of the Duchess of York.\n(2) Coral rock formation on the coast showing the\nDuchess of Bedford en route to the West Indies.\n(3) The open-air swimming pool, which ls a feature of the Hotel Hamilton, Bermuda's largest hotel.\n(4) One of the many caves.\nTHIS AND THAT\nSomebody   Is   always   pointing   out\nviolations  of the  constitution.\nIn   Campaign   Time\n\"Senator,\"   gushed   the   hostess   to\na   prominent   politician,   \"I've   heard\na great deal  about you.\"\n\"Possibly,\"   he     answered,   ilisent-\nly,  \"but you  can't prove lt.'\nwining   to   Compromise\n'Mrs.     Deddbeet\u2014Call       tomorrow,\nPlease.\nBill     Collector\u2014Thsfs     what   Toil\nsaid  yesterday.\nMrs. Deddbeet\u2014Well, make it day\nafter  tomorrow,   then-\nTrue   repentance   also   involves  reform.\u2014 Hosea  Btfllou.\nWe    take    less pains  to be happy\nthan to appear so.\u2014Rochefaucauld.\nTHE TAKU GLACIER\nThis ice field, one of the larpost in the world, is one of the many\nwonders which are to be seen on tlio route of thc Canadian National\nSteamships between Vancouver anil Skagway, Alaska. All of the three\nboats in this service, the Prince Oeorge, Prime Rupert, and the new\nPrince Henry, pass within a stone's throw of this glacier, the height\nof^vhich can be judged by the fishing smack in the foreground. The\nglacier is 90 miles long and only E'lolft one-quarter of its width is shown\nin the photograph.\nPower if, The Rural\nWeekly Press\nListen to what John H. Perry, President ot\nthe c American Press -^Association, has to\nsay on the influence of the  country   weekly:\n\"The force that controls ibis country of ours, in the long\nrun, is the rural editor, in his capacity as spokesman far\nhundreds of thousands who live and earn their living on\nthe farms and In the villages and towns.\n\"It Is not necessary to take the writer's word for It Ask\nany politician whom yon know. He will tell you the truth.\nAsk any representative of thc interests\u2014big city bankers,\nfor Instance, or presidents of great railroad or industrial\ncorporation. i\n\"The politician. If he is above peanut size, will tell you\nthat he worries little about what thc city papers say; but\nlet even half a dozen country weeklies in his home state\nor district open on him, and he pulls down the lid of his\ndesk at the state capital and takes the next train !\u2022 isie ta\nsee what it Is he has done to make thc farmer sore.\n\"The Big Businessman^ if he is big enough lo be entitled to the designation, will tell you that his business\nis gold or bad depending on how the country people like\nthe way It is run. and that what those country people are\nthinking he finds out by read ng or having others read for\nhim, what thc country papers are saying.\"\nWe Home-Town Newspaper is always\nready to Cooperate in giving Service\nIT'3 LIKE BEING\nHOMT  AC\/MM\nHear Familiar Voices\u2014Lot Other:,\nYours.\nSome o' thc itrnoephsri of home\nreaches out to yo'i over Iho long-dis-\nfanci- telephone. One man who call-\nad hoi.it the other day troni a thou-\ncand miles away thrilled to the\ncound of the family clock in trie liv-\n,ng   room   striking   thc   hour\nLi6te-i to the voices of friends and\nrelatives over Ihe long-distance tele\nphone and you feel that you are\nhome again. Those at home feel that\nare with  them.\nA voice over the long-distance\ntelephone lo as clear and unmistake-\nable over a continent's distance as\na half a block away. All-Canadian\nlines now carry your voice direct to\npo nts in British Columbia, Alberta\nbasKatcnewan, Manitoba. .Ask the\nlong-distance rate clerk for rates\nand   information.\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO\nI\n THE GRAND FORKS SUN\nTHE CITY\nG. li. Ross, Ottawa, pilot and bust\nnejii manager of tbe CanadU|a Air Pageant, and Bernard Martin, Montreal,\npilot, arrsved at the local airport on\nTuesday in two planes from the Vancouver celebration. After refueling,\nthey lets lor Lethtridge. After leaving here the ; jrmen lost their way in\nthe forest fire smoke, and much ap-\ntrc-hta, -,uu tor their safety was felt\nall al. ng the line of flight. However,\nafter being five hours late, Mr. Ross\nlanded safely at Lethbridge, while\n-Mr. Martin descended at Calgary. In\npick.iig their wap through the smoke,\nthe two planes bad become separated.\nF. E. W. Smith of Victoria, who has\nbeeu leiieving R. Campbell at the\ngovernment liquor store for tbe past\nthree weeks, w.ll leave today or tomorrow for Oliver to relieve the government at tbat point.\nPublic\nWarning\nGENERAL NEWS\nTALI: HOTEL\n\\V. W. Emslej, wbo has been re\nieving Mantser Sullivan of the Canadian Bank of Commerce for tbe past\nIhrei; weeks, returned to Trail on\nMonday.\nOwing to the extremely heavy\nconsumption .of water, it has become necessary to strictly enforce\nthe sprinkling regulations. For\nthis purpose tbe fire siren will be\nblown at 9 p.m. as a warning to\nturn off all sprinklers. Anpone using water after 9 o'clock in the\nmorning or 9 o'clock in the evening will be 1 iasbie to   prosecution.\nBy Order of the City Council,\nJOHN A. HUTTON, Clerk.\nM. and Mrs. R. Campbell and familp\nreturned ou Wednesday evening from\na three weeks' motor car vacation\ntrip l\u201e i.unfl, Ualgigy and intermediate points. They say that Banff la simply wonderful.\nA small blaze in a Doukhobor house\nin the Ruckle addition yesterday forenoon called out the flre department.\nThe flames were extinguished before\nmuch damage w\u00abg done.\nAll the airplanes of the Transcanada Air Armada returned to the local\ntlirport on Sunday and Monday morning from the Vancouver celebration.\nAlter refueling here, they left\nearlip Monday morning on their next\nlap tor eastern Canada.\nM. L. Brothers of Trail was a visitor   in this city as at Christina Lake\nou  Sunday.\nOillclal word has been rtceived\nfrom Ottawa ih,\u00abt two-cent pastage\nstumps can Le used on cheques as\nwell aa revenue stamps. Cheques of\n\u25a0;.., and uuder are exempt from the\nstamp clause of the Bennett budget,\naccording to an amendmend announced in the house of commons.\nA. 10. McDougi |.l has built a bungalow for Barry Logan of Trail at\nChristina  Lake  tins summer.\nJ. C. Tonks and two sons, Oeorge\nand David, and Chester Hutton ere\nenjoying a fishing outing in the North\n.Forth country.\nA small crew of men was put to\nwoik on the Pathfinder mine on the\n-North Fork tthis week.\nROAD CAMPS\nMrs. A. S. MoKim ot Salmon Arm\nls visiting in this city at the borne of\nher brother, F. J. Miller.\nAid. F. J. Miller is recuperating at\nChr.si.lna Lake from his recent Illness.\nNorman Cook returned to Trail\nlast evening, after spending a month\nwall his parents iu this city.\nFrank Scott ciftne over from Trail\non Wednesday to attend the funeral\nof the late Mrs. Hartinger.\nCaptain William Krakes has gone\nto Vancouver, where he will spend a\nmonth's vacation.\nOver half a dozen bungalows tpid\none substantial residence have been\nerected at Christina Lake this sum-\nmer' , .   jj|.\nLINDBERGHS  TO  FLY\nIN NORTHERN CANADA\nEDMONTON, July 31\u2014The most\ndangerous hop on the Lindbergh\nflight across the fur north ls tin It be\ntween Baker lake and Aklaviv, ln the\nopinion ol Captain \"Pat\" Reid, noted\nCanadian flint und tour leader of the\nTransi-iiiiuditt Air I'iIsoaut.\nPilot Held has flown over much of\nthc country thut the Llndbergs will\ntravel on their route across the north\nI lo wus tho first iiiiiiiiin to fly\nthrough the northwest pussuge from\nHudson llu> to the Arctic const and\nalso iih.s u|icrt|ted along the Labrador\ncoast.\nThe Lindberghs have tho advantage of Ideal Nylin, weather ut this\ntime, in the opinion of Captain Hold.\n'i'hero are practltallip 24 hours ol\ndaylight In the north at the present,\nwhile other climatic conditions tare\nfavorable for such flight.\nA young man with his socks sag-\nfiiiK toward his shoe tops may be in\nthe vogue, but an old man appearing\nthus is only slovenly.\nGetting along with a fussy man can\nmi fke you as tired as a hard day's\nwork.\nWh     ver one's day dreams, it re-\nuires      ich  exertion  to bring even\nthe snri'lc t to realization.\nVlC'llORIA, July 30.\u2014'Instructions\nwere Issued by the British Columbia\ngovernment yesterday for tbe preparation of u.eveu high camps in widely\nseparated parts of the province, and\nan important decision reached as to\nsubsistence allowances that will be\nl>t siii to those used in preparing these\nsites, which will later be used as permanent wjry camps on the highway\nconstruction program of the government.\nThe camps will ibe located at suitable places on e.ght of tlhe main highways of the province, as follows:\nNear Hope, on the Hope-Princeton\nhighwajp, in addition to one near\nPrinceton thready started; at Blue\nRiver, on the North Thompson highway; two canips at Cloyah Bay,\nPrince Rupert route; near Crow's\nNest, on the Crow's Nest route; on\nthe Fort Oeorgo-Yellowhead route,\ntwo camps, one on the Kuskanook,\nGrey creek route; and one on the\nNelsou-i.'ulfour route. Other camps\nwill be started as required.\nFive and Half Days a Week\nAt the same time the government,\nthrough the unemployment committee\nof the cabinet, fixed on a definite plan\nof working hour.i and allowances, to\napply to t hepreparatlon of the highway construction camps. Under this\n.arrangement, which is provisional,-\nthe men will work an eight-hour duy,\nlive and a half days a week. Men vith\ndependents will receive 35 cents per\nhour. A charge of Si per day will be\nmade fer food and board, etc.\nUnder these arrangements men\nwithout dependents would receive 12\nper working day, or $1 -net and their\nlood and shelter, while men with dependents would receive $2.80 per\nworking day, or $1.80 net. The remun-\nenat.ou is regt|rded as a subsistence\nallowance, and nut a wage. The government made lt plain that this was\nthe limit to which it was prepared to\ngo ln the cost of preparing the camps\nlater to be used on the highway con\nstruuetion  program.\nMembers of tbe committee made It\ncleiir tiimt the allowances fixed l'or\nthe piepurution of the cuiujis were to\nhe considered provisional, to secure\nuu immediate stait on making ready\ntlie camps at Which transients and\nother unemployed would would later\nhave opportunity of more definite\nemployment.\nshe whole plan is still subject to\nwhatever utts!sti|nce British Columbia\nmay obtain from Ottawa, which will\nnot be known until after parliament\nhas ucted finally in the matter. Meanwhile tbe clearing of camp sites Is to\nproceed on this provisional Llasis.\nAt the silme time the government\nsent out notices to evenp district urg-\n,ng immediate registration of all\nthose in need, through government\nolllcials i,u the unorganized territories\nuud through municipal olllcials in centers where civic authorities are co-\noperating in the matter. Alter a date\nshortly to be announced, no form ot\nrelet, direct or Indirect, will he contributed by tlie provincial government except to those in possession ot\ncertificates of registration. The proh-\n.i.:ii oi' tr. lusloiit.i ii cities iu to bu attacked first.\nTho unemployment CsbmnUttue ol\ntho ouhiuet has already notified thc\nuiipor.ntotidents of oiupLymoiit old-\nces, district olllclulH of the public\nworks department, government\nugents and siiIhik.nun anil |wsts ol\nthe British Columbia police, as well\nus laying full details of the registru\nton plan before ;4   < il p councils.\nRegistration waa proceed tag actively at many centers, It was reported.\nThe government reiterated its In\ntention of stopping the 40 cents a day\ncrtdit plan as soon ar. suitable worl\nwasf available for tr, >islemt?. After\nregistration ,s cumpleted thero will\nte little room for any newcomers\nCrom prairie points, as British Columbia work plans will be designed to\ncover its own needs. \u2022\n\"What could we farmers hope to\naccomplish without our railways:\"\nasked a Kentucky agriculturist\nrecently. He added that no agency\nhad contributed more to the\nprosperity of the farmer than the\nrailways.\n\"I have never yet found any\nplace- where the* salmon fishing\ncould comj are with New Ppjii-\nswick,\" said Arthur Train, well\nknown novelist, speaking at a < amp\ndinner given in his honor recently\nby the New Brunswick Tourist\nTravel Bureau.\nEncouragement rarre to western\nCanada's farmers and agriculturists with the return to normal\ntemperatures and varying rainfall\nof mid-July, in the drought areas\nof Manitoba and Saskatchewan\nand to a l\u00ab?ss extent in Alberta very\ngreat benefit has been felt.\nChicken^Dinner Every Sunday\n5.30 to 8.30   \u00bb   -    .....\n60c\nJsX\\Jv\/IVlo All rooms are newly decorated, new carpets, the best\nbeds, hot and cold water day and night. Bates\u2014tl a night single, $LM\ndouble. Big reduction In- weekly rates Come and see and you will stay.\nAuthentic rainbow trout weighing 7 Vi lbs. were taken recently\nin the French River six miies\nbelow the bungalow camp, the\nfirst ever caught there according\nto the oldest guide. It was caught\nby E. A. Farirtosh, of New York,\na yearly guest at the camp.\nSince the split up of Canadian\nPacific Railway common stock into\n' lour lor one this issue has taken on\ngreat popularity with the general\nrun of investors Between September and June 1981, the number oi\nthese increased from 21,186 to\n34,872, an increase ot 13,686.\nOver 250 members from Rameses\nTemple, Toronto, went to Cleveland recently by Canadian Pacific\nspecial to attend the annual conclave and imperial council of the\nAncient Arabic Order of Nobles of\nthe Mystic Shrine. This conclave\nwas held last year in Toronto.\nA great influx of tourists is\ncoming into the Maritime Provinces this year, the chain of the\nCanadian Pacific hotels at Yarmouth, Digby and Kentville proving strong influences in promoting\nthe traffic. The ten-day all-\nexpense Canadian Pacific tour to\nthe Toronto Exhibition next month\nis also drawing much attention in\nthe Maritimes.\nBURNS'  GARAGE\nSecond Street, Grand Forks, B. C.\ni '\nDEALERS LN THE\nNEW ESSEX CHALLENGER\nTHE BEST CAR (L\\ THE MARKET FOR THB MONBT\nRare bargains in Used Cars in good condition can always be\nhad at my Garage. H\nCITY GROCERY\nFor Staple and Fancy Groceries.\nPrices Right\nTry out Bulk Teas and Coffees.\nPhone 25\n\"Service and Quality'\nEfficient Repair Work\nUnion and Imperial Gas\nM. H. bURNS, Prop.\nGrain exports from the port of\nVancouver this year will probably\nexceed 76 million bushels. Up to\nJune 4th wheat shipments amounted to 65,331,501 bushels. Accommodation for deep sea vessels has\nincreased from 12 piers in 1920 to\n24 piers at tbe present time and\nelevator capacity has increased\nfrom 1,240,000 bushels to 16,205,-\n000 bushels.\nAn Indian Schoolboy's band of\nwhich the leader was also a schoolboy and in which the instruments\nwere mouth organs, gazoos and\nother noise-makers was one of the\nfeatures of Indian Park at Banff\nwhich opened July 21. This was\ncounterbalanced by a septuagenarian Chief's Choir of 18 chiefs\nand ex-chiefs who rendered airs\ntaught by the first western missionaries back In the 1860 s long\nbefore tbe Canadian Pacific Rail-,\nway penetrated the mountains.\nSix First Aid championships and\nfive second places fell to Canadian\nPacific Railway teams across Canada according to the recent annual\nreport of the St. John Ambulance\nAssociation. Of these, three firsts\nand one second were captured by\nthe Railway's Montreal Police\nTeam. The second was in the\ncoveted Montizambert Trophy,\nrepresenting the championship of\nCanada for all comers in which\nthey were only five points behind\nthe winners, Royal Canadian Army\nMedical Corps of Kingston, Ont.\nDID YOU EVER\nj     STOP JO^ THINK\nI That advertising through the printed page has the necessary attractiveness and eBiclenop of performauce\nthat brings proiitablo results.\nHistory has shown tbat continuous\nadvertisers have found success, while\nnon-advertisers have always been\ntagging behind.\nLack of advertising is killing mi.ny\n: a business that should show increasing business instead of decreasing\nbusiness.\nPeple have been educated to the\nfact tbat well advertised products u.o\nthe quality kind and thep won't buy\nany other.\nContinuous advertising ot quality\ncreates a buying demand which assures the advertiser quicker turnover.\nAnp business in this day and time\ncannot stand still. Progress aud competition demand that it move ahead\nor go out of business.\nContinuous advertising of. quality\nand service builds and keeps the confidence of the public. Without the confidence of the public, no business can\nmove ahead.\nContinuous advertising is the modern way of building better business.\nIt proves to the public tbat the advertisers are proud of what they have\nfor sale.\nAnything wodth selling is worth\nadvertising.\nAdvertising Is the most egective\nselling help that can be found, because continuous advertising paves\ntho wap to bigger miss.\nEvery business ha\u00bblng something io\nsell should advertise continuously so\nthe public may know who they ar.',\nwhere thep are, and what they have\nfor sale.\nHOLY   TRINITY   CHURCH\nREV. W. J. SILVERWOOD\nRector\nPhone\nm\nHoly Communion, 1st Sunday ln\neac month aU ' a\nHoly Communiou,   2nd Sunday ln\neach month at _....' '....11 i\nMorning Prayer and Sermon, 1st,\n3rd, 4th and 5th Sundaps at.,11 a. m\nEvening   Prayer     and    Sermon\nat  '.... ' ' ' 7:30 pjn.\nSunday School at 2:30 pjn. during\nwinter months.\nChoir Practice (under Mr. Grlsdato)\nary 4th, at 7:00 p.m.\n\u2014Commencing     Wednesday,   Febru-\n-Holy Trinity Church Elocution!\nClass\u2014This cktss will be held every\nWednesday evening at 8 o'clock \/immediately after choir practice.\nWolf Cubs meet every Saturday in\nthe Parish Hall at 2:30 pjn.\nLaws are like cobwebs, which may\ncatch smc|l flies, but let, wasps and\nhornets break through.\u2014Swift.\nIndependent Male\nBlack\u2014Does your wife kick about\nashes on the rugs?\"\nt   White\u2014No;  I don't   give   her   a\nchance. I d0 all my smoking on the\nback  porch.\nOne has to he whole souled in man\nner anil calculatiug-in mind to be a\nsuccessful political boss.\nSo it Goes\n\"It's \u25a0 a queer world.\"\n\"What now?\"\n\"The doctor increases night rates,\nthe telegraph compr.ny lowers 'em.'\nIf you draw a 'pistol ut a raffle there\nIs no harm done.\nHe deservedly loses his own property who loses that of another.\u2014\nPhaedrus.\nOne may like to bp Indifferent to\nthe fact that he does not know and\neven not want to know.\n1\\11 a bottle, preferably a wide\nmouthed bottle with glass stopper, to\nthe top with subcarbonates of am-\nnioni:, In coarse powder form. Then\npour over it just enough oil of lavender to covor the contents.\nFresh peaches and bananas as well\n4s cooked apples and canned and\ndried fruits, are delicious when served with breakfast cereals.\nWhen linoleum becomes spotted\nwith paint or rust, clean it by rubbing gently with steel shavings or\nemery paper.\n-Glue stains on furniture and fabrics\ncan be removed by dipping a cloth in\nvlnogar and rubbing hard. If tbe glue\nbos hardened, keep wetting it with\nvinegar, and when softened rub it oft.\nHolidays on Horseback in West\n\"Does\nclothes?\"\npocket.\"\nwife   still pick your\n,    Just    the    change\nAVCffrAGE\nREGULATOR\nWill keep your Receiver operating at the correct voltage and\nsajve you several times Us cost\nln tubes. If your receiver Is out ot\ndate I can put you In p new nine-\ntube screen grid Superhetrodyne\nln your own cabinet. This is the\nla Radio and fully guaranteed.\nPRANK MOORE\nRegistered Radio Service Engineer\nP. O. Box 393 - Phone 181R\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPHONE M\n\u2022s\nTRY OUR SPECIAL TlA\nat : Me per lb.\n\u2022HOES, SHIRTS, OVERALLS\nQOOD VALUES POR YOUR\nMONEY\nOALL AND SEE US BEFORE\nPURCHASING\nJOHN  DONALDSON\nGENERAL  MERCHANT\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\n^ JONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\n& Meet lour Friends\nAtTsw\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nEverything\nForjThe\nSmoker\nK. RUITER & CO.\nGRANS PORKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS * HANSEN, PROPS.\nCITY    BAGGAGE   ANP   GENERAL\nTRANSFER\nCOAL, WOOD AND WE\nPOR SALE\nPHONI M\nPaiaceBarber Shop\nRAZOR HONING A SPECIALTY\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nFIRST ST. NEXT P. BURNS'\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nSez You I\nThe  shots in golf\nTh:t  ring  our  soul\nAre the plmoHt putts\nJltiat  rim  the  hole!\nYear by year the Idea oi Dude Ranching aa-a\nhoHday recreation that really means re-croa-\ntton, ts taking greater hold on young and old alike\nall over the continent Horseback riding, trail\nriding, taking part in rodeos\u2014if yon are a good\nenough cowboy\u2014but anyhow on horseback from\nmorning to night, that ls the way to harden the\nmuscles and bodies of people who have gone soft\nIn the enervating life of cities. This totally different kind of a holiday Is offered in any of half\na doien Dude Ranches ln the Alberta Foothills\nand the Rockies. There ts the historic Kananne-\nkis Ranch, owned by Mrs. \"Bill\" Brewster; the\nT. & Ranch, operated by Guy Weadlok; the Lake\nWindermere Girls Camp and (te K T. Base*, recently opened by Miss Umily Yates of Montreal, to\nnanus a few. The holiday-maker attires htm or\nherself In weird and wonderful cowboy oajtflt from\nhigh-heeled boots and ohaps to ten-gallon hat end\ntries out -everything\u2014roping and tlelng carves,\npacking mules and ponies and learning aU the)\nmystery of the ancient craft of knot-tying, rldtng\nthe mountain trails sod sleeping ont C nights\u2014\njust a real western open-air holiday.      \u2022      *\nLay-out shows typical scenes from the .ITsnsnsa\nkls-Rnnch:\u2014 Society buds hog-tying a calf; a party\nof riders all set for a day's outing and a gitmpae of\nthe exciting business of erecting a teepee.\nFurniture Made to Order,\nAlso Rrepelrlng af All Kinds,\nUphol taring Neatly Dene\nR. C. MoCOTCHBON\nWINNIPEG AVENUE\nDominion Monumental Werke\nAsbestos Produoto Co. Reefing\nESTIMATES FURNISHED\nBOX33? 6RAN0F0Rn.BC\nSUPERIOR\nTHE value of well-\nprinted, neat appear\ning Stationery aa a\nmeans of getting and\nholding desirable few\nhues has been amply demonstrated. Try\nThe Sun fer Good\nPrinting.\nWB PRINT-\nWedding Invitations\nDanes Programs\nBusiness Cards\nVtoltln Car*\nSUpping Tate\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheada\nPrioe Lists\nEnvelopes\nCirculars\n\u25a0to.\nSwift Presses\nTHE SUN\nColumbia   Ave.  and\nLake Street\nTELEPHONE Ul\nThere was a pack ot 30,300 tons of\nherring from the salteries of British\nColumbia last year. The herring industry centers mostly around the\neast coast of Vancouver Island. Virtually the entire polch goes to China,\nthough some shipments go by way of\nJapan, bVH\nIn a letter received at Victoria by\nDr. Brown, medical Inspector of\nschools in the Peace River district,\nhe says that ln spite of hc|rd times,\nhe has not in the course ot his visits\ncome across* single Instance of malnutrition or neglect or shortage of\nclothing. Me speaks highly ot the\ncomfort of little Jog school houses In\nthe bush or on the plains with a good\nL\t\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1931_07_31","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0407177","@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 1929-05-40","@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":"1931-07-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1931-07-31 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Grand Forks Sun","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0407177"}