{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0341214":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"95c12419-3f28-4d16-89c6-7d7522ec0c55","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2017-01-30","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1926-01-22","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341214\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" 1\nThis would be by far a better world if more people followed their own advice\nPrince George\nYoungest son of the.king and queen,\nwho was recently at Hong Kohj? on\nthe ship n which he iB serving part\nof his navnl training, anil [iluekilv\ntook part in fighting ft fire which\nbroke oat in tha' city und to which\ntha HritisK'sailors were called out.\ncylna KETTLE VALLEV ORCHARDIST.'\n'Te'I n\u00ab what you Know ii rni\u00ab* I\n\"t can'suest-iM w-MI at you.\"C\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1926\nRATES REDUCED\nDelegates Given Freedom\nof Gity of Vernon; New\nOfficersElected; Growth\nin Value of Industry\nReported\nVernon, January 21.--Freedom\nof the city was given yesterday to\n135 delegates attending the 36tb\nannual convention of the British\nColumbia Fruit Growers' association\nby Mayor L L. Stewart. Glorious\nsunshine added beauty to the snow-\noovered streets and bills aDd tbe\noity band played selections during\ntbe day.\njjjThe presidential address of Lionel\nTaylor, of Kelowna, reviewed the\nfruit situation. He commended seed\ngrowing as worthy of special atten\ntion. Exportation of onions from\nthis province to New Zealand increased from 160 to 1400 tons laet\nyear, be said.\nC. E. Tanner, of Gordon Head,\nsaid tbat strawberries had realized\nbetter prices in 1925 tban for some\nyears previously and tbat prospects\nwere very bright, tbe output of\nloganberries having already been\ntaken care of for wine making.\nA special campaign for members,\nship will be organized, it was decided.\nLast nigbt H. It. McLtrity, plant\npathologist, Summerland, addressed\ntbe convention on perrooial canker\nin apples.\nRepresentatives from lhe Diimin\niou fruit department, prominent\ngrowers and officials from all parts\nof tbe province were in attendance,\nas was also Hon E D. Barrow,\nminister of agriculture.\nE. VV. Mutch was elected presi.\ndent of the British Columbia Fruit\nGrowers' association at the session\nof the convention beld Wednesday,\nother officers being; Vice president,\nB. Scott, Salmon Arm; executive, T\nAbriel, Nakusp; U. H. McDonald.\nVernon; 0 Slewart, Keating; .1. IC.\nReekie, Kelowna. Nelson was sug\u00bb\ngee-ted for the next conference\nBritish Columbia's nniuial fiuit\ncrop has increased 253 per cent in\nthe last ten years, G. E. Mcintosh,\nDominion fru< omoiissioner, told\ntbe convention. Markets Commissioner Gran of Calgary sngg*-sted\nan extension of tbe bulk apple market, saying tbat apples could be sold\nIn cartoons on tbe prairies to apart-,\nment bouse residents. 'Other speak,\ners included J. H. VV rigbt, Washington Growers, and F. J, Newcomer, entomologist of the United\nStates department of agriculture.\nA 40-ton shipment is expected to\ngo out from the Welling on at Beaverdell about tbe first of February.\nFive men are employed. It is\nthought that tbis shipment will run\nrun higher than, previous ones\nPoliteness has  been  well  defined\nB benevolence in sma 11 things.\nAppeal of Montreal Board\nof Trade AgainstRecent\nDecision Fails; New\nGomini-isionerSupports\nWest\nOttawa, January 19.\u2014The\nboard of railway commissioners divided evenly on the appeal against the application\nof Crow* * Nest rates to grain\nand flour moving westward\nto the Pacific coast.\nAs a result, the original\norder of the bo.rd of railway\ncommissioners, issued in Sep-\ntember last, reducing rates on\ngrain and flour to the Pacific\ncoast for export to the same\npropoitional rates as grain\nand flour would carry if mov\ning eastward, stands, despite\nan appeial againsj the original\njudgment.\nThe   original    order    was\nissued by Chief Commissioner\nH. A.  McKeown'and  Com\nmissioner Frank Oliver.\nIn refusing an appeal by\nthe railways, these two com\nmissioners are supported bjt\nCommissioner Vien, in sups\nport of the appeal by the\nrailways, and opposed to the\noriginal order were Assistant\nChief Commissioner S. J. McLean, Commissioners A. C.\nBoyce and C. Lawreuce.\nThe order, which is now\nsustained by a tie, was the result of an application from\nBritish Columbia province for\nan equalization of grain rates\non westbound traffic, with\nthose on grain moving eastward. The case was heard by\nthe chief commissioner and\nCommissioner Oliver and the\norder bears tho signature of\nthe chief commissioner.\nIn the event of a further\nappeal being made from the\njudgment as it stands, the\ncase would be carried to the\nsupreme court of Canada on\nquestions of law or to the\ngovernor in council on questions of fact.\nWhen the original order\nwas issued by the chief com\nmissioner a resolution was\nalso made public by the assistant chief commissioner, S. J.\nMcLean, and assented to by\nCommissioners Boyce and\nLawrence, declaring that the\nmatter of export grain rates\nvia Pacific ports should be\ndealt with as part of the gen\neral rate investigation and\nunder the judgment to be\nrendered in connection with\nthat investigation.\nThe above commissioners\nwho issued this resolution\nwere\/not present at the hear\ning of the applicEtipn which\ntook place in Vancouver on\nNovember 5, 1924-\nThe board at that time consisted of  five members,  one\nseat being vacant. Since that\ntime Thomas Vien, formerly\nM.P. for Loi.hiniere,has been\nappointed to tlio bench. His\nvote with the chief eommis\nsioner and Mr. Oliver today\nmade the decision of the\nboard a tie.\nPremier Oliver Not\nFully Satisfied With\nReductions Ordered\nVictoria. January 20\u2014Today's\nruling by the railway board upholding the \u2022 rain rate reductions\nordered laet fall does not fully meet\ntbe demands of British Columbia,\nPremier Oliver announced today\nThis province ie seeking to have tbe\nexisting rates scaled still further, be\nexplained.\n\"Our contention,\" the premier\nsaid, \"is that tbe rtilways have not\nfully implemented the order of the\nboard ieeu'id last fall and instructing them to give the westbound\ngrain movement Crows   Nest tatef.\n\"We believe that we are paying\nmore tha-i Crows Nest rates now.\n\"Our application lo the board to\nforce the railways to obe, tbe order\nfully bas been on file some time.\n\"The board should be abfe to rule\nupon it before -sommencicg tbe gens\neral rate revision wbicb it is plan\nning to make soon.\"\nThe premier regards the board'\ndecision today as an important victory for the west.\nA. ladies curling bas been  organized in Greenwood.\nFor those tbat like to put il down\nin black and white\u2014money spent\non a good Holstein is a good investment.\nPREVENTION OF\nCANCER SEEN\nLeeds, Eogland, January 19.\u2014\nDr. Wm. E. Gye, one of the scient\nifts responsible for tbe isol tinn of\nthe cancer germ, speaking at a meeting here, sai : \"We know what we\nhave to solve and in my opinion the\nmost important part of the work is\nalready solved. Prospects for final\nsolution of the cause and probably\nthe prevention of the cancer are\nnne.\"\nNew York,January 19 \u2014T e Be'll\ntreatment of cincer with lead had\nbenefited at least one person in\nevery five wbo hsd taken it, but it\nis extremely dangerous and shouid\nnot lead to \"an unwarranted sense\nof security,\" in tbe opinion of Prof.\nFrancis Carter Wood, director of tbe\nInstitute of Cancer Research at Columbia University\nProf. Wood made bis report today on the result of a trip to Liverpool to study the Bill treatment at\nflrst hand The treatment was\nworked out by Dr. William Blair\nBell, profeseor of gynecolocy and\nabstetrics at the University of Liver\npool.\nbenr robbed of her oub^.\"\nBu', Mr. Motherwell went on,was\never an amendment presented so\nnear to agreement with the \"speech\nfrom the throne as the amendment\npresented by Mr. Meighen?\n\"Behold,\" exclafmed Mr. Motherwell, \"behold,hia attempt toexecu'e\nbis abdominal, bis craven crawl all\nthe way from Hamilton to Bagot,\nI think it ia tbe most shameful\nrecantation ever uttered by a public\nman in Canada, and from now on\nthe leader of the opposition will be\nrightly known in tbis parliament as\ntbe great recacter.\"\nJ\nA Tory Out of Office\nIs Like a She Bear\nRobbed of Her Cubs\nOttawa, January 20.\u2014Hon. W.\nB. Motherwell, minister of agriculture, created laughter when be compared tbe present attitude of Con\nservatives with that of last week.\nA week ago, said Mr. Motherwell,\nConservatives reminded bim of Sir\nHicbard Cirtwright's saying tbat\na \"Tory ourof office was like a sbe\nFORKE WOULD FUSE\nWITH EITHER PARTY\nFOR CANADA'S GOOD\nOttawa, January 20.\u2014Ewpbati-\ncally.and positively, Kofcjit Forke,\nProgressive leader, denied last night\ntbat the Progressive party had re\nceived any bribes or bid in tbe\nnegotiations whicb preceded the\ncritical vote of last week Mr. Focke\nwas speaking in continued debate\non tbe address. \"1 never got any\nbid,\" be declared. \"I never received\nany bribes.\"\n\"X would favor any coalition to\nget us out of our troubles,\" replied\nMr. Forke \"Were Conservatives io\npower and willing to form a coali\ntion to forward principles for wbicb\nI st .nd I would be quite willing to\njoin witb tbem.\"\nEngineer G. Storm was killed\nand Fireman J. P. Duffy was iue\njured Wednesday morning ;, hen tbe\nCanadian Pacific railway passenger\ntrain from Nelson un the Sloe in Val\nley branob jumped tbe track near\nCrescent V-dley, tbe locomotive and\nbaggage car leaving the rails. The\ndead engineer bad just moved to\nNelson from Cranbrook and was\ntaking out his first train on this\nbranch.\nQuebec Winter Sports Off to Good Start\nHon. Hugh Guthrie\nMinister of defence in the Meighen\ngovernment, who during tbe time\nwben the Progressive party wag debating its position bs ween the two\nold parties, announced that.if called\nupon to form a government, Mr.\nMeigbea would carry on without a\nnew appeal to the people.\nI\nED\n\u25a0T*l-\\ *z?--^. :*:'.* *y*J*X\\ \u2022 \/?**-?Q\n(1) From left to right t\u2014W. B. Thompson, McGllli R. S. Whltenssy, Yale- O. Mcisiiblen, Loyola, THoatreali\nJ. Beniiblen, Loyola, Montreal! R. Whlteney, Valet J. Fortler, Ualveralt-r of Mssntrealt I*. Moussaean, University of\nMontreal; R. Plante. Laval, Quebec I G. Tisehe, Laval, Quebec) S. Audette, Ottnira. (2) Iaabrl Coursslcr In action.\n(3) W. II. Thompson muklisK his US-foot Jump.      (4) W. B.  Thompson, of McGill University, Montreal.\nto take part In the New Yenr celebrations, and a fireworks exhibition was staged soon after nightfall. Numerous outings Vere arranged and the winter carnival\nwas at its height and ready to go strong for the rest\nof tbe winter from the first week in January.\nAnother highly Interesting event at Quebec, on December 30, was tie International cross-country ski raca,\nwon by W. B. Thompson, of McGill University. The\ncourse Is over a difficult flve-mtle stretch. Tache, of\nLaval University, Quebec, was second in tiie crosscountry race, and J. Beaublen, ot Loyola Montreal, was\nthird.\nThe Yale University contestants were left far behind,\nin both the ski jumps and races, by their Canadian opponents. H. Whiteney and R. S. Whitenoy, of Yale,\nwere seventh and eighth, respectively, in the crosscountry race. They had the very same position ln the\njumping contest.\nHeavily-laden sleighs arc to be seen coins; slowly\nthrough the old city at all hours of the day and night.\nVisitors seemingly never tire of the wonders of the\nquaint French-Canadian capital.\nRobert R. Bruce, Prominent Mining Man of Invermere to Succaed\nHon. W,. G. Nichol\nOttawa, Jan. 21.\u2014Robert\nRandolph Bruce of Invermere,\nB. C\u201e bas been appointed\nlieutenant governor of British\nColumbia in succession to\nHon. W. <J, Nichol.\nAnnouncement of the appointment was made at the\nconclusion of a cabinet meeting today.\nThe new lieutenant governor is overseas at present, but\nwill be sworn in on his return\nto Canada.\nHon. W. C. Nichol, whose\nterm as lieutenant governor\nexpires, was sworn in to that\nposition in January, 1921.\nRobert Randolph Bruce is a\nScotsman, nis education was obtained at Glasgow; wbere be took a\nspeeiul course in mining and metal\nurgy, receiving honors with bis\ndegree.\nHe came to Cunuin nt once, and\nlinked himself with the Canadian\nPacific railway ii, its survey opera,\nlions.\nLater be w s employed by Ham-\nmond & Osier to look after their\nmining interests in Enst   Kootenay.\nSeeing the woith of the country\nfrnm a mineral standpoint, he\nbranched nut fur himself, obtaining\n\u00ab nitrol of the Paradise mine at In.\nvtumere, which he had been oparaU\ning for approximately thirty   years.\nH\" is a charter member of the\nCanadian Mining Itislitnle,of \u00ab horn\nthere ure very few   left.\n\"In vi->w tit Ihe wonderful strides\nmade in mining recently, the up.\npnintiiieiit is a graceful t-nm-.limiiit\nnn the put nf the government,\"\noiiiiments V, K. Wood\u00bbide,prt*->ldeni\niif ihe Biitish Columhia Chamber nf\nMines, \"Mining men will H|| hs-\ndelighted to know that \u00bb mind u\noperator lb US Steps into Ihe ! ighef!\nposition in this province, \\,i\u201e ei during Oourage and faith in the country\njustifying rhe selection \"\nDaring jumps into space were the opening features\nof Quebec most brilliant winter season wben the\nInternational Intercollegiate Ski Jumping teams lined\nup for the famous trophy on December 3D, at the Ancient Capital. W. B. Thompson, of McGill University,\nscored the longest jump of 95 feet, but J. Beauvais, of\nLoyola College, Montreal, was awarded the maximum\nnumber of points because of his fine form, although he\njumped only 91 feet.\nAmong the university teams taking part in the contest were McGill, Loyola. Ottawa, Montreal, Yale, and\nLaval. Although it was very cold, large crowds turned\nout to see the contest, three grand stands on the Dufferin Terrace being packed.\nIsabel Coursier, nineteen-year-old mles wto holds the\nworld's woman championship, treated the spectators to\na daring exhibition, while Ivlnd Nelsen, Canadian Champion, set a new record for Quebec by jumping 101 feet.\nThe International Ski Trophy waB swarded to the\ntriumphant Loyola College team. Two nights later\nthe Terrace was to be seen in sparks and flashes.\nParties from tlte New England States arrived ln force\nTHE WKATIIKR\nThe  Following  is the  minirnui i\nand maximum temper-ituix foi em i\ni dny   during   the   past    week, un n-\u00ab\n; corded by the government thermometer on E  K. Law's ranch:\nMax.    Mir.\nJsn 1.*)\u2014Friday   Hii _\u25a0_\n16\u2014Saturday    31 I\"\n17\u2014Sunday.  .->\u2022! 18\n18 \u2014 Monday      35 25\n19\u2014Tnesday    25 10\n20\u2014 Wednesday..,.   38 0\n21\u2014Thursday ...    . 28 15\nInches\nSnowfall        9.0 \u00aete <8ntni Jarka Bun\nTHE SUN: GRAND FOBKS, BBFTISH COLUMBIA\n*N INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER\na. a.\nEVANS, EDITOR AHO PUBLISH'\n^v!!0\/\"''^01!. RATEa-*\u00bb**^BLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year in Canada and Great Britain)  tl 00\nAd^(l\u00bbthe ^^ State8) \u2022\u2022- \u2022\u2022*..*.'.':   1.50\nAaareer      \u2014 cations to\nP.,\/,\u2014 tm \"Th\" G^o Poeks Sdn\nn-Tt^ GbA!,d Fo\"*\u00ab* B- C\nOFFICE:   COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1926\nWhat's next in radio? Make a 1926 guess\nfor yourself; your guess is as good as anyone's\n\u2014provided your ituignation is going strong.\nIn the meantime you can get anything from\nPresident Coolidge's message to congress to\na dictum by Overseer Volivia in Zion that\nthe earth is flat\u2014which is more tban you can\nsay of his music. You can ger religion of any\nselected variety, also politics and information.\nTurn the dial and take your choice; the markets; a lecture on hog cholera; a college edu-\ncaeion. All the world is listening and learning as never before. In snowed-in cabins in\nthe silent places none go insane from loneliness whom the radio keeps in touch with the\nworld. Today the radio is boiling water in a\nkettle on ic.-; is stopping bead-on trait s\nthrough emergency brakes; is making the\ndiagnosis for a surgical operation.   Next!\nj tho government published statistics on illjter-\n* acy gathered wben the 1920 census was taken.\nIlliteracy in Brazil decreased from 84 2 per\ncent in lg72 to 75.5 per cent in 1920. In the\nlatter year there w re 11,401715 illiterates\nmore than fourteen years of age.,.,v.,,s'1-f' IE \"w\nWith the important place that the X-ray\nnow holds in the world it is interesting to\nnote that only twenty years ago it was being\nhailed as the latest marvel of science. About\nthe same time electric headlights were being\ntried on some of the fastest railway express\ntrains.\nAppropriately and attractively dressed\npublic school teachers in San Francisco are in\nfavor with their superintendent, Josoph Marr\nGwinn. The superintendent maintains that\nteachers should be well dressed because of]\ntbe mental effect upon the children.\nNotes \u2022 Notions \u2022 Notables\nIt was almost 200 years before Hernando\nL\/ortez dropped anchor in the Gulf of Mexico\ntbnt the Aztecs founded the present City of\nMexico and called it Tencochtitlan. Like\nt iieir predecessors, the Toltecs, who, according to anthropologists, waodered into Mexico\niiom the north  in  the  seventh   century, tli<- ^^^ dt^tt^ktM\nAztecs were skilled architects. While for four 10W tne accepted rules. There have been sev-\nc inturies the Toltecs raised their gigantic col- e-'al clear, cold uights on which it has been\niimns and built their palaces of huge blocks impossible to hear stations 500 miles distant,\nut stone, adorning them with elaborate stone O\" tne other nand- there have been warm'wet\n.,     . , . ,    niirtitQ pnts'rolss  tnr.\u2014 \u00ab**\u00bb.\t\nirviogs, their successors, the A-**i-.*m\u00bb<\u00bb <\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 *\u2022' \u00bb''\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nInvestigation of \"fading\" on a scale  never\nattempted in the United States will be  made\niu mid-January at twenty observation stations,\nit is announced by J. K. Smith.of the Stewart-\nWarner corporation.   Hitherto such experiments   have  been  carried on in isolated sections of the country at two or at  most  threej\nstations. Tbe results of sucb research  have\nbeon negligible. There is still no explanation\nof why signals should be stronger in winter\nwhen static electricity leaps off one's hair or\nsparks out of the rug at one's feet, and  weak\nin  summer   when  there  are apparently no\nstatic charges in the things about us, accord-]\ning to Mr. Smith. The Stewart-Warner observation  posts  will chart readings on selected\ndistriots every two minutes during the period\nof the tests.   The results will be averaged and\nplotted on a map similar to that issued by the\ngovernment weather bureau.    It, is the belief\nof the   engineers conducting the tests that\ncurves wbicb will make possible a comparison\nof effects and a search for causes will result.\nIf so, the experiment will be repeated at regular  iutervals throughout the winter.   \"By a\ncomparison of 'fading' and the static curves\nwith those of the United States weather map\nit will be possible to determine the effect   of\n'fading' and static in tests on stations of varying wave length, and some tangible progress\nmay be made toward discovering what frequencies are best for broadcast.   The plan to\nhold the tests originated in a discovery that\nChicago reception this year has failed to follow the accepted rules. There have been sev-\nnpil I        fame.-***      ****** ***\u25a0        \u2014        '     -\nFROM EVERYWHERE\nCanadian   Pacific   Railway  earning!  for  the  month  of November\nwere $19,294,184.37, an increase of\n$1,193,239.12 over the aame period\nfor 1924.    Net profita for Novem\nber show .an increase af $218,153.80\nover  the  month   of  November   of\n1924.    Net profits  for the eleven\nmonths ending November were $35,\n327,988.88, an  increase of ($1,830,\n043.32 over the corresponding period for 1924.\nAccording to Johannes Borge,\njournalist, of Bergen, Norway, who\nis visiting the Dominion to record his impressions of Canada,\nsilver fox farming has become a\nvery important industry in parts of\nNorway. There are now about 16P \u2022\nsilver fox farms in the Sondmorc\ndistrict of Norway. Last autumn,\nabout 120 silver foxes, estimated to\nbe worth 1,000,000 kroner, were\nshipped from the island of Norwey\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for\nHeadache    Colds Neuralgia    Lumbago\nPain Toothache   Neuritis      Rheumatism\nDOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART\nAccept only \"Bayer\" package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tablets\n^^^^_^^ss.s.\u00bb. Also bottles of 24 and 100\u2014Druggists.\nAspirin is tbe trade mark (registered In Csnsds) of Bayer MsDsjfaetQie at HoDoscette-\nacl-lester of BallcTllcscId (Acetyl Salicylic Arid, \"A. 8. A.\"). Wbile It ls well known\ntbat Aspirin mesns Bayer manufacture, to assist tbe public against lmltstlons, tbe Tablets\nof Bayer Oompany will bs stamped with tbelr feturtl trade mark, tbe \"Bayer Cross.\"\n&fi\n-..-..,. .,.uu KJitxtHJiiiie scone\n\u2022 irviDgs, their successors, the Aztecs, erected\npublio buildings and dwelling places of sfftii\nI tr design. And these ruins still endure to\nc infuse archeologists intent on discovering\nj ist where Toltec craftsmanship stopped aad\nAztec craftsmanship began.\nAn argument in favor of inexpensive possessions is sent by a correspondent. A few\nnights ago a bnrglar got into his house and\nleft a parting note on the (lining room table-\n\"This is a real disappointment,\" the note ran.\n\"After all my trouble, I can't find a thing\nworth taking. Please buy a few valuables, or\nyou won't see me again!\" Eveu a burglar has\na sense of humor.\nIn a few years from now the old saying that\n\"che path of civilization is strewn  with   tin\n\u2022 ms\" may not be true, for a process has been\ndeveloped by which tne millions of tin  cans\n\u25a0 irown away every year may be reclaimed and\ns dd over again in the form of braokets,  sasb\nweights, griddles and furnace grates.   By the\nnew process, perfected by scienjists at Seal*\nile in the northwest experiment station ofthe\niitireau ot mines, the small percentage of tin\ni -isptraDed from th'j iron in the ons,    After\nteveral stages the resultant metal is known as\n\u2022ynthetic iron and may be used for any  purpose to which pig iton is pnt.\n.    \u00ab\u00ab\u00ab.,    treas III, YVUli\nnights entirely free from static and perfect for\nbroadcast reception from distant points.\"\n\"You can tell by his eyes when a man is\nlying. They shift and drop guiltily,\" says a\ntellea in a prominent bank. \"This, however-\nis not true of women. They appear to be bet\"\nter actors and their eyes do not often give\nthem away. However, their necks often betrays them. While they can control their\neyes and facial muscles, they can not control\ntlieir inner perturbation. They get red and tbe\nlittle red veins in the neck pulsate when they\ntell untruths. '\nOf Brazil's entire population of 30,635,605,\na fraction more than 75 per cent can not read\nor write.    This was disclosed  recently  when\nPoems From Other Land s\nTurkey\nOn Spring\nFrom the pleasure, joy, and rapture of this honr,\nla its frame to hold its soul earth scarce hath power.\nKent its collar, like the dawn, hath the rose;\nFrom its heart the nightingale sighs forth iU woes.\nDance the juniper and cypres** like the sphere;\nFilled with melody through joy all lands appear,\nGently sing the running brooks in murmurs soft;\nWhile the birds with tuneful voices soar aloft.\nPlay the green and tender branches with delight,\nAnd they shed with ooe aocord gold, silver, bright.\nLike to couriers fleet, the zephyrs speed away,\nResting ne'er a moment either night or day.\nIn that raid the rosebush filled with gold its hoard,\nAnd iho tulip with fresh musk its casket stored,\nThere the moon a purse of silver coin did seize;\nFilled with ambergris the skirt the morning breeze;\nWon tho sun a golden disk of ruby dye,\nAnd with glistening pearls its pocket filled the sky;\nThose who poor were fruit and foliage attained;\nAll the people af the land some trophy gained.\n\u2014Lami'i.\ni     \u2014\nTraffic on the Great Lakes this\nseason compares well with that of\nlast year as far m Canadian Pacific earnings are concerned. M.\nMcD. Doff, manager of tbe Great\nLakes Steamship Service explained\nrecently that while grain tonnage\nfell below that of the 1924 season,\npassenger traffic and package\nfreight businese wag considerably\nbetter, making the total well up to\nthe average.\nA party of Mennonites, bound for\nwestern Canada, mostly to Manitoba, arrived in Montreal recently\nwith the report that those of their\nsect who had gone to Rosario, Mexico, were far from satisfied and intended going north. It is understood Ciat 1,000 Mennonites have\nemigrated to Canada within the last\ntwo months and that about 2,500\nmore would be coming in the spring,\nHans' Jeidler, in charge of the\nparty, said not one of them thought\nat going to Mexico.\n(\nCITY REAL  ESTATE\nFOR SALE\nAmplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPrices i-s\u2022From $35.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms t\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be seen at the\nCity Office.\nJOHN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.       I\nc^ncient History*\n[Taken From Twenty-Year Old Sun Files.]\nIn the city election yesterday Francis H\nHutton was elected mayor, and Kobert Gaw'\nFred Cooper and J. D.  McDonald alderman\nin the East ward and E. Spraggett, B Le\nquime and A 0. Clements in the West ward.\nGreat\u25a0 Northern,offloial\u00ab are considering the\nadvisabihty of putting on a night train between this city and Spokane. They believe it\nwr>uld be well paatronized. * \"\nThe Boston  Commeroial asserts that the\n\u2022w.wj&ffftKK-i \u2022<\u2022?\u00bb' ji \u00ab\u00ab\u2022-.\u25a0\". **-**-*\nme ot prof,, of im per Lre. *' tbe *x^Hm^^S*T4A\nThe McKinlev Minp-s  T l-H    nn \u2122k*  u i-. Incurred for such incalculable   bene-\nlanH    nnr^       *i\\       ' ,0n WhlCnRosS-  &\u2022**   The price of   these  Marvellous\nSLff        ,Sa,d   t0   rePre8^t F. Augustus Tablets including  Mail  Se, is\nnemze recently secured a bond for -K200 000  3 Dollars per bottle, dispatched in\nnave closed a deal for the  purchase  of thp plain wraPPer on receiPt 0I amount,\nBanner group of claims  in Franklin camp    n. r    \u00b0^\u00bb\u00bb*** *\u00bb\u00ab-      .\nlhe Banner stands  next to the McKinlev in   Dr* Le**ardt* Laboratories,\nimportance in that Camp. -\u00ab.'Uiey in      106, Liverpool Road,|Barn.bury.\nLondon, England.\nYOUNG AT 50\nDr. Let-iard's New Life Tablet!\nImparts to the Old and Middle aged\nYouthfulnew, Energy and Fit-\nnew, retards  mental and physical\ndecay,   thus    promoting longevity,\nPreserves  the arteries   and  tissues,\nSufferers irom Doaf ness with its many\ndistressing accompanying   ailments,\naB Head noises, deriveal most immo\ndiate benefit.    Calm refreshing sleep\nassured. Gloom, Depression and Nervousness is banished under the iiiilu\nence of those | Life-giving   Tablets\nWrinkles, hard  lines aud  blemishes\ndisappear,    The skin becomes clear,\nlight and elastic and the* complexion\nbright and smooth.    Think   of  the\nblessings of perfect   health, the pos\nlesion of few; the joyof a olear Youth*\nful appearance and tingling blood, of\nlustrous hair, bright eyes and health\ntinted cheeks; the beauty of  radiant\nlife and the realisation that Time bas\nbeen put back Ten yeara to the envy\nand admiration of your friends, and\ntheunbouuded satisfaction of   your,\nself.    Can you allow a golden oppor\ntunity like this  to pass?   Remember\nthere are no arduous rules to follow,\nno restriction on diet, noi   are there\nany ill effects after. Un theoontrary\nit gives the entire system a feeling of\nexhaltation   with   increased  mental\nand   bodily  vigour.    Why not look\nand feel 30 at 50?   Do not delay,\nMassey-Harris\nIMPLEMENTS\n*\nWe are agents for the well known Massey-\nHarris line of farm equipment. Let us\nfigure on your needs.\nA Complete Line of Garden Tools\nMILLER & GARDNER\nFurniture and Hardware\nCopper Trails\nExtending to various paris of southwestern British Columbia, the copper\ntrails which we call telephone lines are\nready to carry long distance conversations at speeds ranging from 8,000 to\n178,000 miles per second. When speed\ncounts\u2014Long Distance.\nBritish  Columbia Telephone\nCompany O BBITIgg ,8Hflm (BlAgO  \u2022   _[_\\\u2122L\nATETL-ITTJO1\nTHB SUN: GBAND POBKS, BBITISH COLUMBIA\n4.\n'        \u25a0      -\u25a0 I\nc-.-.i,''-'.    tm\n\u25a0***-\n\u2022tfrilliant Winter Carnival at Banff\nI.   A daring leap Into apace.\n2.   Tobogganing parties.   3.   A swift run down means an up hill walk.  4.\n5. A dog team In training for the Derby.\nSki-joring at a fast clip.\nDuring the coming winter carnival itf Banff, the\nmornings will be set aside to entertain visitors,\nafternoons and evenings for the event*. Iu former winter\ncarnivals in Banff bo many events were crowded into a\nweek as to preclude visitors from taking part in the fun\nthemselves. This year, the committee met the wishes of\nthe visitors by extending tha annual event to cover two\nweeks, from February 8 to February 17 inclusive.\nThe molt expert skiers and enow-shoers in the\nmountains will thus be freed from competitions to take\ncharge of partieB of visitors on pleasure bent. They have\nselected five depots within a radius of two miles from\nBanff, bo selected to allow return over a different route\nthan the outgoing trip. Ski slides abound on these trips,\nsome difficult enough for the expert and others more\nmoderate to initiate novices into this sport, the king of\nall winter pastimes.\nPonies will be available for ski-jorcrs and those\nwishing to partake of the run on toboggans or bob-sleds.\nA real western barbecue of steaming hot meat of wild\ngame, bread, coffee or tea, will appeaue the appetites of\nthe hikers at each of these depots. During the carnival a\nhike par excellence to Lake Minnewanka is planned.\nHere a huge buffalo will be barbecued over a glowing\nbon-fire on the lake shore.\nBill Pctts, head of the Rocky Mountain Guide Association and Brewsters Limited are bringing forty ponies\nfrom the range early in January to train them for skl-\ntoring during the carnival.   Ponies, Bkis and guides will\nie at the disposal of those who may need them.\nNova Scotia Interior as Moose Pasture\n i\nj*]ee*y$X*-*>^-M.<l*W \u00ab>\nOFF FOP TME M\/ODV WUMTIMC GQOuNDS    \u00a7\u00a7| j|\nGlope, ^W-mm*wr \u2666\u201e*\nimdian Guide\n'.. ou .. .oiikt a, .i country of lakes\n. i aiid streams, offering many ideal\n... oe trips, and the interior is a\ni,rt-at moose pasture. Ideal, too,\nis tlie moose hunting, because both\nthe canoe and automobile are used\nby hunters and guides, thus saving\nmany miles of weary hiking\nihrough the wilderness. On the\nLiverpool chain of lakes reached\n(rum South Mil\/ord via Annapolis\nUoyal or Digby, and on Lake Ked-\n^ernakooge, Lake Rossignol, Lake\nMu.iro. Loon Lake and the Liverpool River expert Indian and white\ngijidc-s use the canoes for Ion-; distances and even call the moose to\nthe sI ore with their birch bark-\nhorns. When pome distort point is\nto be reached from \"Del\" Thomas'\nSouth Milford camp, car.oes, -;uide?,\nhunteru aird duffle are loaded upon\n* big motor truck for the journey.\nSouth Milford is 16 milts from\nAnnapolis Royal and Is a favorite\noutfitting point. So ls the Kedge-\nmakooge Rod and Oun Club, on\nfamous Lake Kedgemakooge, in the\nheart of the wilderness 36 miles\nfrom Annapolis Royal. Both of\nthese camps have ample accommodations and plenty of canoes and\nreliable guides.\nThe Nova Scotian moose season\nlasts from Oct. 1 to Nov. 16. Deer\nare as plentiful as moose, and thc\nopen season for this game lasts from\nOct 1< to Nov. U*\nFROM EVERYWHERE\nruiam VaigardBon, a farmer at\nTaber, Alberta, is glad he went into\ns :;,*:ir beet raising. He secured a\nC MO return from three and one-half\nacres of land.\nFrom seven to ten dog teams will be available for\ntrips into the mountains, on the Bow River, over the ice-\nlocked Bow Falls or across the Vermillion Lakes.\nMountain ponies with bob-sleighs will cover the same\nroute.\nPresent plans call for a new World Championship dog\nderby from Calgary to the top-of-the-world, the Great\nDivide in the heart of the Rockies, and back to Banff,\na distance of 186 miles, 60 on the prairies, the remainder'\nin the mountains. This three day race will pass through\nBanff on the morning of the second day and finish in\nBanff at the ski-jump when these events are being run off.\nWhile waiting fer the arrival of the teams visitors will\nwitness Canada's premier ski-jumping competition on the\nnew Banff jump. Many acknowledge thiB new jump as\nthe most picturesque and spectacular in Canada. Set on\nthe Bide of a mountain as it li, the jumper begins the elide\nfar up on the mountain side, and seems to soar to earth\nthrough a lane of pines and spruce. The wooden take-off\ncarries him into the air sixty feet above the heads of the\nspectators below. The new jump is built for leaps into\nspace of from 40 feet to 180 feet.        \u25a0\nDuring the two weeks eight ladies' hockey teams will\ncontend for the Alpine Club of Canada Cup emblematic\nof world's championship in this sport. Six of western\nCanada's best amateur men's hockey teams will fight s\nbitter battle on the ice for carnival honors. Speed-\nskating and fancy skating events and exhibitions, interspersed between periods in the games, relieve the monotony of the wait and pep up the sport activities.\nLouie\n\u00aeg^s-*nuo>jtDvv;\nExpect Moose Oua.ee\nAithoughi large nurubeis c\/i  :..oi\/\nire shot each year, many with muR\nificent   \"spreads,\"  the  annual   lr\nrtase   iB   said   to   equal   the   kill\nSuch guides as Louis Harlow, half\nbreed. Micmac and Sam Globe, full-\nhlood.'d   Indian,   are   expert   moov\ncallers end stalkers and rarely disappoint the hunter.   The cleverness\nwith  .vhich they simulate the calls\nof the cow moose with a simple roi'\noi birch bark fashioned into a horn.\nis sure to fool the  wisest old  bull\nin the wilderness.   When the calling\nseason is. past, the moose no longci\ncomes to the hunter and the huntei\nmust   go   to   him.    Neither   cation.\nnor automobile figures much in thi.-\nphase of moose hunting except thnl\none, or both,  may help the hunter\nnear the place where thc quarry if\nsupposed to be und carry him home\nwhen Ue hunt is over.\nWinter sport activities at old\nQuebec are in full swing. Thia is\nconsidered the most brilliant season\nof entertainment for years past.\nHundreds of sport enthusiasts and\ntourists from the New England\nstates, Canada, and other parts of\nthe continent are turning np in force\nat the Ancient Capital.\nMiss Isabel Counter, only nineteen years of age, Ib the world's\nwoman champion ski jumper. Sbe\ncreated a world record at Revelstoke, B.C. at the age of sixteen In\n1922. This winter, taking part la\nthe winter sports at Quebec, Miss\nCoursier made a jump of 88 feet in\nthe International-Intercollegiate Ski\ncontest.\nA report from Smiths Falls, Ontario, is to the effect that a train\nwas stopped in order to avoid a collision with an automobile making\nfor the tracks over a crossing. The\ntrain was stationary when the automobile struck one of the cars.\nThe occupants of the automobile escaped  uninjured.\nTourists on the Canadian Pacific\nliner Empress of Scotland were at\nthe famous King Solomon quarries,\nbeneath the walls of Jerusalem, on\nChristmas nigbt. Many of them\naccording to a cable received at\nC.P.R. head offices, bought gavels,\nmade from the stone of the quarries, with olive wood handles.\nAccording to information at the\nheadquarters of the Canadian Pacific    Railway,   holiday   passenger\ntraffic this year from points west\nwas the heaviest since 1920 in th\npast few weeks and  represented ;\ntitty    percent   increase    over   thr\namount handled over Canadian Pu\ncific Railway lines last year.   Spec\nial   arrangements    made   to   tak\ncare of the Christmas and New Year\nrush worked efficiently.\nEXPORT APPLE PRICES\nThe following jiiolations have\nbeen receivej by cable to tbe Dominion department of agriculture\nfrom theCanadian fiuit trade oow-\nmissioner io England:\nGlasgow,Jsd. 19.\u2014On'ario Bald,\nwin, fancy, $2 18 to $2.30; C, $2.18\nto $2.66; Spy, funcy, $2.36 to $4.42;\nOntario, extta fancy,$1.69 to $2.06;\nhecy, $1.86.\nLondon, Jan. 19 \u2014ex. S.8. Scotian. Cox OrangH, extra fancy,\n83.83; fancy, $3.39; Washington\nJonathans, extra fancy, $3 39 to\n83 63; fancy, $3 03; C, $2.66; Spitzenberg, extra fancy, 83.15; fancy,\n$2.90; Newtown Pippin,extra fancy,\n$3.63 to $3.87; (incy,$2.90 to $3 03\nC, $3.15 to $3.39. Market slow.\nPound quoted at $4.84.\nInteresting Announcement\nWord comes from Montreal Iha\ntbat great family and farm paper\nThe Family Herald and Weekly Star\nhas been enabled to reduce its sub.\nscription price to Ono Dollar a year,\nThis certainly will be interesting\nnews in every Canadian bome where\nthe Family Herald is known and to\nmany who will avail themselves nf\nthe offer. At two Dollars a year\nThe Family Herald and Weekly\nStar was generally admitted to be\ngood value, in fact big value, but\nwl'en reduced to One Dollur a year\nit will certainly be tbe marvel of\ntbe newspaper world.\nCanada is proud of tbat great\nWeekly, and bag every reason to be\nso, as it has no superior and few\nequals in tbe world today. The\npublishers announce that notwithstanding tbe change in price evary\nfeature will not niy be maintained\nbut improvements will follow. Tbe\npublishers are fortunate in being in\nan financial position to do this, and\nCanadian homes will have tbe advantage. When tbe new rate is\nmade known it certainly will bring\na rush of subscribers to th: Family\nHerald. One Dollar is a small\namount for such a great paper.\nThe first time a girl is en\ngaged she im\"gines she is as\nimportant as the heroine in a\nnovel.\nDO YOU WANT\nTHE PEOPLE\nTO READ YOUR\nADVERTISEMENT\nPeople take The\" Sun\nbecause j they believe\nit is worth the price we\ncharge for it. It is\ntherefore reasonable to\nsuppose that they read\nits contents, including\nadvertisments. This\nis not -always the case\nwifh newspapers1 that\nare offered as premiums with chromos or\nlottery tickets\nWE DO NOT\nWANT CHARITY\nADVERTISING-\nAdvertising \"to help\nthe editor.\" But we do\n.want businessadver rising by progressive business men who know\nthat sensible advertising brings results and\npay. If you have something to offer the public that will benefit\nthem and you as well,\nthe newspaper reaches\nmore people than a bill\nboard\nSUN READERS\nKNOW WHAT\nTHEY WANT\nand if you have the\ngoods you can do business with them\n! THB SUN: GBAND FOBKS, BBITISH COLUMBIA\nThe Fresh Flavor\nof delicious\n\"SALADA\"\nGREEN TEA\nis preserved in the air-tight -SALADA\npacket. Finer than any Japan or\nGunpowder.   Insist upon SALADA.\nNEWS OFTHE CITY\nA joint installation of officers of\ntbe Qrand Eorks and Qreenwood\nlodges of Knights of Pythias and\nPythian Sisters was held in the\nPythian ball in tbis city on Tuesday evening. Mrs. Euerby was tbe\ninstalling officer for the Sisters. E.\nBarg was presented witb a past\nchancellor's jewel by R J. Girdner,\npast grand chancellor. A collation\nwas served at 6 o'clock. After the\nibstallation, dancing was kept up\nuntil it was time for tbe visitors to\nlake tbe train.\nthe camp. About a dozen years\nigo became to tbis city and engaged io tbe same business. Tben,\nafter a few years, he returned to\nGreenwood and became interested in\ntbe moving picture business. Recently he returned to tbis city and\nbecame manager of tbe Urand P *rke\nMeat Market, wbicb position be held\nAt tbe time of bis deatb. Hie wife\npr deceased him in tbis city about\nten yeaiB ago.\nTbe  Sun  Presses  have twice the\nspeed   of   any otber  prenscs in the\nBoundary.   We can save you moi ev\non both long find short niris nf com\nmercial printing and give vnn \u00bb s'l\nnerior class of work.\n*r\nIt is i- emv to piipunsn \u00bb firs\ndei-iie hs it is hard to satisfy the\nfif-iirs-f! that follow.\nMrs. Miion Reid and four children, wbo bave been visiting at tbe\nbome of Mr. and Mrs. R. Campbell\nfor a sbort time, left oo Tuesday for\ntheir future bome in Nelson. Mrs.\nCampbell accompanied tbem to that\ncity.\nGreenwojd won tbe onening\nhockey game of tbe season on tbe\nlocal ice last Tuesday nigbt.\nThe boys' and the girls' basket\"\nball teams of tbe bigh school left for\nRepublic tbis evening to play match\ngames. It is reported tbat the local\n\u2022,'irls won snd that the local boys\nlost.\nMrs. Ignazio Fornelli, of Fife,\nvas brought lo tbe Grand Forks\nhospital this week for treatmdnt.\nthe Elkhorn Fraction, Greenwood,\naud tbe machinery is running\ns noothly. The shaft is being sunk\nan ither 70 feet and wben completed\nwill greatly increase tbe sloping\nground.\nDeath of Mrs. Annie Mc\nDougall\nMrs. Annie McDougail, aged 72\nyears and 11 months, passed peace\nfully away at her bome io this city\nearly yesterday morning after\nlingering illness wbicb latterly des.\nveloped into pleurosy of tbe lungs\nThe funeral will be held from tbe\nCatholic church, wher services will\nbe held, on Sunday morning at 10\no'clock. Interment will be made in\nEvergreen cemetery.\nThe late Mrs. McDougail was born\nGlengary, Ont., wh re she was\nraised and educated. Sbe came to\nGrand Forks with ber busband, tbe\nlate Mr. McDougail, more than\ntwenty-five years ago, and bas resided bere ever since Sbe is survived by five sons\u2014Angus E , Jobn\nand Daniel, of this city; Duncan, of\nRevelstoke, and Lennie, of Nelson.\nA daughter. Mrs. McKinnon, predeceased ber, and another son,\nJames, was k lied in tbe great war\nDeceased was an estimable lady\nwith a very wide circle of friends\nand acquaintances, al) of wbom ex\n,. J \u00bbs--s:  -. \u2022\nA Successful Settler\nBert H. Staples, of Shaunavon, Sask.,\na young man of twenty-tot r, who is\nspending Chiristmas in England, is a\ngreat booster for Canada, to which he\ncame in 1919, without farming ex\nperience or money. lie now owns a\n320 acre farm, a good house, and\nbarns, worth $8000, almost all paid\npaid for, as well as good farm machinery and stock. He is bringing\nback two friends with him in March,\nBranch offices of Japanese fleur\nmills are to be established ia Winnipeg soon, it is understood, se as to\nbe in a good position to buy wheat\nTwo representatives of the Mistin\nFlour Mills and Mitsui Grain Company, of Tokio, were in Winnipeg\nrecently making arrangements fez\nthe purchase of 150,000 tons of\nwheat for the two firms.\nS. T. HULL\nEstnbluhed 1910\nReal Estate and Insm-nice\nlu-aiili-ni Ascent Grisisil Porks Townsite\nCompany, Limited\nFarms    -{Orchards     City Property\nAgents lit Nelsou,  Calvary, Wlhnlpcg ami\nother Prairie points. Vanoouver Agent   :\nFOR A SPECIAL CUP OF TEA TRY OUR\nCHALLENGE  BRAND\nThis Tea we have   had especially blend*. J.\nCall in and ask for a sample.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25\nService and Quality\"\nPBNDBKIN\nKATTKNBU\nTMKNTS\nLANIM LTI..\nBsstpblleheil In 1910. wears in * poslllun io\nlurulsh reliable Information '\u2022oiioeriiiig thl\u00bb\ndistrict.\nWrite lisr free literature\n..... -.\u2022i-u,uiexis..e, an oi wuom ex\nTwo shifts are working daily at  tenc-their sympathies   to  members\namyt.ex.rn    tt -\u25a0\u201e\" J.:.    ttl'bb***.*.*** *.-**-:- ''\not tbe family in their sad  bereove-\nment.\nErnest Rolph, a Toronto architect,\nhas claims to the discovery of th*\nfint fossilized remains of eggs of\nprehistoric reptiles. He found then\nla a deep cutting between Lethbridge\nand MacLeod In the shape of about\n15 perfectly round stones. I'he eggi\nmeasure 2H inches in diameter and\nare now being investigated by Professor Parks of Toronto,\nIb order to create a better understanding of the game, an all-star\nteam of English badminton champions arrived in Saint John, N.B.,\nrecently and made a tour right\nacross the Dominion, exclusively on\nCanadian Pacific lines, playing exhibition games ln the largest cities.\nSir Oeorge Thomas, Bart., is captain of the team which sails for\nheme on December 80.\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\n^CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nAftent\nlsuininion Mo.iuiiicutiil Worka\nt'HAabeatoa Products Co. Hoofing;\nESTIMATES FURNISNED\nBOX 33?     BRAND FORKS, B. C |\nBARGAINS\nGet the habit of\ntrading at our\nstore\nMr. and Mrs. Tracy  Huntoo,   of\nK -public, visited friends in the city\ni. iday.\nMrs. H. V Knowles is suffering\nfrom illness and was taken to the\nOrand Fnrkr boripital today.\nMrs. Jerry Beed is reported to be\ns-'tiously ill io tbe Orand Forks\nhospital.\nNext week will be international\nweek in R'liiinlaod, and tbe fans in\nthis country will get an opportunity\ntn listen to overseas programs.\nIf. U. Bates, who operates a chain\nof camps in ths Metagama district\nof Ontario, reported to the tourist\ndepartment of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway that the record for the 1925\nseason was fourteen moose, two deer\nand one bear, taken by ten parties\nit fall hunters totalling 22 persona.\nMost of the visitors were satisfied\nas 76 percent of them made reservations for next year.\nJ, B. Mooyboer and\ni'Vtiche visited Nelson on\nday.\nHerb rt\nWedned-\nBoundary Pioneer Passes\nJobn Patrick Flood, aged 67 year*,\nind 8 months, died in the Qrand\nI-'<irkN hospital last Monday after a\nshort lllioeu of tuberculosis, said to\nhtvo been cintruded recently dur\ning un attack of pneaumonia. Tbe\nfuneral whs held at 2 o'clock Wed-\nneiidny afternoon from Holy Trinity\ncSiurch, where services wer-* held,\nond it wus very largely attended. Interment war. made in Evergreen\nc-metery.\nThe late Mr, Flood was a pinneer\nof Oreenwood, wbere be conducted\na meat market in tbe early  days of\nA prize of $1,000 weekly, offered\nby a Chicago publication for a deed\nof bravery, comes to Canada for\ntbe first time. J. B. Partridge, fireman on the Canadian Pacific Railway, on the run between Calgary,\nAlta., and Field, B.C., is to receive\nthe reward for saving the lives of\ntire men who were in danger from\na huge rock and mud slide on tha\nrieW Bill, August 21 last.\nSatan would be unable to\nrun his business if men didn't\nfurnish him so much free\nhelp.\nCanadian roses grown at Brampton, Ontario, and sent to Sir Georgt\nMcLaren Brown, European general\nmanager of tha Canadian Pacific\nRailway, stationed ln London, scored\na decided hit with Londoners. Largs\ncrowds gathered to see the Canadian\nblooms which were on display in\nthe windows of the offices of che\nCanadian Pacific Railway in Trafalgar Square.\nNOTICE  OF   GENERAL\nMEETING\nGrand Porks. Irrigation District\nMOT-ICE iB hereby given that the\n\u25a0V Annual General Meeting of the\nF.lectors of the Grand Forks Irrigation District will be held in the Community Hail, Growers' Exchange\nBuilding, Grand Forks, BM, on Feb.\n1st, 1926, at the hour of 8 o'clock in\nthe evening, for the following purposes, namely:\u2014\n(a) Statement of the financial conn\ndition of the Improvement  District.\n(b) To discuss witb the Trustees\nany matters relating to the works or\nfinances of the Improvement District.\n(c) To fix the remuneration of the\nTrustees for the ensuing year.\nO. PENNOYER,\nSecretary for Trustees.\nWe  have   exceptionally good bar*\n^j^a\u00abina  in all  our ^j\nSi    departments!\nDONALDSON'\nPhone 10\nShipYourCream to\nItie Kettle Valley\nCreamery Go.\nWap**\/ the highest price and assure\nyou thn most accurate tast. Give your\nlocal creamery your trade.\nKETTLE VALLEY CREAMERY COMPANY\nChristmas holiday passenger traffic to the British Isles was especially\nheavy this season on Canadian Pacific Railway lines. Over 1,200\npassed over these lines In the last\ntwo weeks of November, while\nothers arrived later in time to got\nthe S.S. Melita and the S.S. Metagama which sailed from Saint John,\nN.B., on December 10 and 11. Westerners all eeem to bc in very gooti\nfinancial circumstances owing tt\nthe good crops the past season.\nBRUNSWICK  DULSE Prevents GOITER\nGoiter is caused by the lack of iodine in the glands\not the throat. BRUNSWICK DULSE contains\nNature's iodine, a tasty food with a flavor all its\nown. If your grocer cannot supply you, write direct to us,enclosing ten cents for a full-size package\nISLAND DULSE COMPANY,    ST. JOHN, N. B.\nDHPABTMKNTOP LANDS\nNOTICE\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nonler iti\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks, II. C.\nAPPLICATIONS   FOR   UHAZINCl    PKII.\nMIT8 FOB TIIK SKA-JON OF 11*21!\nAPPLICATIONS for penults  to graze live\nstook on thu Crown range within each\nOrniliiK District of thu Province  of .Hritish\n-,,,......   -,*.,...   us   s.ssu   s roviuce   OI   lirltlNll\nColumbia, must bu Med with tho Distrlot\nForester at Fort George, Kamloops. Nelson,\nPrince Rupert. Vanoouver, and Williams\nLake on or before Misrch 81st, 1U26.\nBlank forms upon which to submit applications may be obtained from the District For*\nesters at the above named places, or  from\nthe Department of Lands, Victoria, B C.\nO. E. NADEN,\nDepnty Miuister of Lands.\ncpurl merit of Lands,\nVictoria, B.C.,\nJanuary 9th, 1926.\nTIIE HUB\u2014Bring your boot\nand shoe repairs to my\nshop for neat and prompt\nwork. Look for the big\nboot.\u2014 GEO.   ARM ON\nPICTURES\nc-\n^>;\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFORFINE PRINTING\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds,\nUpholstering Neatly Done\nr. c. McCutcheon\nwramnoAviMoi\nHIDE THERE ON\nA\t\nCLEVELAND\nIT bring* tiie whole oountry for miles around within easy reach.\nHave you seen the uew models] They're an graceful an swallows! As\nbright as now eoinl As weatherproof as a duck? Automobile Steel\nBoarings Frame of English Seamless Steel Tubing. Hard Maple\nRims. Hercules Brake. Everything complete, lieal Quality. Real\nValue.  Easy Terms. VVe are tbe people to mount you right.\nJ. R. MOOYBOER \u00abffitt'\nOpen Saturday Evenings Till 10 o'Cloek]\nE.C. Henniger Go.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks. R. C.\nOur\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\n-TWE value oi well-\nprinted, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult ur. before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBall programs\nBir-ins-is cards\nVi.   'ng cards\nSh';   ing tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\n\u2022Dodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNev   Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColon\nIrcnuo and\n\u2022Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nURAND F' RKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS S HANSEN, Prop, gj\n\u2022City Raggage and Ueneral\nTransfer\nCoal,  Wood and   Ice\nfor Sale,\nOffice at  R.  F.  Petrfe'i Store\nPhone 64\nYale Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty*\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYalr Fiona,   First iiikkt\nSYNOPSIS OF.\nUNDACTMNDMENTS\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nVacant, unsurvsiyed, surveyed Grow is lands\nmay be pre-empted by Hntl-ii subjeots over\n18 years of age, ami by aliens an declaring\nIntention to become British subjects, conditional upon reslienoe. occupation and Improvement for u\u201e-rsauliaral purposes.\nFull Information co.i ernim,' regulations\nregarding pre einntious Is given ln Bulletin\nNo. 1, Lan,I Series, \"How to Pre-empt baud,\"\noopies of which can be obtained freo of chnrge\nby addremilng the Depurtmeut of Lauds,\nViotorla, B.C., orsuy Government Agent.\nRecords wilt bu made ooverlng only land\nsuitable for agricultural purposes, and which\nIs uot timberland. i e\u201e carrying over &,OO0\nboard feet per aore went of tne Coast Range\naud 8,000 icct per aore east cf that range.\n^Applications for pre-emptions are to be\naddressed eo lhe Laud Commissioner ol tbe\nLand Recording Division, lu whieh the laud\napplied for Is situated.and are made on\nprinted forms, ouples of ii.m lbe obtained\nfrom tho Land Commissioner.\nPre-emptions must be oooupted for five\nyearsaud Improvement* mude tu value of $10\nper aore, Inoludlng clearing aud cultivating\nat least five aeres, before a Grown Uraut can\nbe received.\nFor more detailed Information see thc Hu I -\nlet In \"How to Pre-empt Laud.\"       _. . .   _.._,\n(PURCHASE\nApplications arc received fur purchase of\nvaoant and unreserved Crown Land., uot being timberland, fur agricultural purposes;\nminimum prloe of llrst-olass (arabl\u00ab) land Is\nl'> per aore. and seoond-class (graaing) laud\nI'-'.\/iO per aoro. Further information regarding purubase or lease uf Grown lands ls given\nIn Bulletin No. 10, Land Series. \"Purchase and\nLease of Crown Lands.\"\nHill, factory, or Industrial sites on timber\nland, not exceeding 40 aores, may be pur*\nchased or leased, ou conditions lnolndlug\npaymeut of stumpage.\nHOMESITE LEASES\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 80 acres,\nmay be leased as homesltes, conditional upon\na dwelling being 'Created In tha flrst year,\ntitle being obtainable after residenoe and\nImprovement oouditions are fulfilled and land\nhas been surveyed.\nLEASES\nFor graaing and Industrial purposes areas\nnot exoeedlng (40 acres msy be leased by one\nperson or aoompany.\nGRAZING.\nt'nde\" the Graaing Aot the Provlnee It\ndivided Into graaing districts and the range\nadministered under a Oraxing Commissioner. Annual graaing permits are\nIssued bated on numbers ranged, priority being given to established owners. Stoek-\nowners may form associations for range\nmanagement. Free, or partially free, permits\nare avatleblee Jor settler-, tampers and\ntravellers ap to ten head.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1926_01_22","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0341214","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.031111","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-118.439167","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Grand Forks, B.C. : G.A. Evans","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}