{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0341502":{"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":"1927-08-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341502\/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":" {*>\nIt is a day's work to make every man you meet glad he met you\nMOVEMENT OF\nSUMMER AND\nFALLAPPLES\nApples\nKELOWNA, August 15.\u2014Duchess\nsblpmetits haive now started\nIn good earnest. The committee ot direction has set -prices or\n$1.28 tor crates and $1.60 for wrapped. -Conditions seem to ibe favorable tor a tree movement.\nMuch Interest has been takin In\nthe Wealthies and their relation lo\nthe Ouches. The committed will\nnot permit the Wealthies to movt*\nuntll they are fully matured, according to the reports of the truit inspectors, nor until the Duchess deal is\nfairly out of the way. This will permit of the Wealthies attaining a desirable degree of maturity and attractiveness, thus helping their said\non the prlrle market.\nLater, the committee, will endeavor\nto see that the Mcintosh crop does\nnot move until well colored. Thctre\nseems no reason why iMacs should\nbe rushed on to the market, consid\ntiring their excellent keeping qualities (Pid the fact that, even if they\nhave to be picked, the grower can do\nhis sharei ln holding back his fruit in\nthe orchard without congesting the\npacking houses.\n\u25a0 On the whole, with the cooperation\nof all concerned, and with fully receptive markets, It looks as If the\nforthcoming apple season should be\nmore stpisfactory than soma that\nhave preceded lt\na. Tomatoes\nThe committee has had something\nto say about seml-ripcl tomatoes recently, and In that connection has received a statement from a jobber on\nthe prairlee which rei*ds as follows:\n\"In the past there has been a tendency on. the part of British Columbia shippers to ship a lot of Junk ln\n\u2022thfdr -tomato crates. Possibly they\ncannot be blamed, considering the\nlow prices tbat rule at the penfk of\nthe season. This class of stock just\ntctads to demoralize the market and\nneither the jobber, retailer nor consumer. Is satisfied, no matter how\ncheap It is. \/There is nothing more\naggravating to a jobber than to get\ntomatoes dead green and soft ripe in\nthe same cratta. We would mention\nthe very unfair pratice of the shippers ot including absolutely dead\ngreth tomatoes ln their crates alt the\nfirst of the season when the price ls\n\u2022at the very peak. Jobbers simply\ncannot send them out to their cus\ntomers in that condition. They therefore have to repack them and set\naside the greens to ripen, tfnd before\nthey aro ripe the price Is down 50 per\ncant We sold one customer an express shipment of about eighty cases\nwhen the price was very high.The\nwriter was present when they were\nrepacking them and they were at\nleast one-third unsaleable! and will\nbe unsaleable for at least another\nweak. This jobber had tomatoes\nrolling by freight and the only reason\nthat he bought by express web that\nhe needed them for immediate sale,\nThe jobber feels, and we agree with\nhim, that hei Is entitled to some kind\nof protection on a deal like this.\"\n1 Celery\nThe aame jobber haa the following\nto say on celery, though it ought to\nbq remarked thajt, so far as the Oka\nnagan valley is concerned, the celery\nmovement appears to have been free\nand satisfactory:\n\"This ls a commodity on which\nthel consumption a this time ot year\nIs greatly overestimated. Yesterday\nthe wri er made! the rounds of every\nfruit jobber in Calgary and with only\none exception we saw celery unfit for\naale In every jobbing housu; this ln\nthe face of the fact tbat they were\nbaying only a few crates at a time.\nWe- were just In time to see one jobbing house dumping twenty-two 50\nlb. boxes of washed celery that they\nhad brought in by eixpress.\"\nCantaloupes (\nCantaloupes are just beginning.\nThe supply ls not so lapge as last\nyear but should be ample for the\nmarket\nPotatoes\nThe price on red potatoes had to\nbe) dropped -again to $25 on' account\nof coast coast competition.   Price on\nwhites remains at $28.\nThe Nelson, Creston and Orand\nForks districts were] visited last\nweek by a special representative of\nthq committee, J. H. Aberdeen, who\nwai| \u00bbbfe to be of considerable assist\n\u2022net' to' lbe shippers there).\nThe'chairman also visited Sailmon\nArm on .Friday, August 5, and spoke\non Uie operations of the committee\nat a luncheon of the board of trade\nteiire.\n\u2014Interior Tree) Fruit and Vegetable\nCommittee of Direction.\n\\*Q\nt*_Ana KETTLE VALLEF ORCHARDIST\nTWENTY-SIXTH YEAR\u2014No 42\nTell me wbat yon Koo * It tn-\u00bb;\nI can Ineta is well at ys a.\"\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1927\nHon. Jobn Oliver Passes\nA telegram recjived  iu this city yesteriay stated that\nHon. John Oliver, premier of British Columbia, died at his\nhome in Victoria at 11:30 a.iB. Wednesday ni^ht.\nMr Oliver was born in Hartington, Derbyshire, England,\nJuly 31, 1856, and was the son of Robert and Emma Lomas\nOliver. He was educated iii the parish schools at Hartington He came co Canada in 1870; to Bri ish Columbia in\n1877. He was elected to the British Columbia legislature\nfor Delta io 1900, 1903 and 1909; leader of the Liberal opposition in 1909; unsuccessful candidate for house of corr-\nmonsin 1911; councillor of Delta, 1890 94; reeve, 1911. Hi'\nhaa been {rime minister of British Columbia since 1917. In\n1886 he married Elizabeth Woodward, and he is survived by\nhis wife, five sons and three daughters.\nIn Abyssinia\nTHE PRAIRIE\nCALGARY, August 16.\u2014Fair warm\nwchther has prevailed , during\nthu week. Harvest is expected\nto commence about August 20 at\nmany 'points. Field crops are in\nsplendid shape. Busine ss is good,\nbut profits small due to kecta competition.\nConsiderable Interest has centered\nin the royal visit to Calgary, afnd today Premier Baldwin of Great Brltl\nain will deliver an addresB.\nThere is considerate volume of\nfruit and vegetables moving from the\nOkana|gan valley. A prlcots are\nabout over. This crop was marketed in a satisfactory manner. -Supplies were rather light, with size and\nquality above the avereige. Cherries\nare also on the decline) ln volume and\nincreasing in price.\n\u25a0 The public have been satiated with\nall kinds of berries. This has been\na b*s)d seaso for berries, as the condl-\ntlonof arrival has been below the average standard and much loss has resulted to shippers, wholesalers and\nretailers. Bome ot the trouble'could\nbe improved by better marketing\nmethods, but most of it was beyond\ncontrol.\nBritish Columbia field tomatoes are\ncrowding all other kinds off tha market A more careful pack is demand\ned by the trade. 'Local hothoouse\nstuff is retailing, at a| very low figure.\nImported plums are slightly on the\ndecline. Yellow Transparent and\nDuchess apples from British Columbia ara about the only applesoffered.\nVegetables are still in good demand,\nespecially such commodities as are\nnot grown In volume; locally.\nBritish Columbia potatoes are having a heavy movement. The coast\nquotations are still below the interior\nbut the volume from the coast has\nfallen off, due to the low lprce\nreached.\nBritish Columbia peaches are\nscarce. \/Five cars of Elberta peaches\narrived in Calg-*fry yesterday from\nCalifornia,\nW. B. Gornall, assistant commissioner, fruit branch, Ottawa, visited\nCalgary this week. He mt't the Dominion frpit inspectors from Edmonton, Saskajtoon and Calgary here.\nIMr. Gornall is returning to Ottawa\nafter visiting Washington and British Columlbia fruit districts.\nHEW CHILDREN'S AID\nSOCIETY   BEING   8TARTED\nA new era in children's aid work\nln British Columbia is being started,\nwith Miss Laura Holland as organizer and superintendent of tthe home\nln Vancouver,\nAn appeal is being Bent out for\nhelp to wipe ou,t the deficit of the\nsocie-ty, to allow- the new work to be\ncommenced on a satlsf&lctory basis.\nAs there are little ones in our home\nfrom nearly ervery part of British\nColumbia and, as the need ls great,\nthe. help of everyone; is asked to save\nthe abused and neglected llttlo ones\n((nd give them at least a fighting\nchance in this lifej.\nYou are asked to be generous to\nthis cause, and help the society to\ncontinue to carry on its great work.\nEvery dollar sent in goes to help Bave\na little child. Send in your donations to the Children's Aid Society,\n2613 Wall Street, Vancouver, B. C,\ntint! on behalf of the child who will\nreceive help through that donation,\nI thank you.\u2014Mrs. S. H. Ramage,\nConvener Tag Day 1927.\n\"\u25a0Having any trouble these days\nmeeting your expenses,  BUI?\"\n\".Meeting 'em? Why, man I run\ninto 'em every time I move.\"\nSUN'8 WEEKLY TRAVELOGUE\nTHE status of Abyssinia, sup\nposedly settled a score of years\nago when England, France and\nItaly guaranteed her independence,\nis up for consideration again among\nthe guarantors. The, country is practically the last bit of Africa unappropriated by Europei)n powers, and\nsome of the powers are wondering\nwhether it would not be better after\nall to bring western civilization\u2014vnd\ncontrol\u2014into this corner of the Dark\nContinent.\nAlthough the people of Abyssinia\nmay be immersctd in medievalism,\ntheir rulers have managed to keep\npretty well up with the timee.\nOne of the most famous women\nrulers in the history of the world sat\nupon the throne of Abyssinia nearly\n3000 years ago, but the present empress of that country, a daughter of\nMenelik il, is not ejllowe'd to govern\nher people. Waizeru Zauditu ls\nmerely the nominal head of this coun\ntry, which was noted as thel home of\nthe Queen of Sheba in the days of\nSolomon. The actual ruler of Abyssinia, or Ethiopia, as its natives prefer to call it, is Has Taffari, thei regent and heir apparent, son of Ras\nMakonnen of Harc|r, and cousin to\nthe empress.\nThe United Staes has no resident\nagent in Ethiopia. Although the\nruler is very favorably disposed toward Americans, and is willing to extend unusual courtesies to them, he\nfirst makes very sure of their mission\nt|nd satisfies himself that they are\nas they represent themselves. A\nwould-be traveler may have to cool\nhis heels in Addis Abada, the capital,\nfor many weeks beiore he receives\n.permission to go about the country.\nAddis Abada ls a straggling city.\nIts principal stratus are \"paved\"\nwith round'waloiworii bolwders from\nG to 100 inches in diameter, and the\ntwo main suburban roads along the\nbale of the hill are sun'ucod wilh a\nthlnmacadam. Wheeled trofllc is un\nuncommon, most residents going\nfrom place to place on horseback. It\nis a jjourney of an hour and noli\nfrom the American mission, on one\nedge\/ of town, to the British legation,\non the other.\nA fairly good road runs from the\nresidence of Ras Taffari to that of\nthe empress, and several streets are\npassable to the haif-dozen automo,\nbiles, which are limited to the city,\nand to one road which is improved\nfor some distance! westward. Over the\ncountry as a whole there is no possibility of wheeled traffic of any kind.\nThe ride in an automobile in the\nciety ls more or less of aft adventure.\nThe streets are always filled with\npedestrians, each one of whom is obsessed with the idea that he must\ndiscover how log he can keep ln front\nof the machine by running. The native pack ponies coming to market\nare unused to ajutos and gallop wildly along the road, causing their\npacks, when loaded with hay, to slip\nsldewlse and finally benciith them.\nThe store buildings are one or two-\nstorey adobe and stono structures\ncovered with galvanized Iron rootling\nThe stocks of goods are small i.uul\nInferior, although at ono store, run\nby a Parsee, a considerable assort?\nment of articled Is for sale. Beside\nthe stores, there are the thousands\nof gra|ss-roofed huts scotteretl about\nthei hills, where the native papula\ntion lives.\nThere is no electricity, no gas, no\nwater or sewerage system, but ther\nis a \"movie.\"\nAll the town goes to the station in\nthe etvening when the train arrives\nfrom Jibuti. The caoches of the train\nare filled with all kinds stnd classes\nof people, who arrive weary and\ndirty.\nIt is only 500 miles from the coast,\nbut tho toy train has labored heavily\nfor three days to accomplish tlr\njourney. It runs only in daylight\nhours\u2014a) practice due in part to danger from, the Somalia and Danakils,\nnomadic peoples of the semi-desert,\nfor it would not be difflcalt to removo\na rail, plunder the wreck and disappear in tlm darkness\nWhen traveling ln Abyssinia thorn\nnire a few details of organization to\nwhich particular attention shold bc\npaid. Tha first ls to be well supplies) with interpreters. There should\nbe at least two, preferably man who\ndo not like each other f,or there are\nselveral hazards in having but one In\nterpreter. In the flrst plt|ce, you are\nat bis mercy, and are told only the\nthe things that he- is willing that you\nshould know. If he wishes to go a\ncertain route, he tells you that there\nis but one road. Again, he, may fall\nill a-ad thus leave you without means\ncommunication.\nA second end to be secured in organization ls discussion ln camp.\nTherei can be no concerted action\nand little indlvldualsabotage in the\nway of. delaying the marches, li\nthere are factions among tho servants. To to this end it is wise to hire\nboth Mohammedans and Christians.\nThe Mohammedans prove especially\nuseful ln tying up the Christians\nwben the latter get drunk.\nThe platelau of western Aysslnla\nslopes upwards from the low plains\nof the Sudan. It rises gradually\nhigher iftti higher until the extreme,\neastern edge ls reached.\nHere it breaks abruptly into a\ngreat escarpment,, the first drop being one of 5000 feet. Its surface is\ncut by streams, tbe larger of which\nhave eroded canyons of greejt extent\nand of forbidding depths. The aspect\nof the country is extremely mountainous, but for the most part this\nappearance; is due to erosion   ,\nThe canyons Interpose great dim-\nties in traveling. They necessitate\neither very hazardous descents and\nclimbs or time-taking detours ot\nmany miles. The trails, as far\npossible, follow the'high ground.\nSeventy-five miles north-east of\nAddis Abadai (about six days by\nhorseback) lie's Ankober, situated on\na peak in the breaks of the eaatern\nescarpment.. Tbe traveler sights it\nhours before his arrival, but he is\ncompelled to drop down thousands\nof feet to cross a, stream and then\nrecllmb to an almost equal elevation.\nThe sides of the canyon are very precipitous and, although the trail zigzags back afnd forth, it Ib extremely\nsteep.\nAnkober was founded by Amada\nYesus about 1760. -It consists of a\nneedle-like peak, surmounted by a\ncitadel wbich includes an lnclosure\ntind a couple of houses, one of which\nbelongs to the ruler. There are several lines of defeases of a type perfected as a barrier to spearmen,\nThere are; also three of four guardhouses on the path which leads to the\ncrest. About the hill lie a few scat-\ntared huts and on either side is n\nchurch.\nThe view from the peak at the corner of the plateau is magnificent. To\nthe north and west are lines of crags\nrocky pinnacles and forbidding\nchasms eroded from the escarpment.\nTo the northwest the escarpment\nrises like a wall From the southwest to northeast the plain of the\nHawash rivetr sweeps ln a great curve\n\u2014miles and miles of blue-black acacia; grasslands that fade away in the\nlower levels of intangible streaks of\nwhite).\nThe Ambaras belong to the Coptic\nchurch, a branch of the Christian\nfaith. In their services the priests\noften encircle the church dancing, or\ndance before it,' as was the custom\nof the Jews in Biblical times.\nLATEST VESSEL\nTO SKIM OCEAN\n*A\nFRENCH    naval     engineer\nnamed Jean-Paul Michel hae\nInvented an ocean liner that\nisnhalf ship and half airplane.\nThe new ocean vehicle, which li\ncalled tbe Greyhound of the Seat is\nguaranteed to have a speed of SO\nmiles an hour and to cross the Atlantic In 60 hours.\nIt is unlike any other boat or airplane that ha|s ever been built, although an Italian company at Genoa\nis now constructing a \"mystery boat\"\nalong somewhat the same lines.\nThe Greyhound of tbe Sea) will be\ndriven by two big ah- propellers at\nthe bow, just like an airplane or seaplane-, and instead of riding through\nthe water like a ship it will glide\nover the top of the waves. There)\nwill, be an air rudder and also a water\nrudder, but there are no underwater\npropellers. The ship has large skids\nunderneath to help it slide along the\nwaves.\n\"I know exactly how It will perform when it ls finished,\" Michel,\nwho Is a graduate ot the leading\nFrench technical school, explained\nthe other day.\n\"I have been testing out different\nmodels for almost fifteen years, afnd\nI finally found one that fulfilled all\nmy expectations.\n\"Tho first big experimental ship,\nwhich is about 1500 feet long and has\naccommodations for thirty passengers, is now being built in my ship-\nyr.|s'd near Toulon. It is more than\nbalf finished, and the first thing I am\ngoing to do when lt is all ready is to\ntake a trip to New York. I am going to make it ln two days and three\nnights.\n\"I think my invention will upset all\nexisting ideas qbout navigation, and\nparticularly tba] propulsion of warships.\"\nBut the strangest thing about the\nGreyhound of the Sea is that it will\ncarry practically no fuel aside from\na little oil for ah emergency motor.\nMichel also has invented a process\nof extracting sodium from the' sea,\ntransforming it on board ship into a\ngas and using this gas to run a spe-\ncir,(l motor ha has adapted to lt, but\nthe details of the invention are carefully guarded.\nThe most important room on board\nhis new ship will be a big laboratory\nnear the stern, where a chemist will\nbe constantly on duty to supervise\ntbis chemical process.\nHe claims there is such an abundance of this fuel in thel ocean that\nhe could travel on it as long as his\nship held together, but just as a precaution he fs going to install a littles\nDiesel motor and take on a) little fuel\noil, this precaution being omitted\naftre the new system has been fully\ntried out.\nIn appearance the Greyhound of\nthe Sea will look something like a\nsubmarine, wltb horizontal fins at the\nsides, riding the surf; pe of the water.\nThe top will be entirely enclosed\nexcept for a promenade deck near\nthe stern. The ship will be some-\nless, of course. It will not be able\nto fly, although at high speed it would\nsimply ski macross the whftecaps.\nIt Ib being built of very thin steel,\nin order to be as light as posslgle,\nand lt is difficult to foresee how it\nwill behave in a hee-vy sea.\nThe high speed will be attained by\nreducing friction with the sea rather\nthan powerful motors.\nWINESAPS PREDOMINATE\nIN THE NORTHWEST\nAPPLE   PRODUCTION\nWe reproduce the following from\nthe Chiccago Packer to showthev varieties of apples and the proportional\nquantity produced in the North Western states.\nWe especially ctfl attention to the\nWinesap and Newtown varieties.\nThese figures will show the preponderance of the Winesap production.\nGrowers south of Penticton should\nread and mark the possibilities they\nhave in growing this variety:\nAt arecent shippers' conference\nheld in Seattle, ajt which apple shippers from all parts of thel Northwest\nwere present, an estimate, by varieties, was made for the coming season. The estimates, which include\nall of Washington, Oregon and ldafio,\nwere as follows:\nCars.\nWlnesaps     13,626\nJonathans      7,450\nnoma Beauty     \u00ab,000\nHONEYMOONS BY AIR\nPOPULAR IN  ENGLAND\nLondon, August 18.\u2014Many more\nwomen use) the airplane service between England and the conUnent\nthan men. There has been a large\nincrease ita the number of young\nhoneymooners who travel by air\nrather than put up with the discomforts of crosa\/channel steamer\ntravel. Close observers say that\nthe women seemt much more at\nbome several thousand feet ln tho\nair thi.li the male passenger. Increased facilities for flying now\nmake it possible for the wealthy\nwoman to leave Croydon in the\nmorning, fly to Paris for shopping,\nand be back In England In time for\nwomen bave majde several such\ntrips this season.\nDelicious        3,200\nNewtowns        2,000\nSpltzenbergs         1,500\nStayman a         1,000\nMiscellaneous  varieties        4,776\nWith thc short crops forecust In\npractically every other apple produo-\ningsoctlon nf tho country, growers in\nthe Northwest are anticipating a season of satisfactory prices. < t\nTHE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n3te (grand f arb \u00a7utt\nG. A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANOE\nOne Year (in Canada and Qreat Britain) f 1.00\nOne Year (in the United States)    1.50\n^Address* -\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014-cations to\nsiThk Grand Porks Sun\nPhosk 101 Guand Forks, B C\nOFFICE:   -COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STKKET.\nFRIDAY. AUGUST 19, 1927\nNotes \u2022 Notions \u2022 Notables\nLEFT turns wrongly niaile, are probably the caiuse of\nMore minor accidents and trallic congestion than any\nother traffic error. A sweeping turn to the right beforo\nturning left causes both confusion ami congestion and\nleads to a|cordents. Failure to signal before! turning left\nalso leads to accidents. Turning left is safe and simple\nIf the rulel in the law is followed. It requires a driver\nIntending to turn left, to approach the intersection fn the\nlane immediately to thei right of the center of the roadway. He must give a signal by extending the right arm,\nor by some other dt(vice plainly visible to drivers in the\nrear. Having signaled, other vehicles going in the same\ndirection may pass him on thel right, legally, safely, and\nwithout delay.\nCHEMICAL alarm clocks to spouse sleepy potatoes and\nother plant cuttings from their lethargy and start\nthem into growth wcleks before their usual time, were\ndescribed to the National Academy of Science recently\nby Dr. Frank E. Denny, of thc> Boyce Thompson institute.\nYonkers, N. Y. \"The potato tubers when freshly harvested fjre dormant, and will not sprout if planted at once\nunder growig conditions, the rest period lasting ffpm one\nto fo.ir \u2022O-onthB in different varieties of potatoes,\" said\nDoctor Denny. \"This period of inactivity may be shortened by treating the tubers with various chemicals. .The\ngain in time of sprouting is about two to six weeksL depending on the! variety of the potato afid the stage of dormancy at the time the treatment is applied. Twigs of\napple, grape, lilac also have this dormant -[kiriod in autumn, (.(nd the buds of these species can ibe forced into\nehrly growth by treatment with oertain of these chemicals, the gain in time of budding or blooming ranging from one to nine weeks.\" The chemicals used by\nDr. Demny include thiocyantes, thiourea and ethylene\ncblorhydrln.\nmated tbat at the upper and lower limits of hearing it\ntakes a m| llion times as much energy to make sound\naudible! as in the range of 1000 to 5000 cycles, where the\near is most sensitive. On the rapiio the sounds \"th,'\nf,\" \"s\" and \"v\" are the most difficult to hear correctly.\nThis is attributed chiefly to their very weak energy.\nA CHINESE boy in the employ of a Russian family at\nHarbin discovered that 1,500,000 ruble notes were kept\nin an old box. Dazzled by this wealth thei boy succumbed\nto temptation and departed with the money without even\nclaiming |100 of his savings which he had intrusteld for\nsafekeeping to his employers. As the present ntarket\nrajte for rubles ls only about two cents per thousand, the\nunfortunate thief has suffered a loss of $70.\nCj-fATHO will be the flrst woman to fly over the North\n** -pole?\" asked Dr. Oeorge Wegener, president of\nthe Berlin College of Commerce) at the recent convention\nln Berlin of the International Society for the Exploration\nof Arctic Regions by Airship. Doctor Wegener said that\nwas the only part of the world not invaded by women,\nand he predicted that one of tbe fair sex will be) there ln\nthe nea fruture.\nIN .THE Academy of Nature\". Sciences ln Philadelphia\nthere is what is thought to be oldest dring ln the\nworld, unless there are some older ones embodied ln the\nearth, which Ib where this one came from. It Is a specimen of calcite crystal in whioh there is a cavity sev\u00abral\ninches long ahd in this there Ib about half a gill of liquid,\npresumably water, ffhe institution is tho oldest ln tne\ncountry and the specimen has been there almost from tbe\nbuginning, but until recently it has never been on public\nview. During its stay at the academy there has been no\nnoticeable diminution of the material inclosed in the\nspecimen.. There are other such specimens, but tbJs is\nthe largest known and has qualities which make it quite\nvaluable in the eyes of the scientists who are watching\nit to sefe if the contents become changed in a\/ny way.\nThis was uncovered in Rossie, N. Y., ln 1838. In one variety of blue quartz from Bucks county, Pennsylvania,\nin addition to the bubble, there are1 minute crystals which\nare constanly to motion, which has possibly been continuing for millions of yeafrs.\nTlie Spice of Life\nHOUSEKEEPING    WAS   NOT   HER\nSPECIALTY |\nIn Charles Hanson Towne's recent\ninteresting autobiography, \"Adventures in Editing,\" he gives an amusing example of what mischief the\ntypesetter can play with serious\npoetry, by even the slightest of typographical errors The lighthouse\u2014,\nthat noble beacon of cheer and hope,\nstetjdfaBt amid the tumult of tbe elements\u2014has long been a favorite object with poets addictdd to simile. In\nher turn, Ella Wheeler Wilcox employed it in a poem sent to a maga-\nzlnei edited by Mr. Towne.\n\"She had opened a certain set of\nverses,\" he relates, \"with onei of her\nmost cosmic lines, typlcif of her\nstyle, 'My soul is a lighthouse keeper,' but the printer In setting it up\ncaused it to read, 'My soul is a light\nhousekeeper.' Mrs. Wilcox never\nforgave that lynotyper, and neither\ndid I;and her followers must have\nthought their beloved leader had\ngone out of her mind.\",.\nHousekeeping, even of tbe light variety, is a-n art ln which any woman\nmay take pride ln being proficient;\nbut for one aspiring to be a modern\nSappho its proper place is distinctly\nin the background.\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for\nColds     Headache     Neuritis        Lumbago\nPain       Neuralgia     Toothache     Rheumatism\nDOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART\nTHE formation of a society of scientists representing\nall countries tha,t border on the Pacific ocean, to bt\nknown as the Pacific Science association, has been announced by Prof. Heirbert E. Gregory of the Bishop mu\nseum of Honolulu. Meetings are to be held in the varl\nous parts of the vast area in which these men work, nit\nintervals of three years, when problems relating to ocean\ndepths and currents, volcanoes and earthquakes, the\nplc-nt and animal life of the sea and its shores, and all\nother scientific questions concerning the Pacific will be\ndlscuBse-d. Among the nations now interested are Canada, the United States, Japan, China, Russia, Australia\nNew Zealand and the Dutch East Indies. The first stept\ntoward the dstablishroent of the new organization were\ntaken at the reoent meeting of the Pan-Paciflc Science\ncongnlss at Tokyo.\nM\nANY New Yorkers are, entertained during the lunch\nhour by the little music stores placed at strategic\npoints on'side streets to catch noonday idlers. Thel music\nfan often buys phonograph records and sheet music' but\nmore often he visits thes; store merely to listen to the\nlatest \"hot number\" played by a jazz expert on a piano\nthat reveals in its tone thet results of -reels* and tear.\ntSW^\nAccept only \"Bayer\" package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 18 tableta\nAlso bottles of it and 100\u2014Druggists.\nAspirin to Um trails sulk (rsflstsrsa la Osnsds) of Barer Maonfsctrira af IfoMtntss.\nacMaatar of Ssllcrllcucld lAntrl BaUt-rUc Add, \"A. 8. A.\"). WMls It Is -mil -atraa\nOut Aspirin tanas Bant- m\u00bbniifs\u00abtir\u00bb, to assist tho public sislnst laUUUotaa, Uw TlslsaB\not Bajar Oonoaar will ba aUmpsd with thslr a-aoaral traSa aula*, lho \"Bs-sar Onoa,\"\nw\nHAT may prove to be the earliest British doll's house\nhas been discovere|d in an old country house in\nChelmford. It is a two-storied house about five feet high,\nbuilt of solidoak, -ful contains four large rooms, attics\nand a balcony on top. The legs on which the house is\nmounted and the paneling and the mirrors are, it is said,\nof definite Queen Anne design and workmanship.\nACCORDING to a Chicago paper a society belle ls being held In connection with a holdup. fWell, if she\nis guilty, they might be able to wring a confession from\nher. j; ^jf!\nTHB mummy of an eighteen-year-old Egyptian horse\nceremoniously buried ln a huge wooden coffin som,'\n3000 yeafs ago, has been set up in the Cairo musenim\nThe old horse had been carefully wrapped in cloth anc\nthe legs were doubled up and tied with ropes of papy\nrus. The coffin was white, trimmed with bands of yel\nlow and red. British officials who found thel horse neai\nSakkart| said that it was a powerfully buflt animal ir\ngood condition and it apparently was never shod.\nSTRANGERS, cats and dogs are approaching too neai\nthe home of Wesley Holden of Franklin, N. H. The*,\nget the fright of their lives when they seei his nove!\nwajtchdog. It is a ,pet alligator that has been theire three\nyears. It measures four feet from ti'p to tip. The alii\ngator has the libe|rty of certain rooms and for brief in\ntervals has been allowed in the yard, and has never\nhajrmed anybody. Most people) do not approach near\nennough to be harmed.\nEXPLORING the sub-surface structure of the earth by\nradio, Prof. Peltrovsky of the Leningrad Geological\ninstitute, has successfully located and measured deposits\nof iron ore antl coal in the Ural mountains. The short\nradio wav lengths arc| debected by large masses of mineral and metal ores, no matter how deeply they be buried,\nho| asserts.\nANEW glider record weis established at Passltten.\nGerm-any, when Ferdinand Schulz remained in th<\nair for 14 hours and 8 minutes fn a one-seat glider. The\nprirVious record was held by a Frenchman named Mas-\nsaux, who remt-lne in the air slightly more than 10 hours\nand 19 minutes.\nEVEN though the eleven western states possess most\nof the American -potential water power, during 1926\nst(\u00bb|-n plants to generate electricity were erected ln\nthose states in nearly the same proportion as hydro\nelectric plants, says the New England Utility News.\nHydro-tflectric plant capacity was increased by about\n155,000 horsepower antl that of fuel-burning plants' by\n1-15,000 horsepower.\nSIXTY* years ago the Victoria cross was presented for\ntho first time. This order of merit was instituted amd\nconl'erretl for the purpose of recognizing acts of signal\nbravery to the British queen (or king) and country\nsoldiers or sailors engaged in warfare. It originated\nin connection with the Crimean war, and the first crosses\nwere made from the Russian cannon captured at Sebas-\ntopol. The most coveted of all British decora|tions is\nopen to all officers and man of the regular, auxiliary and\nreserve forces of the empire.\nPoems From EasternLands\nCHINA\nCELEBRATING A HUNTING EXPEDITION\nOur chariots were well built and firm,\nWell-matched our stefeds, and fleet and strong,\nFour, sleek and large, eaph chariot drew,\nAnd eastward thus we drove along.\nOur hunting cars were) light and good,\nEach with its team of noble steeds.\nStill further east we took the way\nTo Foo-mere's grassy plains that leads.\nLoud-voiced, the masters of the chase\nArranged the huntsmen, high and low.\nWhile banners streajmed, and' ox-tails flew,\nWe sought the prey on distant Gaou\nEach with full team, the princes cam<e,\nA lengthened train in bright array.\nIn gold-wrought slippers, knee-caps rial,\nThey looked as on an ajudience day.\nEach right thumb wore the metal guard;\nOn the left arm Its shield was bound.\nIn unison the arrows flew;\nThe game lay piled upon the ground.\nThe leaders' of the tawny teia(ms\nSped on their caourse, direct and true.\nThe drivers perfect skill displayed;\nLike blow well aimed each arrow flew.\nNeighing and pleased, the steeds returned;\nThe bannered lines back slowly catae.\nNo jostling rude disgraced the crowd;\nThe king declined large share of game.\nSo did this famous hunt proceed!\nSo freel it was from clamorous sound 1\nWell does our king become his place,\n' And high the deeds hiB reign have crowned!\nSPEECH requires a small amount of energy, according\nto telephone engineiers,-who explain that if a million\npersona were to talk steadily, and this energy of their\nvoices were to be converted into heat, they would helve\nto talk for an hour and a half to produce sufficient heat\nto make a cupful of tea. One acoustic export haa divided\nthe English speech into :'(i letter sounds, and he found\ntheft   the   vowejls carry most of the energy.   It is esti-\no4ncient History*\n(COMPILED FROM TWENTY-YEAR OLD 8UN FILE8.'\nA gentleman sent a dispatch to this city from Phoenix\nlast Monday morning and then boarded a train for Grand\nKorks. When he arrived in the city he leairned that he\nhad outstripped the message* here. The mile-a-mlnute\nthrains in the east are not in it with the Boundary downgrade flyers .\nAt Cascade, thei hydro-electric plant is not in use. It\nhas been placed in good shape, however, and will be kept\nas a reseirve should anything happen to thb line from\nBonnington Falls.\nR. T. Lowery has wearied of the coast climate and has\nresumed operations on his G*jae.**.wood Ledge.\nDuring the Imte hot wave, the-tbenpometelr is said to\nhave gone up to 113 in the shade at Midway.\n-f\nJohn Simpson, B.A., thel new principal of the Phoenix\npublic school, is visiting his sister, Mrs. Ed Stuart, in\nthis city.\nKING ALBERT'S LITTLE 8TROLL\nKings arel expected to be good linguists. Albert of Belgium speaks\nseveral languages, even Including\nsome good idioma-tic American, picked up during his early unofficial visit\nto the United States. But he does\nnot speak Swedish, and during his\nvisit to Stockmolm for the wedding\nof his son, Prince Leopold, to Princess Astrid of Sweden, he got into\ndifficulties, when he went out for a\nwalk, unattended, ununlformed, wearing a comfortable felt hat, earlyy in\nthe morning.\n\"On his return,\" sap's Het Laatste\nNleuws of Brussels, \"wheta he was\nabout to enter the palace, tbe sentinels did not recognizci him and refused to let him go ln.\n\"Je suis le roi des   Beiges,\"   Baid\nthe king ln French, but the soldiers\ndid   not   understand him.   Then he\ntried in English:\n\"I am the king of Belgium.\"\nBut, as the sentinetls still did not\nunderstnd, he finally said in German;\n\"Ich bin der konlg von Gelgien!\"\nBut the soldieirs only replied :\n\u2022'Nobody is allowed to enter.\"\nThe king wafe in despair    Then he\nremetmbered a few words of Swedish\nand endeavored to make the soldiers\nunderstand    in their   own language!\nthat he was king of Belgium.\n\"Rung Belg! Rung Belg!\" he repeated, but the soldiers understood\nstill less.\n\"I believe he is. mad,\" said one of\nthem. \"You go and waj-n the policci\nI will watch him- in the meantime.\"\nOne of the soldiers went to the\nsergeant-major, who came at once,\nand with the greatest astonishment\nsaw it was the king of Belgium. At\nlast the door weJb open to him. -He\nwalked laughing into the palace and\ntold his adventure. King Gustaf of\nSweden was much amused and said:\n\"You see! That comes from wearing a hat with a broad brlm.__We\nvery nearly never saw either the\" hat\nor the king again!\"\nONE OF BARNUM'S TRICKS\nThere are many stories\u2014somo apocryphal no doubt, but all amusing\u2014\nabout the great showman, P. T. Barnum. For one of them Moreton\nFrewen, the English economist, ls responsible.\n(Once, he says, on arriving in New\nYork he found the city placarded by\nBarnum with huge posters announcing that the last of the buffalo herds,\nbrought from Montana, would be on\nview ln his New Jevrsey show on a\ncertain day. At that time the only\nwary of getting from New York to\nNew Jersey was by taking one! of a\nfleet ot nuge steam ferries that plied\nto and fro across the .Hudson river.\nThe day arrived, and such a vast\nthrong crowded tbe ferries tha*., although the fare\u2014normally twenty-\nfive cants\u2014 was doubled, there was\nstill barely standing room on the\nboats. When the great show was\ncrammed to its utmost capacity, Bar-\nnum himself announced through a\nmegaphonq that the buffalo herd had\nstampeded when only a few miles\nawafy at Trenton, but that every disappointed sightsqer there would receive back his entrance fee as he\nwent out through the turnstiles. He\nhoped that a free view of his beasts\nand of the tattooed lady would compensate! them for their disarppoint-\nment.\nA little later it leaked out that the\nshrewd showman had hired all the\nferry boats that day between New\nYork and Jersey City and hojtl made\na small fortune out of the credulous\nNew York crowd.\n\"You say you made that dress for\n|30?\"\n\"Yes; goods cost only |45 a yard.\"\nCITY HEAL  ESTATE\nFOR SALE\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, arc invited.\nPri ^es:--From $35.09 per lot upwards.\nTerms t--Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may be seen at the\nCity'Office.\nJOHN \\. niJTTON.\n-    City Clerk.\nSometimes the informality\nof the spoken word\nis more effective\nthan a letter.\n'LONG DISTANCE, PLEASE\"\nBritish  Columbia Telephone\nCompany\njiiuiiiiijiiij [imniiiJjfjjiNiiiJifniiii! HNiiuiuiMiiJHJiiiWiu^injjJiiiiniiJiiMiJiiinMininHmifjjiiiiiiniNiif!!^\nTHE SUN prints all the loeal news\nand carries a number of interesting\nfeatures found in no other Boundary\npaper   $1.00 per year THB SUN: GBAND FOBKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nCROWN COLONY\nDAYS\nAwny hack in tlu*- sixties thousands of\nacres nf Hritish Colt . mbin's limber wore\nsold for \u00abno e\u00ab-ii(- pet acre, which looked\nlike n fnir price\u2014'then. 1'o\u00bbd\u00bbiy similar\nlintbrr is worth from SI50 to SS200 nn\nacre, so tremendously hns timher appreciated in value within the scope of tin\naverage lifetime.\nWhat   the young growlh of to-day will\nbe worth sixty y ars from now is beyond\ncomputation if  it is protected from fire\nand allotted to icnoli maturity.\nThe m -ml is obvious.\nPREVENT FOREST FIRES\nYOU GAN HELP\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST SERVICE\n1927 GAME LAWS\nEA8TERN\nGAME\nDISTRICT\u2014BIG\nMoose\nMoose, ot all male sez, ln that portion of the electoral district ot Omineca situate and lying to the north ot\nthe main line of the Canadian National   railway,   formerly known as the\nThe temporary Game Regulations\ntor 1927. gazetted May 19, have beon Grand\" \"T'runk Faciflc'raUwayT and~n\nwithdrawn and retplaced with a com'\nplete set, gazetted on June 30. In\npublishing the regulations so far\nahead of the opening of the shooting\nseason, the game board is showing a\nmeasure of readiness in meeting tho\nwishers of sportsmen. In 1925, the regulations did not appear in the B. C.\n.Oaaette until August 27. Publication\nwas made laat year on July 29 and\nthis year a month earlier.\nMountain Sheep\nMountain sheep, of the male sex,\nthe Eastern district, ln that portion\nthereof situate and lying to the north\nof the main line of the Canadian National railway, formerly known as\nthe-Grand Trunk Pacific railway, and\nin those portions of the electoral districts of Cariboo and Lillooet situate\nand lying to the south of the 52nd\nparallel of latitude and west of the\nFraser river, open season from September 1 to November 15.\nIn the electoral districts of Fernie,\nCranbrook and  Columbia, open season from October l to October 31.\nMountain Goat\nMountain goat, in the Eaatern district, except tha portion thereof de-i\nscriber as follows:  \"Commencing at\na point on the international boundary\nwhere It is Intersected by the center\nline of the Columbia river;   thence\nnortherly along the said center line\nof the Columbia river to the Arrow\nlakes;     thence    northerly  along  th\ncenter   line   of the Arrow lakes and\nColumbia river to the Canadian Fa-\n*ciflc railway; thence westerly following   the   boundary   of   township 6,\nrange 26, west of the 6th meridian,\nbeing a point south of Yale; thence\neast   along   the north boundaries of\ntownship 6,. ranges 26 and 25, to the\neasterly boundary of the watershed\nof the Fraser river; thence southerly\n1 along the easterly    boundary of the\n| said  watershed to the International\n| boundary line; thence easterly along\nsaid   international   boundary to the\npoint of commencement,\"  open season from September 1 to Decembsr\n15.\nBear\nBear (except White or Kermodei\nBear), in the Eastern district, open\nseason from September l to June' 30,\n1928.\nProvided   that   no   bear shall be\ntrapped ln the Eastern district.\nDeer\nDeer (Mule, White-tail and Coast),\nbucks only, throughout the Eastern\ndistrict (except White-tall Deer in\nNorth and Soutti Okanagan and Similkameen  elector--*,!  districts   and  in\nthe electoral districts of Atlin, Fort\nGeorge and Cariboo, open season\nfrom September 1 to December 15.\nIn the electoral district of Columbia, except that portion thereof situate and lying west of the Columbia' the Orand Forks-flreenwood electoral\nriver,   open   season from October 1J district west of the summit of the\nThe principal change is in the realignment of the garnet blstricts. The\nNorthern district has been abolished,\nahd the province Ib now divided Into\nEastern and Western districts only.\nThe Western district is defined\nMidway    mountains),    open    season\ntrom September 1 to December 16\nto October 31. '\nCaribou\nCaribou, of the male sex, lit theEas- j \t\ntern district    (qxcept the    electoral! FUR-BEARING ANIMALS\ndistrict of Cariboo Bituate and lying! ta ^ Eastern district, all fur-bear-\nto the west of the Fraser river, and' ing animals (except Beaver and\nthat further portion of he Eastern j Muskrats), open season from No vern\ndistrict situate and lying to the south ber 16 to April 30, 1928.\nof the main line of the Canadian Pa\ncific railway), open season from Sep-\n'\u25a0all that section of the province situ-  te*a!ber -1 ** December 16.\nate and lying to the) west of the summit of the cascade mountains and\nsouth of the electoral district of Atlin.\" The EastcA-n district includes\nall the remainder of (he province.\nThe dates given of   opening   and\nclosing of seasons are inclusive.\nWapiti (Elk)\nWapiti (Elk?),-of the male sex, in\ntiie electoral districts of Fernfe,Cran-\nbrook and Columbia, except that portion of the Columbia electoral district\nsituate and lying to the west of the' a\u00bb!\nColumbia river, open season from Oc-'\nIn the Eastern district, Muskrats\nand Beaver, open season from March\n16 1928, to April 36, 192.8\nGAME BIRDS\nDucks\nDucks    (except   wood , and Eider\nDucks), Wilson Snipe, Coots, Geese\ntober l to October 15.\net Economic*! Tttatportttioa\npflostfl\n^ mazing\nQuality\nin Chevrolet History\nQUALITY in design. Quality in construction. Quality in appearance.\nQuality in performance. Never beforo\nhas any low-priced car possessed them to\n\u2022uch an amazing degree\u2014because no other\nlow-priced car combines the progressiveneft\nA*t Chevrolet and the diversified experience,\nthe vast resources and the matchless facilities\nof General Motors.\nStudy today's Chevrolet. Mark well the aristocratic beauty of its lines\u2014the Superbly\nexecuted details of its Fisher-built bodies.\nThen go for a ride. Revel in the thrilling\n\u2022purt when you \"step on the gas\". Delight\nin the smooth operation\u2014the swift sweep of\nthe passing miles. Marvel at tha way the car\nhugs the road, the ease with which it obeys\ntiie steering wheel, the promptness with whicli\nit responds to the brakes.\nHero Is quality expressed in terms that mil.\nlions now can understand and enjoy. Hero\nis quality obtainable at New, Lower Prices,\nwhich reflect the savings of tremendous production and which demonstrate the willingness to share these savings with the public, t .\nHere Is a car of amazing quality ... for\n\u2022rerybody, everywhere. at%na\nNew and Lower Prices\ntj\nTouring\nRoadster \u2022 \u2022\nSport Roadster\nCoupe \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nCabriolet > t\nCoach ...\nSedan   \u2022'.'\u2022'\u25a0\nf 643 Landau Sedan    . *915\n>   645 Imperial\n720 Landau Sedan    \u2022 933\n765 1-Ton\n873 Truck Chassis    . 633\n730 Roadster Delivery 643\n850 Commercial Chassis 483\nPrice, st Vactory, Oshawa, Ontario\u2014Taxes Extra\n1. R. MQOTBOER, Grand Forks, B.C.\nGRAND FORKS GARAGE, Pentioton, B.C.\nPRODUCT OP GENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA, LrTTED\nBrant, throughout the Eastern\ndistrict, , open season from September 15 to December 31.\nGrouse and Ptarmigan\nBlue Grouse only, in the Eastern\ndistrict, in that portion thereof\nknown as the Grand Forks-Greenwood electoral district and that portion of the Similkameen electoral\ndistrict situate and lying east of Allison creek, the South Similkameen\nriver and the Pasayton river, open\nseason from September 15 to October 16.\nGrouse (Blue and Willow) and\n(Ptarmigan (except Prairie Chicken\nor Sharp-tailed Grouse), in the Eastern district, in that portion thereof\nknown as the Cariboo electoral district, open season from September\n15 to November 15. In the remain\nder of the Eastern district (except\nthe electoral districts of Omineca,\nSkeena, Fort George, Atlin, North\nandSouth Okanagan, open season\nfrom September 15 to October 15,\nPtarmigan, ln the Eastern district,\nln that portion thereof known as tbe\nelectoral districts ot Omlneca.Skeena\nFort George and Atlin, open season\nfrom September 15 to November 15,\nPrairie Chicken or Sharp-tailed\nGrouse, in the Eastern district, ln\nthat portion thereof known as the\nelectoral district of Fort George,\nsituate and lying to the north and\neast of the Rocky mountains, open\nseason from September l to October 15. In the Eastern district, in\nthose portions of the electoral dis?\ntricts of Cariboo and Lillooet, situate\nand lying to the south of the 53rd\nfor a thousand years or more, the sub\nJefct of preparing the leaf for consumption has become a fine art and\na ceremony, but the full delicious refreshment and healthful stimulation\nmay bt) extracted from the fragrant\ntea-leaves lf the following rules are\nfollowed eyactly:\nRule No. 1\u2014The best quality of\ntaa must be used. The tea also must\nbe fresh, to yield the full goodness.\nRule No. 2\u2014The quality of the water used will affect tho bavor of the\nbeverage In the cup. Draw fresh\ncold water and bring it to a hard bubbly boll. Never use. water that has\nbeen boiled before. Sometimes chlo-\nIne put in water to purify it will completely cbange the flavor of the tea.\nThe water is to blame, however, and\nnot the tea.\n\u2022Rule No. 3\u2014It is proper that only\na crockery or china teapot be, used,\nnever one of metal or any other substance if the pure and delicious flavor of thel tea is to be drawn out. Tea\nlikewise should, never be enclosed in\na hetal tea-ball.\nRule No. 4\u2014The tuapot must be\nscalded out with boiling water and\nwhile it is warm, place in it one level\nteaspoonful of tea for each cup required.\nRule No. 5\u2014Now pour the boiling\nwater on the leaves. Allow to steep\nin a warm place for we minutes.\nStir Just sufficiently to diffuse the\nfull strength of thetea. Then pour\ntbe lipuid off the leaves lntoanother\nheated vessel, unless served immediately. If poured off ln this way, tbe\ntea will not tako on bitter taste.which\neven the finest tea will do unless\nprevented from over-steeping. Tea\nmade according to these rules will be\nfragrant, dedlcious and completely\nsatisfying.\nparallel of latitude, open season from\nOctober 15 to October 31.\nQuail\nQuail, ln the Eastern district, in\nthat portion thereof known as the\nelectoral district of Similkameen and\nSouth Okanagan, open season from\nOctober 15 to November 15.\nPheasants\nPheasants, cock birds only, in the\nEastern district; in the electoral district bf South Okanagan; that portion of the Similkameen electoral\ndistrict situate and lying to the east\nof Allison creek, the South Similkameen riVer and the Pasayton river;\nln the electoral district of North\nOkanagan (except that portion situate and lying to the east of the Coldstream municipality), and in the municipality and district municipality\nof Salmon Arm, open season from\nOctober 15 to November 15.\nCock birds only, in the Eastern district, in the North Okanagan electoral district, comprising that certain\nparcel or tract of land lying within\nthe drainage area of Duteau, Harris\nand Bessette creeks, and being\nbounded on the north by the Creigh-\nton valley Vernon road, on the west\nby the eastern boundary of Coldstream municipality, and on the\nsouth by the south boundary of the\nNorth Okanagan electoral district,\nopen season from October 15 to October 31.\nCock birds only, ln the Eastern\ndistrict, in thai-portion of the electoral dlstric of Creston situate and lying to the west Kootenay Landing,\nopen season from October 15 to October 16.\nCock birds only, in the Eastern\ndistrict, in that portion of the doctoral district of Lillooet along the\nFraser river from Big Bar creek on\nthe north to Texas creek on the\nsouth, extending a distance of ten\nmiles on the west side of the Fraser\nriver and for a distance of thirty-five\nmiles on the east side of the said\nriver, open season from October 16\nto October 31.\nEuropean Partridge\nEuropean Partridge, in the Eastern district, in the electoral districts\nof Similkameen and North and South\nOkanagan, open season from October\n15 to November 16.\nIn the Eastern district, in that portion thereof known as the municipality of Salmon Arm, open season\nfrom November 1 to November 15\nWapiti (Elk), Moose and Mountain!    Brant\u2014Dally bag limit, 10;   total\nGoat.\u2014Throughout   the   province   no \u25a0 bag limit, 60.\nperson shall at any time kill or take\nor have ln their possession during\nthe open season more than one wapiti (elk), one moose and two mountain goat.\nGame Birds\nPheasants (cock birds only).\u2014Except ln the electoral district ot Creston: Daily bag limit, 44; total bag\nlimit, 16. In the electoral district of\nCreston: Daily bag limit, 3; total\nbag limit, 6.\nQuail.\u2014Daily bag limit, 10; total\nbag limit, 100.\nGrouse and Ptarmigan (except Prai\nrle Chicken or Sharp-tailed Grouse.\u2014\nDally bag limit, 6 of one species or\n12 of all species; total bag limit, 50\nln the aggregate.\nPrairie    Chicken   or    Sharp-tailed\nGrouse.\u2014In the electoral district of\nFort   George: Daily    bag   limit, 6; ! M,8S Ca-*'enne*\ntotal bag limit, 60.   In the electoral' and   act  aB \"\ndistricts   of   Cariboo  and   Lillooet:\nDally bag limit, 3; total hag limit, 12.\nEuropean Partridge.\u2014Daily bag\nlimit, 4; total bag limit, 16.\nDucks.\u2014Daily bag limit, 20; total\nbag limit, 150.\nGeese.\u2014Daily bag limit, 10; total\nbag limit, 60.\nWilson Snipe.\u2014Daily bag limit, 25;\ntotal bag limit; 150.\nCoots.\u2014Dally bag limit, 25; total\nbag limit, 150.\nEvery person, upon the request of\nanyy constable or game warden,\nshall furnish satisfactory proof to\nhim of the locality and dates on\nwhich any game was by him killed\nor taken.\nThe open season declared by the\nregulations do not apply to the hunting, taking or having in possession\nof quail, pheasants, prairie chicken\n(sharp-tailed grouse) or partrldgeB\nwhen snow is on the ground.\nSLY PSYCHOLOGY\n\"Wby   did   you   tell that man he\nlooks like a Greek god?\"\n\"As  an intelligence  test,\"  replied\nIf he begins to smirk\nhe believed It, tt will\nshow he ls halt moron.\"\nSALESMANSHIP\nMrs. Stouter\u2014I want a five-pound\nbox of chocolates.\nClerk\u2014Yes, madam. We are now\ngiving a reducing free free with\nevery purchase.\nBAG   LIMIT8\nBig Game\nDeer.\u2014No person anywhere in the\nEastern distrlot shall kill or take or\nhave in their possession during   the\nopen season more than two deer, all\nof which must be of the male sex.\nBear.\u2014No person anywhere in the\nprovince   shall   at   any time kill or\nake or have in their possession during   the   open season more than two\ngrizzly bear and three bear   of   any\nother species.\nMountain Sheep.\u2014Jn that portion\nof the province north of the main\nline of the Canadian National railway, formerly known as the Grand\nTrunk Pacific railway, no person\nshall at any time kill or take or have\nin their possession more than two1\nmountain sheep. In the electoral\ndistricts ot Fernie, Cranbrook and\nColumbia, and in tbose portions of\nthe Cariboo and Lillooet electoral\ndistricts situate and lying to the1\nsouth of the 52nd parallel of latitude\nand west of the Fraser river, no person shall at any time kill or take or\nbave ln their possession more tban\none mountain sheep. I\nCaribou.\u2014'In that portion of tlie\nEastern district lying to the north of\nthe main line of the Canadian Na-,\ntional railway, formerly known as:\nthe Grand Trunk Pacific railway, no\nperson shall at any time kill or take'\nor have ih their possession during\nthe open season more than two\ncaribou, and ln those portions of the\nEastern district lying to the souLh\nof the Canadian National railway,\nformerly known as the Grand Trunk\nPacific railway, no person' shall at\nany time kill or take or have in their\npossession . during the open season\nmore than one caribou. i\nOO YOU WANT\nTHE PEOPLE\nTO READ YOUR\nADVERTISEMENT\nPeople take The Sun\nbecause they ijbelieve\nit is worth the price we\ncharge for it. It is\ntherefore reasonable to\nsuppose that they read\nits contents,including\nadvertisraents. This\nis not always the case\nwifh newspapers that\nare offered as premiums with chromos or\nlottery tickets\nWE DO NOT\nWANT CHARITY\nADVERTISING-\nAdvertising \"to help\nthe editor.\" But we do\nwant businessadvertis-\ning 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 THB8DN:  GBAND FOBKS, BBTTISH COLUMBIA\nMality\nTEA\naoa\nPaying less can only mean poor tea.\nHINTS M THE\nNEWS OFTHE CITY\nAmotor car driven liy N. L, Ul '\u25a0\nne'H und  occujiliil   DSSitlsi  lilm   hy\nDonovan uud Mr. Ollvor, iu  lur.\nout for another car in-ar- lho huwiu.s,\nat Clirlstliui luku on    Friday, got Ion\nneejr to the edge of roud, uml It turned    turtle   uud rolled down Into tho\nriver.   ,'Mr.    Mclnnis    was    severely\nbruised and battered, but alter spend\nrag   a   couple   of duyu in the Grand\nForks   hospital   he ls apparcmtly us\ngood as he eper wilt onco more.   Air.\nDonovan also sustained some bruises,\nbut    thel   other    gentleman  escaped\nwithout any injury.\nwho Is now living at Portland, Ore,,\nis iponding his vuciillmi at Clii'lsllnii\nlaid   und with his purents ln ihlsolly.\nTlio    hi'iivy    ruins on  Wodnesday\ni, forost  rungors  sny, afmosi on-\nulluiinuted    tho  danger  from\n\u2022\u20221 In  Ihis district this sum-\nMrs A. Llndgren, of Christian Vol-\nloy, was a Grund Forks visitor yos-\ntoi'duy.\n.Mr. und Mrs. Harry Bosworth, of\nRossland, formerly of this city, are\nspending u couple of weieks at Chris-\nt In: f lake.\nMiss -Ruth Burns, u gra|duats nurse\nwho has been matron of a number\nof hospitals in this provinco and in\nWashington, daughter of Mr. und\nMrs. M'. H. Burns oi' this city, was\nmarried In Spokane last week to\nFrsjik Hahn, a well-known farm im\nplelment dealer of Colville, Wash.\nMr. and Mrs. Hahn are spending their\nhoneymoon at the home of the bride's\nparents in this city and at Christina\nlakci.\nA demonstration car from Quebec\nwhich the demontrators claimed had\nbeen on the road continuously for\nthirteen months, extracted some attention on the streets on Tuesday\nevening.\n'Mr. and Mrs. II. H. Henderson and\nfarlly relturned ou Friday evening\nfrom a week's vacation spent at the\nhome of Mrs. Henderson's parents\nDear Colville, Wash.\nJ. A. Bertois and daughter Miiry.\nof Cascade, were in the city yester\nday.\nColin McDougail, of Nelson, arrived\nIn the city last Friday and has been\n\u25a0pending the present week here.\n\"Tack\" Cook, formerly of this city\nThomas Chapman, an old-timer of\nGrand Forks, bas returned to the\ncity to take a pasition ln McKinnon's\nstore.\nMr. Morton, who has bcien clerk in\n.McKinnon's store for a considerable\ntime, left on Wednesday for Edmonton, Alta).\nMiss Ruth Holm, of Hilltop, and\nHarry Royce, oi' Greenwood, were\nmarried  in  this  city  on  Wednesday.\nA young child of Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Thompson, of Cascade, died\nin the Grand Forks hospital on Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Larsen, of\nCascade, were Grand Forks visitors on Wednesday.\nE. D. He|ll, of the Trail Bulletin,\nwas ln the city en Wednesday.\nAGENTS\u2014EITHER SEX\u2014$75 weekly easy selling i'AiLOO CLEANERS,\nWASHO, POU9HRITE. Cleans\neverything. Homovcls Road Tat*\nwithout injury to paint. Sells on\ndemonstration. Samples free. P.\nA. LBFEBVRE & OO., Alexandria,\nOnt.\nHalt the people are worrying about\nbeing found out\u2014the other half about\nbeing taken ln.\nBY   ERWIN   GREER\nQUIT  WORRYING  AND  ENJOY\nYOURSELF\nAfter i'li-vun months of work mid\nwory comes the auto tour which is to\nput us back on our physical and\nnihiilal hoofs us good us new. It\nshould do It because there is not li\ning \"l-o under the uun that gives a\nparson euch u complete chunge. The\nair, wilier, sky, scenery, people aud\niood- ull aro different. Any change\nso rudlcul must have an Immediate\nogoct.\nHowever, If the tourist continues\nto lug along his worries, a large, part\nof the beneflt of touring Is nullified.\nWorry Is hofrdor to stop than work.\nuome peoplo worry natuaily. They\nworry If thti And themselves not worrying up to their usual standard.\nSuch people sliould take extra precautions to eliminate causes of worry\nThe most common worry that\nkiiops u tourist's face tis long as a\npump handle relate to his home property. Will the house burn down?\nWill burglars work lt over? Will\nthe Water pipes break or the gas get\nloose? Did I leave the phonograph\nwound up tight? Did I leave the garbage in thei kitchen?\nOf course, by lee|ving the wife at\nhomo such worries could be eliminated, but thei worry of wondering\nwrat she might be doing would counterbalance it.\nThere is only one line of action to\ntake: Fully insure- the house, garage\nand furniture and see that Vacancy\nPermits r're attached to all Are policies. Cut the wator off at the house\nsill, shut the gas off at the meter,\nopen the bain switch of the elclctrlc\ncircuit Put all valuable papers in\na lockbox in a bank vault. Bulkier\nvaluable objects should be boxed and\nleft with a bank for general storage,\nPay up all current bills, stop the\ndaily papeira, mow the lawn and lug\nthe lawnmower under the house\nHaving done these things letup into\nthai car and hie away. If anything\nhappens you are not to blame. This\nis about all a nitm can do unless he\nhires a policeman to watcb the premises and a detective to watch* the\npoliceman.\nLeave unnecessary items at home.\nYou don't need a crowbar, an armchair, a radio, or a piano. All you\nneed Is a tent, cots, blankets, stove\nand  dishes.   A  three-gallon preserv\ning kettle is a flne thing to take.\nIt can be usud to carry water, to\nwash dishes in or to put up fruit.\nRoad worries can be avoided in a\nlttrge part by a proper ante-mortem\nhorse sense.\nWatch thei other fellow\u2014remember It's all tn a lifetime\u2014and bye and\nbye you will forget to worry on your\ntrips.   What's Uie use, anyway?\nHELP WANTED\nMan of the House\u2014Don't say anything to your mistress, cook, but bave\nyou a policeman calling on you In tbe\nkitchen?\nCook\u2014No, sir.\nMan of tbe House\u2014Well, try to get\none. We must bave somebody to\nhelp eat up thq cold ham.\nTHE   REAL   DIFFERENCE\nRecently ln school a class was reciting gnummar.   The teacher asked:\n\"Ruth, wbat ls the difference   between   an intransitive   verb   and a\ntransitive verb?\"   The answer was:\n''On-*-   ls   transitive amd the other\nisn't.\"\nGet Your\nGroceries\nat the\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25 \"Service and Quality\" I\nRoyal Train Is Canadian Pacific's Finest\nmi   1* T?,e \"-\u25a0\"\"5\u00ab \u2022***\"** ,*>*> *hc \u00ab*rlnc\u00ab-\u00ab cor ''Strathcnnu.\"     2. interior ef loanae section of the \"Mount\nStephen,\" ono of the Private ciirsi at the dlaposinl of  the  PrtnetM.    -*. \"2S0fS\u00bb typa locomotive that  will\nhaul royal trnln iliirliiic mnjor portion of Journey.     4. Section of the Royal train .honing- tho \"Went-\nsvorth,\" one of the private cam uaed by Premier Baldwin.\nUNDOUBTEDLY the finest train\n_ ever assembled for any occasion bore their Royal Highnesses\nThe Prince of Wales, Prince George,\nand Premier and Mrs. Baldwin\nfrom the Windsor Street Station in\nMontreal recently on their journey\nwestward across the Continent.\nFrom their observation platform at\nthe rear of the \"Mount Stephen,\"\nwhere the Prince of Wales will\nsmile his greetings to thousands of\nCanadians across the Dominion, In\nthe private cars placed at the disposal of Premier Baldwin, the train\nresembled more in appointment the\nmost exclusive club, finishings and\nappointments beinir in every way\nfitting for such distinguisheii\nguests  of  Canada.\nDays before tho Empress nf\nAustralia, bearing tho Princes and\nPremier to Quebec, steamed up the\ngrey -waters of the St. Lawrence,\nthe yards of the Canadian Pacific\nwere a scene pf more than usual\nactivity, interest centering around\nthe Royal train being assembled\nthere. The finest private cars of\nthe Company were assembled, the\nMount Stephen and the Strathcona\nfor Their Royal Highnesses, and\nthe Wentworth and the Killamey\nfor Premier and Mrs. Baldwin. The\nRupertslund and the Van Home\nwere placed at thc disposal of Premier King nnd members of the\nPrinces' party. Thc Mount Stephen used hy the Princes as\ntheir dining room anel also as\na general lounge car is finished in walnut, the glassware\nand silver fittings being set off by\nblue toned rugs, hangings and upholstery. The Stiiithcona, containing  the  sleeping  quarters  of  thc\nPrince of Wales and Prince George,\nis also finished in dark walnut.\nThe coverings of the beds are all\nin royal blue while those of their\naides-de-camp are in water Ihluo\nof a shaded Bilk. Premier Baldwin's private cars, located near tho\nfront of the train, are furnished in\nthe same manner, supplied with\nradio and Oitthophonic. The Wentworth is finished in mahogany\nwhile the Killamey is in walnut.\nIn addition to the private cars are\na number of compartment Glen cars\nfor the use of officials and others\nwho will accompany tho train\nacross the continent. The most\npowerful locomotives in use on tbe\nC.P.R. will haul the special train\nduring the major part of the journey across Canada to thc Rockies,\nthis being the G-3-d type of the\n2300 class.\nGRAND   FORKS-tBREENWOOD\nDISTRICT.\nNn.  16-30 COOPER   BRIDGE.\nvENDBRS are invited for tbe fill\nIng in of theapprocfches of the\nOooper Bridge, the quantity being\napproximately 4,000 cu. yds., tbe\nmaterial to be taken from the roadway immediately west of the bridge.\nThere will be approximately a 6 ft.\noutting on  the present\" roald-\nThe material required to fill In\nthe south end will have to be hauled\nover the new bridge or the contractor may, at his own expense, purchase the material at any place he\nwishes. No classified material will\nbe allowed.\nTenderers are asked to quote a\nunit price per cu. yd., tenders to be\nforwarded to the DISTRICT ENGINEER'S OFFICE, PENTICTON, B.\nC, with a certified cheque covering\n10 (per cent of the amount of the\ntender. -\nTenders will close at 5:00 p.m.\non the 26th day of August, 1927.\nAny further information may be\nobtained from Mr. Donaldson, General Foreman, Court House, Grand\nKorks, B. C.\nP. PHMJP,\nDeputy Minister and\nPublic Works Engineer.\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B. C,\n16th   August,   1927.\nCANCELLATION   DF  RESERVE.\n\u2022NOTICEIS HKRKY'IIVEN that thc reserve\nIt covering Lots S006s, 3007s, 3008* and\n3000s, Similkameen Division ol Yale District,\nIs cancelled.\n6. It. NADEN,\n... Deputy Minister of Lands.\nDepartment of Lands,\nVietnria, H.C.\n15th July, 10:27.\ns\nDONALDSON\nUl.3\u00bb\u00bbM,:i,',\"\u2022\u2022*\u2022'*    ' \u25a0   'V :.i-i'\u25a0\nPfcone SO\n.' **\\*'>*'*\",*.'C*^ \u25a0\u2022\u201e''-'\nTry our Special Tea\n~ot    .. .65c per lb\nShoes, Shirts, Overalls\nGood values for your\nmoney.\nCall and see [us before\npurchasing.\nJOHN  DONALDSON\nGeneral Merchant\nGBAND F   BKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS \u00bb HANSEN. Props\nCity Hag&ige and General\nTransfer\nCoal,  Wood and   Ice\nfor Sale\nE. C. Henniger Co.\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks, 11. C.\nOur\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\n.**3\n'jPIIli value of well-\n-*\u25a0 printed, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable bus-\ninegsthas been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBail programs\nBusiness cards\nVi \u2022\u25a0 ng cards\nSh* \u2022\" iug tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNote head 3\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters v\nMenus\nNew Typo\nLatest Style\nFaces\nSYNOPSIS OF\nLANOACTAMENOMENTS\nPRE-EMPTIONS\n^Vacant, iiiir.serveil, surveyed Crown land)\nmay be pre-empted Ity Brut li subjects over\n18 -rears ol aire, aud by alien, on declaring\niutentloiito become Brititb subjeots, coudl-\nI tional upon resi leuee. ssceuuatiuu aud Ira-\nj prov.nieiitforuirrlculiaiul purposes\nFull Information concerning regulations\nregarding pre-e-niitlous is glveu In Bulletin\nNo. 1, Lrii I Series, \"How to Pre-empt Land.\"\ncoplesu' wl.lohcaus\u00bbobtaliiedfreoofcbnra*e\nby addressing the Department, of Lands,\n| Viotorla, B.O.. or any Government agent.\nKeoords will bo made or-verlng ouly land\nsuitable lor agi Icuiturai pu rs-,,,,...,, ,ud ws,sJsj\nIs uot timberland. I e\u201e c\u00bbrrvl\u201e,j over 6,000\nboard feat per acre wen ol tne Coast Rang*\nand 81)00 feet per aore cast of that ransm\n^Applications fur ii-e-emptlons are to be\naddressed to tbe Laud Commissioner ol Ik*\nLaud KeoordlngDlvislou, lu wbich the land\nappllod for Is situated, and are made ou\nprinted forma, ooplcs ol en be obtalued\ntrom the Laud Commissioner.,\nPre-emptions must he  ooouplcd for Rt*\nycersaiid Improvement, made to value of 110 -\nporaore, InoluliugelSiirlnsf and cultivating.\nal least Hve acres, beiore u Crown Uraut emi\nbe received.\" \\\nFor more derailed iiitoriuanoii seethe Hut.\nletin'-How to Pre-empt Lind,\"\nPURCHAb*\nApplications arc received for purohaaa ol\nvacant and unreserved Crowu Lauds, not being timberland, for agricultural purposes'\nminimum prloe of ilrst-olass (arable) laud Is\n\u00bb per aore. and seoond-class (graalug) land\n*-.t~ per acre. Fur'her Information regard'\nlug purchase or lease of Crown lauds Is given'\nlu Bulletin No. lo, Laud Scries \"Pui chase and\nLease of Crown Lands.',\nMill, factory, or liidiitrial sites ou timber\nland, not exoeediug to aores, may ba purohased or leased, on oonditlous Iueludlng\npayment ol stumpage.\nHUMtblll-   I <*:a8E8 ;\nTHE SUN\nColumbia Avenue and\nlake Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nPalaceBarber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty*\nOffice  at  R.  F.  Petrie's Store\nPliose 64\nP. A  Z. PARE, Proprietor\n..FIRST 8T, NEXT P. BURNS\/\nUusurteyed areas, not exceeding so acre\",\nmay bo leased as homesites, conditional upon\na duelliug belug e eoted lu tha flrst year,\ntitle being obtainable alter residence and\nimprovement condition, sre fulfilled and land\nhaa beeu surveyed.:,\nLEASES       r---|\nFor graaing and industrial Purposes treat\nnot exoeedlng 640 acres may be leased by ona\nparson or a oompany.\nP GRAZING.\nVnder the Graaing Aot the Province la\ndivided luto grailng districts aud the rang*\nadministered under a Qraxing Com-\nmissioner. Annual graaing permits are\nlasued band ou numbers ranged, priority being- given to established ownera. Stoek\nowners may form associations for rang*\nmanagement. Freo, or partially frea, permits\narc available for settler., tampers end\ntravellers np to ten head.\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nealer lo\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks. B. C.\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER J\nt-iant\nlronilnion Monumental Worka Q\nl_Aabeatoa Produca Co. KooBn-^H\n\u2022 -r estimates furjusned: kiri\nBOX 332        .MANO FORKS, B.C\nPICTURES\nAMD PICTURE FRAMIKB\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlao Repairing of all Kinda.\nUpholstering Neatly Done\nR. G. HoGDTGflBON\nwunurwAvtsui","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_1927_08_19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0341502","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"}]}}