{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0341795":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"22a6270a-b40b-4bea-9776-1d2fe060a3d5","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":"1922-01-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341795\/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":" li IWjUMiii Ubeaty\nGRAM) FORKS Jut\nthe center of Qrand Forks valley, the\npremier fruit growing district of\nSouthern British Columbia. Mining\nand lumbering are also important\nindustries in districts contiguous to\nthe city.\nC 1^0%?\n\u2022\n1\ns\nKettle Valley Orchardist\nTHF *\\\\\\W -3 t,ie favorite new\u00bb-\n1 UU *J%Jx?*\\ paper 0\u00a3 tije citjWM\nof the district. It is read by more\npeople in the city and valley than any\nother paper because it is fearless, reliable, clean, bright and entertaining.\nIt is always independent but never\nneutral.\nTWENTY-FIRST YEAR\u2014No  12\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY,  JANUARY 27, 1922\nfTell me what you Know It true:\nS3 c*o tams as well as you.\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nWANTSA RAISE\nNew Pump Also an Item\nof Expense That Gity\nMay Have to Bear This\nYear\nThe fint regular meeting ot th e\nnew city council was held on Moon\nday evening, Mayor Hull and all\nlhe aldermen with the exoeptioo of\nAid. MoDooald being present.\nTbe clerk reported the result of\nthe recent civio election.\nClinton Atwood addressed the\ncouncil, claiming that an insufficient\ndescription bad been given of tbe\ntwo horses recently advertised and\nsold by poundmaster, and he wished\nfo regain ownership of them. The\ncouncil promised to go rs far as it\ncould towards attaining this end.\nLater in tbe eveniog (be matter was\nreferred to a committee, with instructions to secure, if possible, the\nrelease ot the animals from tbeir\npurchasers and to turn them over to\ntheir former owner on payment of\ncosts. '\nA resolution was adopeed author\nizing the mayor and the city clerk\nto sign all cheques and public docu\nment.\nThe fire chief submitted his report\nA circular letter from the minister\nof public works expressed thanks to\nmunicipalities for assistance given\ntbe government in connection with\nthe change of tbe rule of the road.\nAn offer of $100 from Peny Ab\nbott fo. the Well wood property in\nWest end was not accepted. Tbe\nclerk was instructed to write to Mr.\nAbbott and to tell bim tbat the upset price of this property is 1300.\nA letter from P. B. Freeland\nstated that the .water pipe to his\nresidence was not of sufficient\nsice to supply the amount of water\nrequired. Referred to water and\nligbt committee.\nA letter from the Remington\nTypewriter company ct**ss plafhed of\nits traveling representative being compelled to pay a license,\nIt asked for a refund of tbe money\non the ground that the man inspect-\ned the machines in the city and\noften repaired them gratis. -The\ncouncil was of the opinion that\nthere were men in the city capable\nof doing tbe repair work, and took\nno action.\nA letter trom the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company, Rossland,\nnotified the council tbat after tbe\nfint of February the rate (or power\nwould be increased from 2\u00a3c to 3c\nper k.w. hour. The water and ligbt\ncommittee was instructed to take\nthe matter up with Manager Campbell and to endoavor to secure an\nannulment of the order, or at least a\npostponement of tbe date at wbicb\nthe company proposes to put it into\nforce,\nThe chairman of the water and\nlight committee reported tbat, in\nhis opinion, it would be economy\nfor the city to replace one of tbe\npumps in tbe pumping station with\na new pump during the coming\nsummer. Tbe matter was discussed\nat some length and then referred to\nthe water and light committee for\nfurther investigation.\nThe mayor suggested that fittings\nbe secured so that a temporary connection can be made between two\nhydrants witb a fire hose when a\nmain is being repaired between the\ntwo pofnts The suggestion was fa\nvorably acted upon.\nThe chairman of tbe water and\nligbt committee reported that he\nhad made a hurried examination ol\ntbe goods stored in old school house\nin tbe West end, and tbat be bad\nfound a number of articles in tbe\nbuilding.\nThe mayor reported that the Yale\nbiidge had been completed and. tbat\nthe eld one was being torn down.\nThe clerk was instructed to communicate with Percy Abbott, the\nchiropractor, and lo ascertain bis\nqualifications for practicing without\na license.\nA disoussion on tbe pound bylaw\ntook about an hour and a half of\nthe council's time. Some of tbe\nkinks were straightened out and a\nnumber of instructions were formulated for tbe poundmaster.\nA temporary loan bylaw was introduced and advanced to the third\nreading stage.\nTHE HIGH COST\nOF LAUGHING\nsr* 'l-.'-l.f.'d   t    fl     f\nivrlV       lr\/\/ ,\/   & \/>'\ni ' VffY \u2022Hli ii-     it*, # ^\nTHE   NEEDED LAST WORD\nTommy\u2014\"Look here, we've had enough nonsense.   I want the money!\"\nr\nFruit Growers HoldMeet-\ning and Ask for Enlightenment on Many Marketing Subjects\nWritten for The Sun br\nD. B. cTWELROSE\nThe race on earth now living,\nmust be supplied witb fun, eacb one\nhis share is giving until said race is\nrnn; Theie's every kind of gladness\nmixed up here with our eadnear,\nand goodness knows there's bad\"\nness since tbis old race begun.\nThere're pastimes here so thrilling our hearts turn upside down,\nsome pull off stunts that's killing,\nworse tban a circus clown. For we\nmust have things funny to catch\nour surplus money, I'll tell the\nwhole world, sonny, our sorrows we\nmust drown.\nWhen Ruth and Dempsey 're\nbusy tbeir swat-bills must be paid,\nwitb fame tbat makes us dizzy tbeir\nfortunes they have made; When\nChaplin starts in mocking, some\npoor lame guy when walking, we\ndig down in our stocking and make\nan awful raid.\nSome smart guy writes a story\nthat taftee like \"margarine,\" we\nload him down with glory and buy\nhis limousine; Tbe movie stars are\nwealthy, tbeir bank rolls look quite\nhealthy, they sneak our coin quite\nstealthy, and leave ua not a bean.\nBut we must smile and giggle,\nand keep our spirits higb, as long\nae we oan wiggle we won't lay off\nand die; We just forget our sorrow,\nand think not of tomorrow, and\nwhen we're broke we borrow from\nsome poor easy guy.\nThe money spent for pleasure\nwould make an awful pile, but we\ncan't hoard our treasure because it's\nnot the Btyle; There ain't no fun in\ncrying, no time on earth for sighing, it'* time enough when dying to\nsober up. a while.'\nWith oue cent from each dollar\nthat's spent on fun and glee, I'd\nsport a diamond collar and have a\nglorious spree; And wben my race\nwas finished, my pile might be\ndiminished, but I would be distinguished\u2014a great celebrity.\nmeeting and gave a full account of\nthe work tbat bad been done in bis\ndepartment up to date. He invited\nall interested parties to sail at bis\noffice in the old court bouse to inspect tbe plans and profiles, and to\nget the lay and elevation of their\nland in order to enable tbem to pre-\npar for the distribution of the\nwater when the system is completed.\nTbe fixing of truestess' salaries\nrequired a great deil of discussion\nbefore a figure could be agreed upon.\nThere were very few extreme economists present of the opinion that\nthe truatees should donate their\nThat good progress on the Work of\" services.   Nearly all felt  that, dur-\nTITO BE\nFINISHED JULY 1\nAnnual Ratepayers Meeting Informed That Construction Work Is Progressing Satisfactorily\nTHE WEATHER\nThe following is the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\nday during the past week, as recorded by the government thermometer on E. F. Law's ranch:\nMax.   Min.\nJan.   20\u2014Fridav  18 9\n21\u2014Saturday  24        14\n22- Sunday  27 0\n23\u2014Monday  21       -4\n24 -Tuesday..;.... 36        17\n25\u2014Wednesday.. 29 6\n26   Thursday  36        20\nInches\nSnowfall    5.1\nH. V.   Craig,   registrar  for the\nYale 'and district, with headquar\nters at Kamloops, has resigned hia\nposition aod will hereafter praotioe\nhis profession at Kelowna.\ninstalling the irrigation system, and\ntbat tbe contract called for Unit 1 to\nbe completed by July 1, was the\nstatement made by the trustees at\nthe annual meeting of the ratepayers of the Qrand Forks improvement distriot in the Davis hall on\nWednesday evening. The meeting\nwas largely attended. Chairman\nMcCallum was prevented from at\ntending by illness, and C. A. S. Atwood was chosen chairman and C.\nC. Heaven secretary.\nTrustee Glaspell gave a resume ot\nthe work done by the ^trustees dur\ning the past year, and then read tbe\nauditor's report, which stated that\nthe books had been neatly and correctly kept and that vouchers bad\nbeen attached to all bills. Tbe\nbooks showed that the board of\ntruetrees bad received up to tbe present time from tbe provincial con\nservaticn fund $9,126.45 by tbe\npassage of money bylaws, and tbat\nthe total expenditures had been\n18,508.98, leaving a balance in tbe\ntreasury of 9617.47, Tbe disbursements bad been principally for engineers' and secretary's salaries, tbe\nconstruction of pump bouse and\npump foundation, the purchase of\nsome stores from the Oranby company, and payment or miscellaneous\naccounts. Mr. Glaspell took particular pains to explain each item\nof the disbursements in order that\nthere might ge no misapprehension.\nHe pointed out that a saving of over\n1600 had been effected by having\nthe pump house and pump foundation constructed by day labor instead of letting the contract to the\nlowest tender.\nThomas Powers thought a saving\nshould be effected in tbe adminie-\ntraiive affairr of the district by {petitioning the lieutenant-governor in\noounoil for permission to change the\nconstitution so as to provide for but\ntbree trustees instead of five. Some\ntime was consumed in discussing\nthe 'question, but it was finally\nagreed to lay the matter over until\nthe question of trustees' salaries had\nbeen disposed of, and after that was\ndone the meeting decided to take\nno action in4he matter.\nMajor Gnham, ihe enigneer in\ncharge of the work, addressed   the\ning the construction peiiod at last,\ntbe trustees would bave to devote a\ngreat deal of their time to the work,\nand it would not be right to ask\ntbem to work for nothing. Tbe\nfinal outcome wae tbat the meeting\ndecided to pay tbem $5 per meeting\nfor twelve meetings per year,'witb\ntbe privilege of tbeir holding twenty\nfive meetings per year during tbe\nconstruction period at the same rate\noi remuneration\u201495 per meeting,\nor (125 for the twenty-five meetings.\nThe remuneration for tbe paet year\nwas set 95 per meeting for twenty-\nfive meetings.\nThe proceedings were harmonious\nthroughout, and everyone present\nseemed anxious to do everything he\ncould to speed the work along.\nThose from No, 1 unit were in particularly high spirits at the pros-\nof getting water on their lands during the oomiog summer. Work oo\nthe other units will be started when\ntbe money is available.\nLAUDS MINISTER\nR.   E.   Beattie   Explains\nWhy He Opened Seat in\n' East Kootenay for Dr.\nJ. H. King\nFOSTER'S FORECAST\nWashington, Jan. 24.\u2014The week\ncentering on January 29 will average warmer than usual on meridian\n90 from tbe Gulf of Mexico to the\nfar north. The high temperature of\ntbat disturbance will be in northwestern Canada about January 27,on\nand all along meridian 90 on January 29, and in eastern sections January 31. A cold wave will be io\nnorthwestern Canada near January\n29, on meridian 90 January 31, and\nin eastern sections February 2.\nTbe last week of January will\nbring to meridian 90 one of the\nthree warmest periods of the month,\nand the week centering on January\n22 has been counted as the coldest\nof tbe month on meridian 90. Ail\nthese weather features reach the far\nwest and far northwest abont two\ndays before and eastern sections\nabout two days after they cross meridian 90.\nRather quiet last part of January;\nnot much rain or snow; bad for winter wheat. These conditions will\ncontinue, with warmer than usual,\ntill tbe week centering on February\n12.\nVictoria, Jan. 24.\u2014Declaring tbat\nHon. J. H. King, newly appointed\nminister pf public works in tbe federal government, was tbe only man\nin whose favor he would resign bis\nseat in East Kootenay,It. E. Beattie,\nwbo won that constituency by a substantial majority on December 6,\nissued a statement today in Victoria\nto the effect that he thought be was\nserving the best interests of his supporters by giving way to tbe new\nminister, who bad been chosen by\nPremier Mackenzie King to administer what is perhaps the most important department in the Dominion government.\n\"I was greatly honored by tbe\nelectors ot East Kootey when they\nreturned me by a substantial majority,\" said Mr. Beattie today, \"but\nin consideration of the work done\nin British Columbia by lion, Mr.\nKing during the past five years, and\nhis selection by Premier King, I feel\ntbat I am serving the interests of\nmy constituency and Canada as a\nwhole by relinquishing my seal io\nbis favor.\n\"Hon. Dr. King is the only man\nin tbe west for wbom I wonld take\ntbis step,\" said Mr. Beattie. \"For\ntwenty-five years we pioneered in\nsoutheastern British Columbia, and\nmucb as I would like to go to Ottawa, I feel that there something\ngreater tban my personal interests.\nTherefore I have decided to retire\nin favor of Dr. King, who knows\nconditions in tbe west better than\nthan anyone else. He bas been personally interested in tbe development of the lumheriog, coal mining\nand quartz mining industries in\nwestern Canada and has become an\nauthority upon highway extension.\nThe system of good roads in British\nColumbia is largely due to tbe activity of Hon. Dr. King, and good\nare necessary to the development\nof my constituency.\n\"I have been placed in a ratber\nembarrassing position aod it has\nbeen difficult for me to make a decision,\" said Mr. Beattie, \"but I feel\nthat I have acted in tbe best interests of those wbo supported me.\"\nTwo sheets of foolscap filled with\ninterrogations were propounded by\nlocal fruit growers at a meeting held\nin tbe G.W.V.A. ball ou Tuesday\nevening. C. E. Barnes, president\nof the British Columbia Fruit Growers association, will be expected\nto answer these questions when\nbe visits our city on Tuesday,\nthe 31st inst. In order to give him\ntime to obtain data for tbese an*\nswere, tbe meeting decided to mail\nhim a typewritten copy of the quel*\nti ns at once.\nTbe meeting was one of the moat\nrepresentative gatherings of fruit\ngrowers ever beld io tbe city. Robert Mann, of the local aseociation,\noccupied the chair and Horticulturist Black acted as secretary.\nQuestions were submitted by nearly\neverybody in the hall, and they covered every conceivable subject in\nconnection with the marketing of\nfruit. As about every orchardist in\nthe valley was present at tbe meet*\ning, and know what transpired, no\nadvantage is to be gained by giving\nwider publicity to tbe troubles and\ngrievances of the ranchers by printing tbe questions at this time.\nJeff Davis made a business\nto Greenwood on Monday.\nvisit\nSteady Growth of B, G.\nPopulation Shown by\nthe Census Figures\nOttawa, Jan. 25.\u2014The Dominion\nbureau of statistics this afternnon\nissued, subject to correction, the population ot British Columbia by electoral districts and by cities, as shown\nby returns of the sixth census. 1921.\nThe increase in British Columbia's\npopulation ab shown will also mean\nincreased representation from that\nprovince in the house of commons following the next redistribution.\nAt present British Columbia sends\nthirteen members to the house of\ncommons. Its population of 523,369\nwill entitle it to fifteen members.\nThe figures for cities place Vancouver's population at 116,700, a\ngrowth of 16.299; Victoria, 38,182,\ngrowth of 7022; New Westminster,\n14,410, a growth of 1241.\nProvince 523.369\nElectoral districts\u2014\nBurrard  69,119\nCariboo  48,977\nComox Atlin  32,017\nFraser Valley  23,766\nKootenay East   19,133\nKootenap West  30,045\nNanaimo   48,017\nNew Westminster   45,879\nSkeena  29,352\nVancou ver Centre  60,663\nVancouver South   45,965\nVictoria City  38,695\nYale  35,679\nCities, towns and  municipalities\u2014\nAlberni        997\nArmstrong         979\nCranbrook     2,880\nChilliwack     1,762\nCumberland      3,180\nCourtenay        806\nDuncan     1,179\nEnderby        776\nFernie ...   4,145\nFort George..,        290\nGrandForks     1,441\nGreenwood        371\nKamloops     4,487\nKaslo       950\nKelowna     2,517\nLadysmith    1,967\nMerritt     1,719\nNanaimo and suburbs     4,025\nNelson     5,236\nNew Westminster    14,440\nI North Vancouver    7,640\n\u2022Continued on Page 4.\n________ THE   SUN.   GRAND   FORKS,   B. C.\n3h* (&tmb Jfarftn Sum\nAN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER\nQ. A. EVANS. EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\u2014PAYABLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year (in Canada and Great Britain) $1.00\nOne Year (in the United States)   1.50\nAddresr -u *-*\u00bb****,\u2014'cations to\nThb Grand Forks Sun,\nPhonb 101R Grand Forks, B. C.\nOFFICE:    COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1922\nSurprise was expressed at the fruit growers' meeting tbe other night that so small an\nitem as 25 per cent of tho British Columbia\nfruit crop, not controlled by the Okanagan\nselling agency, should have been sufficient to\ndemoralize the market. The surprise seems\nreasonable, but it must be remembered that\nit takes very l'ttle to demoralize the market at\nthe end where the jobbers lay in their supply\nA surplus of half a dozen applos would pro b\nably do it. But at the selling end\u2014at the\nend where the fruit gets into the hands of the\nconsumers \u2014 different conditions prevail.\nThere an oversupply can only be created by\nthe exorbitant price charged the consumer for\nfruit.\nto practically hold her *own as regards population. If this has been accomplished during\na period while her agricultural and other resources were in a development stage, she can\nafford to view the future with serenity.\nThe Liberal conference at Victoria seems\nto have been harmonious, as far as the outside world has been taken into the secret s of\nthe proceedings. Those who predicted a disruption of the party and the government are\ntherefore sad.\nA Washington woman, though married, in\nsists on retaining her maiden name.   If this\ncustom is adopted, hyphenated names will be\none of the lesser problems that future gener\nations will be called upon to solve.\nThis is the first year that the January thaw\nhas missed connections for this valley in over\ntwenty years It will probably be added to\nthe July (Temperature.\nIf the the water is turned on in the irriga\ntion ditch on July 1, the people of the valley\ncan celebrate two important events on the\nsame day.\nIt is a reasonable supposition that if the\nprairie farmers could get British Columbia\nfruit at a price at which the orchardists can\nafford to grow it and make a fair profit on\ntheir investment and labor, plus reasonable\ntransportation charges, there would be three\ntimes the amount of fruit consumed in the\nwheat growing provinces there is now, and\nthe overproduction bugaboo would become\nnegligible. It has been shown that the price\nof apples on the prairies is prohibitive except\nto the wealthier class, that the British Columbia producer in some instances is not getting\nthe cost of production for them, and that the\nprairie retailer is only charging a fair margin\nof profit. With these facts established, the\nreal reason for inflated prices charged the con\nsumer should be solvable. It is as much to the\ninterest of the British Columbia grower to\nkeep the retail pr ce on the prairies within\nbounds as it is that he should be able to dispose of his crop at a price that will repay him\nfor the cost of producing it.\nIt must have been particularly gratifying\nto tde ratepayers of the Grand Forks improvement district who listened to the trustees'\nreport Wednesday evening to learn that the\nbusiness of the board has been carried on, up\nto the present time, in an efficient, economical\nand strictly business-like manner. If the\nsame course is pursued in the future there\nshould be no grounds for complaint. While\nnearly eyerybody in this district believe in\neconomy, we doubt if a single person could be\nfound who would be willing to carry this\npolicy to the extreme that it would impair\nthe efficiency of the system when completed,\nand for this reason none interested in the enterprise will begrudge the trustees the modest remuneration voted them. While construction is in progress they will necessarily be\ncompelled to devote a great deal of their time\nto the details ofthe work, and their time, like\neAerybody else's time worth buying, is worth\nsomething.\nA Man Is As Old\nAs His Eyesight\nIF glasses are ground to\nfill the proper prescriptions your eyes will enjoy\nthe vision of days gone\nby. In enjoyment of the\npassing throng, of nature's changing picture\nand in the perusal of\npassing events, a man is\nas young as his eyes. We\nare worthy of your patronage and confidence.\nWe are experienced in\nthe art of optometry.\nJ. C. TAYLOR\nJeweller and Optician\nBridfte Street Grand Porka\nThe names of the solicitor general and the\nminister of public works in the federal gov\nernment spell Mackenzie King. .\nShall woman work? Most people may think\nthat this question had long since been settled\nIt may seem to some that work isn't a matter\nof sex or matrimonial state; it is the contribu\ntion that the worker makes to society and the\nself-expression which he or she finds in that\nwork. And this applies just as much to mar\nried women as to unmarried women or to\nmen, for that matter. A woman owes it to\nherself and to society to seek what is for her\nthe highest self-expression. And whether sbe\ndoes this by taking care of her husband and\nohildren alone, combining the home with a\njob outside, or doing just a job in the indus\ntrial or business world, must be a matter for\nher to decide. Certainly, if we are to begrudge\nthis to a woman we are reverting to the Dark\nAges. Very few modern homes are sufficient\nto occupy the entire mind and time of a\nwoman. And is a woman to sit around idle,\nwith half of her abilities stagnant, just because society forbids her to work because she\ndoesn't have to support herself?\nWe were glad, however, that the question\nof economy was broached in the meeting, because economy will have to be practiced in the\nadministration of the system after it has been\ncompleted. When that time arrives it will\nnot be unreasonable to ask the trustees to\ngive their services gratis. The simple fact that\nwater is to be turned on the land is not going to make millionaires of the ranchers of\nthe valley,at least not until after a fewyears,or\nuntil the markets become stabilized and they\nfamiliarize themselves in the best method of\nusing the water. In the meantime it is going\nto require all their spare time to provide for\nthe sinking fund and their other taxes, and\neconomy will be the safest course for them to\npursue.\nTwo British and two French airplane companies now provide a daily service between\nLondon and Paris, a Dutch company's airships ply between London and Amsterdam, a\nBelgian company's between London and Brussels. Other French companies provide intermittent service to most ofthe large continental\ncities, and German companies fly over a network of routes in Germany. All of the companies are dependent on government aid.\nGreat Britain in its budget for 1921-22, besides providing landing fields and customs facilities, grants a subsidy of \u00a31,000,000. Italy,\non the other hand, having failed to extend\ngovernment aid, has almost no commercial\naviation left. The only important air service in\nthe United States is the mail line between\nNew York and San Francisco.\nThe Panama canal belongs to the United\nStates at last. The Colombian congress has\nratified the treaty by which the American gov\nernment engaged to pay $25,000,000 for all\nthe rights of Colombia in the territory now\noccupied by the republic of Panama and the\ncanal zone.\nNo better evidence in proof of the stability\nof Grand Forks could be produced than the\nfact that, after losing what was a few years\nago her principal industry, she has been able\nE. G. HENNIGER\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Feed\nLime and Salt\nCement\nand\nPlaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks,B.C\nNothing Else is Aspirin\u2014say \"Bayer\"\nJVaroingl Unless yoa see name\n\"Bayer\" oo tablet***, yoa are not vetting Aspirin at all. Why take chancest\nAccept only an unbroken \"Bayer\"\npackage which eontains directions\nworked out by physicians during 21\nyears and proved safe by millions for\nColds, Headache, Earache, Tootache,\nNeuralgia, Rheumatism, Neuritis,\nLumbago, and Pain, Made in Canada.\nAll druggists sell Bayer Tablets of\nAspirin in handy tin boxes o' 12 tablets, and in bottles of 24a nd 100.\nAspirin is the trade mark (registered\nin Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of\nMonoaceticaoidester of Salicylicacid.\nWhile it is well knowh that Aspirin\nmeans Bayer manufacture, to assist\nthe publio against imitations, the\nTablets of Bayer Company will be\nstamped with their general trade\nmark, the \"Bayer Cross.\"\nS. T. HULL\nEstablished 1010\nRealEstute and Insurance\nRe.lde.it Agent Qnuid Forks Towntlte\nCoinpany, Limited\nFarina    |Orcluirds     City Property\nAgents ut: Nelioii, Calgary, Wihnlpog tnd\notber Prairie polnti. Vancouver Agenti:\nPBNDBB1NVKSTMKNTS\nHATTKNBURY LANDS LTD.\nBitabllsbed In l'Jlil. wi'are ln a podllou to\nfurnlih reliable Information concer nliitr thli\ndistrict.\nWrite for freelltoratnre\nGRAND FORKS\nTransfer Company\nDAVIS 8 HANSEN, Prop\nCity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal*   Wood and   Ice\nfor Sale\nOffice at R. F.  Petrie's Store\nPhone 64\nFOR EVERY DAY\nThrough days of grievous heartache,\nIn nights of bitter pain,\nSo many hopes have faded,\nSo many plans proved vain;\nBut still the silver lining\nFringes the clouds o'erhead,\nAnd newer hopes come thronging\nSwift after those that fled.\nAlways another dawning\nFollows the longest night,\nTurn then from cheerless brooding\nLook for the gleaming light;\nLift up the weak and weary\nWho falter by the way,\nSo shall you find new blessings\nAttend you every day.\nC.V. Meggitt\nBeal Estate nnd Insurance\nORCItARIlS, FARM   LANDS   AND CITY\nPROPERTY\nExcellent facilities for lellhtg your farms\nWe bave agents at all Coast and Prnlrle\nPbln's\nWB CARRY AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE.\nDEALER IN POLES, POSTS AND TIES,\nAND FARM PRODUCE\nSellable Information rogardl.il! this distrct\ncbeerfullr furnished. We solicit your inquiries.\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFORFINE PRINTING\nPLANT B, C, GROWN TREES ONLY\nTHE BRITISH 60LUMBIA NURSERIES CO., LTD.\nHava by careful and e_ficio.it management built up a large\nbusiness during the past ten years, and are the la-igest\ngrowers of nursery stock in Western Canada.\nA LARGE ASSORTMENT of very 6no Fruit Trees and\nSmall Fruit Plalits are now growing in our Nurseries at\nSardis, which aro being offorod to planters at very Reason-,\nable Prices.\nTHE QUALITY of these tree, and plants are of high order\nbeing propagated from specially selected trees of known\nproductiveness.\nWe arge growing a very line lot of Roses of leading varieties which have bloomed this season in the Nurserias and\nwill give good results when transplanted in your garden\nor lawn.\nWe Solicit Correspondence from  intending planters and\nurge the placing orders early in theseason. WRITE TODAY\nAddress\nThe British Columbia Nurseries Co. Ltd\n'   Sardis, B. C. Department C.\nClinton A. S. Atwood, Salesman, Grand Forks, B. C.\nEden and Bluebird\nElectric\nWashing Machines\n1190.00\non lerms\nMiller & Gardner\nComplete Home Furnishers\nKeep to the Right\nNow the New Year is begun, \"Keep\nto the Right,\" is a very good motto.\nFollow it, to avoid all accidents.\nKeep to the right, too, when you telephone. That is, be right in the way you\ntelephone, bc right in dourtesy, in short,\nbe right in all those practices which\nmake for good telephoning. Keeping\nto the right means good service.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\nAN ADVERTISEMENT\nIn The Grand Fork* Sun Is a\nPROFITABLE   INVESTMENT %\nTHE   SUN,   GBAND   FORKS,   B. C.\nINTERESTING    SCENES    FROM   MANY    PARTS   OF   THE    WORLD\nTr'-^Tirr-1 r p\u2014 i g\n--**SW-m-***mm m***mmm*aSS**m******m*m**m*mmm^m.: \u2122-tmimx!' J BY \u2022\nRIlll-UlimiininimMluip.LijmiminnuMi,!,,!,,^\neouRTtsrorcp.\/A  >^p\nSYCOVRTiSYOrc**^\nT~        T~fT  w^**wm\u2014*r    Tttav  *B-*yA-*g*9ts  as   ucuio\nW Mt back of tht surrounding peaks\n\u2022nd ott the beaten traclu.\n...\u00bb h. AMtalbolne,  knows   as   the\n\u2022'Matterhorn of the Rockies,\" is a\nSK1* 4f:'r,' P*00* t*1? tnm   Ban\u00ab-\nThli   Banff-Awlnlbolne   trip   haa\nA large comfortable camp, located\non an admirable site, will be maintained at Banff Middle Springs.\nAccommodations may be had at\nWis camp without taking the tour.\nOthe). camps are located at convenient distances along the main\ntour route which goes by way of\nSpray Lakes.\nSchedules will be elastic. Should\nthe scenery or trout fiahinpr\u2014whii?h\nis very fine\u2014of a certain camp appeal to 00*  *s*-**\u00bb e*s BoUuuf  to\n*Vfle_**e apptMtes* anticipate thcdintxargortg\nprevent a sojourn there at long aa\ndesire prompts, then joining an.\nother party for the balance of tha\ntour.\nSpecial side trips may be tit\nranged to Kananaskis Lakes and\nPass, Palliser Pass, Mt. Redskta.\nMt. Whiteman, Marvel Lake, Lake\nGloria and other \"nints of interest\nThe   return  trip  mav be  made b\u00bb\nway   of  Thf a \"\t\nGclclr-n  Vv  w, , .     ..\nCreek \u00abad a,*M &v\u00ab.\nly   of  the  Rockt,\n'   lei Vsts., Um]](\nmmmmm~m..::m,\t\n---tw THE   SUN.   URAND   FORES,   B. C.\nNews of the City\nThe new Yale bridge has been\nfinished and was opened for traffic\nthis week. It is very substantial\nstructure and a great improvement\nto tbe oity and the transprovincial\nhighway. The old bridge, wbich\nwas a landmark of pioneer days,\nhaving been constructed over\ntwenty-five years ago, has been die-\nmantled.\nYeBterday was Chinese New Year\nand all tbe inhabitants of China\ntown were 'at home\" last night.\n'Wm. 0. Ferris, of the Bank of\nCommerce, returned on Saturday\nfrom Toronto, where he attended\nthe annual meeting of the directois\nof the bank.\nA rink of local curlers com\nof N. L. Mclnnes, Wm. Bonthron,\nA. E. Savage and H. W. Gregory\nleft on Monday for the Rossland\nbonspiel.\nA choral society has been organized in tbe cily, and it is taken for\ngranted tbat the savage beasts, or\nbreasts, will soon be soothed.\nMrs. Neil Matheson is confined\nto her home by illness. Mrs. Barry\nLogan, of Trail, came over ou Saturday to nurse her.\nA. O. Frache returned on Monday\nfrom an extended visit to Lethbridge, Alta.\nJobn Donaldson left on Saturday\nfor a business trip to Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Steele's seven-\nmonths-old baby is serionsly ill.\nRoad Supervisor J. A. McCallum\nbas been indisposed -his week.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred  Russell\nup to Lynch Creek yesierday.\nwen\nJoe Cunningham, the well known\nyrospector, is in town.\n\u00a3-pound package\nwith   each   purchase of 2 pounds\nof Lanka Tea or 1 pound Lanka Tea  and  1\npound Braid's Best Coffee.   One sale limited\nto 2 pounds.\nFull Line of Groceries and Vegetables\nTHE CITY GROCERY\nPhone 25 H. H. Henderson, Prop.\nLANKA TEA c\"\",Ptrper.tTF\u00b0r^1:\nApplications for immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, within the\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPrices:\u2014From $25.00 per lot upwards.\nTerras:\u2014Gash and approved payments.\nList of lots and prices may be seen at the\nGity Office.\nJOHN A. HUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nCounter\nCheckBooks\nMrs. Ed Davis arrived in the city\non Wednesday from Vancouver to\npack up her furniture for shipment\nto the coast.\nR, M. McLeod and family left\nSaturday night for Vancouver,\nwhere they intend to reside in future.\nPopulation of\nBritish Columbia\nCtmcliided from Page 1.\nNorth Vancouver district...      2,944\nPoint Grey municipality....   13,654\nPort Alberni     1,049\nPort Coquitlam     2,148\nPort Moody     1,035\nPrince Rnpert     6,378\nPrince George        290\nRevelstoke     4,350\nRossland       2,110\nSalmon Arm        627\nSandon        242\nS. Vanoouver municipality... 31,182\nTrail     3,015\nVancouver 116,700\nVernon     4,690\nVictoria  38,682\nWest Vancouver district     2,638\nFred Russell, having received\nword that his mother is very ill in\nSpokane, left for that cjiy last\nnight.\nW. R. Dewdney, government\nagent at Greenwood, was in the city\nlast Saturday.\nR. Johnson, of Rock Creek, was a\nvisitor in the city on Friday.\nNow We Know Why\nPork Is Expensive\nMarjorie, who for the first time\nbad motored with her parents to the\ncountry, seemed to enjoy all the\nvarious scenes about the farm.\nSomewhat to the horror of her\nmother she even took a keen interest\nin the butchering of a hog.\n\"Father,\" she said after she had\nseen the hog cut up, \"I bet you\nnever knew tbal a pig had an inner\ntube*.\"\nWe have secured the\nagency for Grand\nForks of a large\nWestern Publishing\nHouse which manufactures a superior\ngrade of Counter\nCheck Books\u2014carbon back and carbon\nleaf styles.\nPrices Are Right\nEncourage Western\nenterprises and keep\nWestern money in\nthe West.\nAny Quantity\nfrom 100 up to 2500\nbooks.\nHELP WANTED\nMEN AND WOMEN to sell to wo\nmen in homes rubber-lined, waterproof Qingbam Aprons for use in\nthe kitchen. Can easily make $14\ndaily and more. Rapid seller and\nready demand,' Send 75 cents for\nsample apron and full particulars.\nMoney .refunded if apron returned.\nBritish Rubber Company, 232 McGill Street, Montreal.\nNOTICE OF ELECTION\nGRAND FORKS IRRIGATION DISTRICT\nRIDE THERE ON CLEVELAND\nIT brings the whole country for miles around within easy reach.\nHave you seen the new models') They're as graceful as swallows! As\nbright as new coin! As weatherproof as a duck) Automobile Steel\nBearings. Frame of English Seamless Steel Tubing. Hard Maple -\nRims. Hercules Brake. Everything complete. Real Quality. Real\nValue. Easy Terms. We are tbe people ,to mount yon right.\nJ* R. MOOYBOER gI^dWbks-b-c!\nOpen Saturday Evening. Till 10 o'Cloek\n\u2022 Notice is hereby given that nomih\natiod day for the annual election of\nTrustees of the Qrand Forks Irrigation District has been set for Satur\nday, February 4th, 1922, between the\nhours of 12o'clock A.M.and 2 o'clock\nP.M., in the Irrigation Office, Old\nCourt House Building, Orand Forks,\nB.C.\nThe election ef the Trustees will\ntake place on Febrnary 11th, 1922,\nin case an eleotion is necessary,\nand the poll will be held in the Irrigation Office, Old Court House Building, Qrand Forks, B, O, between the\nhours of 9 o'clock A. M. and 6 o'clook\nP.M.\nTwo Trustees are to be elected.\nDated at Qrand Forks this 16th\nday of January, 1922.\nO. PENNOYER,\nReturning Officer,\nThe Sun\nJob Department\nGRAND FORKS PUBLIC SCHOOL\nTENDER FOR WOOD\nThe   Passing   of   Lord  Mount   Stephen\nLord Mount Stephen is dead, aged\n92 yean. He passed away peace -i\nfully on November 29th, 1921, at his\n\u25a0residence, Brocket Hall, Hatfield,\nHertfordshire, dying painlessly of\n\u2022heer old age. Lord Mount Stephen\nhad .been living in absolute retirement for many years.\nGeorge Stephen was a Scot, born\nin 1829 at Dufftown, Banffshire, and\nhis educational advantages were confined to what the parish school afforded. Leaving school at the early\nage of fourteen, he was apprenticed\nto a draper and dealer in dry goods\nin Aberdeen. Having completed his\nfour jeers' apprenticeship, like many\nto this northern land, he made his\nway to London, where he joined a\nwell-known firm which still exists\nunder the shadow of St. Paul's\nCathedral.\nIt wae the middle of the 19th century when George Stephen, then 31\nyears of ape, reached Canada in\neompany with his cousin, Donald\nSmith (afterwards Lord Strathcona).\nIn Montreal he entered thc service\nof hi* oousin, William Stephen, who\nwaa in the dry goods trade, and three\nyears later he went into partnership\nunder the style of William Stephen\nt Company. Years of steady hard\nwork followed. In 1862 the senior\npartner died, and George, acquiring\nthe whole business, began to manufacture cloth. This proved remunerative and he soon devoted his entire\nefforts to It, relinquishing the wholesale trade.\nJeorge Stephen was elected a director of the Bank of Montreal, and\nin 1876 he was chosen as vice-president, and later as president.\nThe name of Lord Mount Stephen\nwill be chiefly remembered as being\naaaociated with the conception and\nthe carrying to completion of the\nC.P.R., the pioneer transcontinental\nrailway. He joined the small but\ndetermined and optimistic group of\nmen who had accepted the offer of\nthe Government to build the Canadian Pacific Railway. He was its\nfirst president in 1881, and the first\nannual report was printed on one\nsheet of notepaper and signed by\nGeorge Stephen. It was fitting that\nhe should be its first president, for\nhe had put his all into it, for one\nthing; for another, he had unrivalled\ndriving power; and, again, he had\ngenius for method and detail.\nA year after the completion of the\nC. P. R., George Stephen was created a baronet. He built himself a\nmagnificent home on Drummond St.,\nMontreal, in which he took great\npride, especially in the conservatory,\nbuilt after the English style, as well\nas in his pictures, to which he devoted much attention.\nIn thinking of the public welfare\nef the eommtmitv, Sir George Stephen at that period displayed great\ngenerosity.\nSir Geerge Stephen resigned the\npresidency of the C. P. R. in 1888,\nIn which he was succeeded by tbe\nlate Sir William Van Home, who\nconsolidated, and at the same time\nextended the service and earnings\nof that gTeat corporation. Three\nyears later, in 1891, he was created\na baron by Queen Victoria, when he\nassumed the tit1'? of Lord Mount\nStephen, and crussed the Atlantic\nto settle .-' >wn in England. In his\nbeautiful Ljiuc, Brocket Hall, Hat-\n;\".*>\u2022\n\u00a3_ .,\u25a0_-'\u25a0:'-*\u2022&\u25a0& iii-.\n'\u25a0\u2022.|_STJ>^\n*''\u25a0\"'\u25a0 '.-ftpiHE'\nh'U\nrlWlW\nfield, Herts, near which Uie\nbury family reside, he for\nyears entertained notable personages and devoted himself to the promotion of philanthropic movements.\nLord Mount Stephen was twice\nmarried, his first marriage taking\nplace ln 1853, to Anne Charlotte,\ndaughter of Benjamin Kane. In\n1897 he was united to Glen Tufnell,\ndaughter of the late Captain George\nTufnell, R.N. There was no issue\nof these marriages; but Lord Mount\nStephen adopted a daughter, wbo\nmarried a son of the Northcote fam\nily In England.\nIt Is of Interest to note that al\nthough ln his valedictory to the C. P.\nR. shareholders, Lord Mount Stephen excused his retirement on the\nground of health, he lived for a\nperiod of thirty-three years thereafter, or the span of another generation.\nMuch regret was expressed in C,\nP, It. eirolw when the death of Lord\nMount Stephen became known. An\nthe flags from one end of the syi\u00bb\ntern to the other were placed at hall-\nmast, and a laurel wreath was placed on the statue of Lord Mount\nStephen which stands in the waiting\nroom of the Windeor street station\nhere.\n\"It waa a cause of great satisfaction to Lord Mount Stephen that he\nlived to see his 'baby* grew into the\ngreatest enterprise Canada has ever\nSJfwn,\" said Lord Shaughnessy.\n\"There was a great personal friendship between us,\" continued Lord\nShaughnessy, \"which deepened as\nthe years advanced.\" Discussing the\nfact that Lord Mount Stephen wae\nin his 98rd year, and that Mr. R. B.\nAngus, who had been so intimately\nconnected with Lord Mount Stephen,\nia in hli 91st year, Lord Shaughnessy\ncommented: \"1. am only 68; quite \u2022\nboy compared with them.\"\n\"I was firet associated with Lord\nMount Stephen in 1882 nearly forty\nyears ago, shortly after the coo-\nstruction ef the Canadian Pacific\nhad been commenced by the company, but my relations did not become at ell cloee until the end oi\n1884. From that time until he retired from participation in the company's affaire we were very close\nbusiness and personal friends. Indeed, our very warm personal relations continued to the end. i\n\"Lord Mount Stephen was a man\nwith Imagination and initiative,;\ncoupled with probity and courage.\n\"During the construction of thel\ntnni-oontinental line he had many\nanxious houre, and there were times\nwhen his personal fortune, as welli\nas that of his colleague, Lord Strath-1\neona, waa plaeed tn jeopardy In!\nloans to Hie eompany in ite dark!\ndays. I\n\"To Lord Mount Stephen beyond-\nall others may be attributed the sue-1\nceesful completion of the railway.\n\"During the last 20 or 26 yean\nhe had lived in England, but he foi-'\nlowed Canadian affairs with the\nkeenest interest.\n\"In view of the part that he played ln the first and most Important\nenterprise connected with Canada's\nprojrreas, I am sure thet the name\nof Lord Mount Stephen will always\nbe cherished by Canadians, and, indeed, throughout the world.\"\n\"My moat intimate connections\nwith him were in 1884 and 1885,\nwhen the Government, after the first\nloan, were loath to provide any more\nmoney. It was during that emergency that he and Lord Strathcona\nfurnished the requisite funds front\ntheir own fortunes, at a considerable\nsacrifice, no doubt, because they had\nto sell other securities that they held\nto raise the money. Finally the\nGovernment did make a further loan\nof $6,000,000, which saw the company through, and enabled it to get\nalong until Lord Mount Stephen, oi\nGeorge Stephen, as he was then,\nhad succeeded in selling the com-\npany's first mortgage bonds through\nBaring Brothers.\n\"Juat as soon as the company received payment for Its bonds, ths\nwhole debt to the Government wa\u00bb\npeW. He had said he would repay\nthe loan, and did so. But if he had\nadopted modern methods )..\u2022> wo Id\nprobably have triad to borrow mon\n********       XmmmX^mAI*\nSealed tenders will be received by\nthe undersigned up to Saturday,\nJanuary 28th, 1922, at 11 o'olock A.\nM., for supplying Fifty cords green\nwood, four foot split fir or tamarack.\nWood to be piled at the school as\nand where directed. Tenders to state\ndate of delivery. The lowest or any\ntender not necessarily accepted.\nDated at Qrand Forks, B.C., January 19, 1922.\nJOHN A. HUTTON,\nSecretary Board of School Trustees\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nDealer,in\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nA. E. IPOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\n?Aftent\nDominion Monumental Worka\nAsbestos Products Co. Roofing\n. ESTIMATES FURNISNED\nBOX 332    GRAND FORKS, B. C\nAUTO LIVERY IZ\nModern Bigs and Good\nHorses at All Hours at\nthe\nModel Livery Barn\nM. H. Bonis, Prop.\nPhone 68 Second Street\nYale fearber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYale Hotkl, First Stunt\nGood\nPrinting\nrjiHE value of well-\nprinted, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBail programs\nBusiness cards\nVisiting cards\nSh'p->ing tags  .\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nTHE HUB\u2014Bring your boot\nand shoe repairs to, my\nshop for neat and prompt\nwork. Look for the big\nboot.\u2014GEO.   ARMSON\nSynopsis of\nI Land Act Amendments\nNew Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColumbia Arenue and\nLake Street\nr i-t> i ? i > 51\nR101\nMinimum Brio* of lint-elan land\nradioed to IS an aere; seoond-class te\nUM sn acre.\nPre-emption bow confined to savveyed lands only.\nRecords will be (ranted co-win* only\nland suitable for agricultural purposes\nsnd which la non-Umber land.\nPartner-whip pre-emptions abolished,\nbut parties ot not mors tban (our may\nananas (or adjaosnt pre-emptions\nwltb Joint residence, but each making\nnecessary Improvements on respective\nclaims. *.\nPrs-e__eptors muat occupy claims (or\ntre* years and make Improvements to\nvalue et 110 per acre, Including clearing and cultivation of at least 8 acre*\nbuore receiving Crown Grant\nwbere pre-emptor In occupation not\nlass than I years, and* has made proportionate Improvements, he may, because et ill-health, or other causa, bs\ngranted Intermediate certificate ot improvement and transfer his claim.\nHsoords without permanent residence may be Issued, provided applicant makes Improvements to'extant of\nHMO par annum and records same each\nyesr. Failure to make Improvements\nJT record same will operate as forfeiture. Title cannot be obtained In\ntaw than t years, and Improvements\nof $10 00 par acre. Including t acres\ncleared and cultivated, and residence\nof at least 1 years sre required.\nPre-emptor holding Crown grant\nmay record another pre-emption, if he\nrequires land In conjunction with his\nfarm, without actual occupation, provided statutory improvement-, made\nand residence maintained eo Crown\ngranted land. *t\nUnsurvayed areas, not exceeding M\nacrea   may  bo  leased  as  homesitea*\ntitle to bs obtained after fulfilling real\nHernial and improvement conditions.\nror graaing and Industrial purposes\nareas exceeding <M aores maybe\n\u2022eased br one person or eompany.\nMill, factory or Industrial site* on\ntimber land not exceeding 40 acrea\nmay ba purchased; conditions Include\npayment of stumpage.\nNatural hay meadows Inaccessible\nby existing roads may be purchased\nconditlonaTunon construction of a road\nto them. Rebate of one-half of oost of\nroad, not exceeding half of purchase\nl>rlce. Is made. vw-mma*\nPRK-CMPTOfU'     FRCE\nACT.\nGRANTS\nThe scene of this Act Is enlarged te\nlotive.\no fees relating te pre-emptions are\nitfona recorded after Jane M, fill.\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMIH6\nFurniture ..Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly   Don\nR. G. McCOTCBBON\nwiMune avuoi\ntime within whioh the heirs or devisees\nof a deceased pre-emator may apply\nfor title under thlsTat iTektenXl\nfrom for ons year (Tom the death of\nsuch porson, as formerly, until one\nyear after the conclusion sf the nreaent\nwar. This privilege is alao mST'i-\ntrosctlve.\nNo fees i\ndue\nomptfons* reoorded'afMr Jana'sVis.\nTaxes are remitted (sr Ave yean.\nProvision for return et moneys accrued, das and been paht sines August\n\u00ab. 1911. on account if payments, Tei\nor .tens on soldiers' pre-emptions.\nInterest on agreements to purohase\ntPXa.\u00b0L **** *\u00b0** I***** by members of\nAllied Purees, or dependents, acquired\ndirect or Indirect, remitted froenen-\nlist ment to March tl. 1M0.\nSUB-PURCHABERS   OP   CROWN\nLANDS.\nProvision made (or Issuance of\nCrown grants ts sub-purchasers of\nCrown Lands, acquiring rights from\npurchssers who failed to oomplete\npurchase, Involving forfeiture, en fulfillment of conditions of purohase. Interest and taxes. Where sub-puiehas-\ners do not claim whole of original parcel, purohase price due and taxes may\nbe distributed proportionately over\nwhole area. Applications must ke\nmade by May 1, U20.\nGRAZING.\nOranlne Act, Ult, for systematic\ndevelopment of livestock Industry provide.-, for graslng districts and range\n.-iilmlnlK.ration under Commissioner\nAnnual grazing permits Issued based\non numbers ranged: priority for established owners. Stock-owners mav\nform Associations for range manage'-\nment. Free, or partially free, permits\nfor settlers, campers er travellers, up\nio ten bead.\nNEW HARNESS SHOP\nI have opened a new harness shop and am prepared\nto make harness to order\nand do all kinds of repair\nwork. Shop equipped with\nmodern machinery. All work\nguaranteed:\nC. A. Crawford\nNe** Telephone Oflu*","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_1922_01_27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0341795","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"}]}}