{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0341902":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"0afdcbca-8484-4ba4-90b6-3a04921fc0e3","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":"1912-04-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341902\/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":" ^be\nH\u00bbW\u00abti\u00ab_Ubr\u201e\n&un\n2^R.A, ?i#\nAND KETTLE VALLEY ORQHARDIST\nEleventh Year\u2014No. 23\nGrand Forks, B. C, Friday. cApril 5, 1912.\n$1.00 Per Year in Advance.\nSmall Fruit GrowiDg Pays\nWell When Conditions\nAre Right\nI1Y 3. V. (.'aUU-ENTEB, U.S.A., ASSISTANT\nHOBTICUI.TUltlST.\nRaspberries.\u2014 To obtain ths best\nresults, a deep soil, well drained and\nwith a large moisture holding capacity\nis desirable. In the coast dit.tr.ets\nwhere the humidity is high, it is advisable to obtain a site with a sufficient slope to give good air drainage.\nThe same method of preparation of\nthe soil as given for strawberries is\napplicable here. Deep cultivation\nand ploughing is advisable befoie\nsetting out a patch, especially on the\nheavier soils.\nPropagation\u2014The roots of a raspberry are perennial, so the general\nmethod of obtaining plants is to dig\nup the one year old plants from the\nbearing patch. It is also possible,\nsometimes, to nse the suckers and re-\n' plant them the same spring in which\nthey start, especially if weather and\nsoil conditions are favorable, '\nPlanting\u2014This is done eilber in\n{Jf.he fall or spring, depending on the\ndistrict, the condition of the land and\nthe grower. The planting distance\ndepends on the variety, type, and\ncondition of the soil and the district,\nso that no distance which would be\nsatisfactory for all aitei can be given.\nAs a general rule, the rows are six to\neight feet apjart, and the plants set at\neighteen indies to two feet in a row.\nThey require' pruning before setting\nin the same way as a one-year old\napple tree, i.e., roots trimmed and top\ncut baek. Plant about three to five\ninches deep, depending on the soil,\n\u2022Spread the roots, and pack the earth\n*ell around them.\nTraining\u2014It is found advantageous\nto support the vines with trellis. This\nis generally done the second or third\nyear. To accomplish this post, are\nset thirty feet or so apart with a\ncross piece at the top which should be\nabout' three and a hajf feet from the\nground,, on which two wires are\nstrung, one at either end of the cross-\npiece. Within this space the vines\nnre kept upright, bringing the plantation into better condition for cultivation ahd other cultural operations.\nPruning\u2014Fruit is borne on the\none-year old wood, so that in pruning\nnil canes that have borne fruit are removed, and the remainder thinned out\nif necessary. The best time to prune\nis immediately after the fruit is\npicked, as hy leaving the old canes\nthey form an unnecessary drain uu the\nplant fi od and soil moisture, The\ntaller of new canes should also be\npinched or cut back at the time so as\nstrengthen the bearing shoots for the\nfollowing season. They are again\ngone over and cut back before growth\nstarts iu the spring. < Blackberries are\npruned in the same manner.\nGood cultivation should be kept up\nin the same manner as in a strawberry patch until midsummer or a\nlittle later, depending on the soil and\nlocation.\nnt, but   where they have been tried\nin favorable districts they are   being |\nsucuessfnlly   grown.   They   are produced in the States to the south of us,\nboth for the fresh and dried producta.r\nThey have been fouud to do well on\nalmost all types of soil, and are being\ngrown i-uccessfully on tha heavier\ntypes. The same general remailis re\npreparation of land as given nn strawberries are applicable here.\nPropagation\u2014They can be propagated by tipping, layering, or by the use\nof cuttings. Tipping is generally\npractised as described below.\nPlanting\u2014This is done either in the\nfall or spring, but spring plantiug is\ngenerally practised, Planting distances\nvary. One of the largest and most\nsuccessful growers ' nf this fruit in\nOregon has his rows eight feet apart\nand the plant set the same distance\napart in the rows. A trellis is con\nstructed for the support of the vines\nby placing posts in the rows every\nthirty-two feet, on which are strung\nthtee No. 12 galvanized wires in a\nsimilar manner as on a grape trellis.\nPruning\u2014The fruit is produced on\none-year-old wood, so in pruning all\nthe canes that have borne fruit are\nremoved; this should be done as .0011\nalter fruiting at possible. The canes\nihould be cut oil at least fix inches\nfrom the crown of the plant Ten to\ntwelve new canes ean- be left, and\nthese are wound round the trellis\nwire so as to have them well dis\nti-ibuted.\nCultivation\u2014Good cultivation \" is\nifiven until midsummer. The patch is\nplowed in September, throwing the\nfurrows towards the vines. At that\ntime a number of the vines, where the\npatch has received good care will have\nreached the ground, and the tips of\nthese are plowed under, They take\nrent and afford a supply of new plant-,\nfor selling, or use in the uew planta\ntiou ths following spriug.\nA logan berry patch when well\nhandled will yield good crops for\nmany years.\nCurrants and Gooseberries.\u2014They\ndo best on a good deep soil, well\ndiained, retentive of moisture, and un\nsites that will afford good airdrainags.\nPropagation\u2014By cuttings principally. Sometimes by tipping and\nmound layering. They are generally\nplanted in hills about four to five feet\non the square.\nPruning\u2014Gooseberries bear on one-\nyear-old wood and ou spurs which\nbear profitably for two or three years.\nIt is advisable to cut out all wood\nover three years old and keep a sup\nply of new shoots and two-year shoots\nunder way. The red and white currants bear principally 011 two-veur-old\nwood and are pruned accordingly,\nThe information given in this article on each species of small fruit is\nnecessarily brief. Some of the more\nimportant essentials to success have\nbeen mentioned, which ihould prove\not value to the grower who purposes'\nplanting small fruits. It should be\nborne in mind that the profit which\nis made on small fruits is due largely\nto careful attention to cultural operations. Ths grower who intends planting should have sufficient labor in\nview and should bo in a positiou to\nlook well after his plantation,\nOrchardists on the Covert\nEstate Will Dam Fourth\n\u25a0 of July Creek\nThe orchardists on the Covert estate are planning to dam\nFourth of July creek in order to\nconserve the water for Iheir gravity\nirrigation system in the event of an\nextraordinarily dry season. Tbey\npropose to construct a reinforced\nconcrete dam 150 feet wide and 40\nteet high, with a rock and earth fill\nin front, this spring, at a cost of\n$2500 About fifty carloads of apples were shipped from this estate\nlast fall.\nPruning has beeu the order in\nthe Keltle Valley orchards for sev\nernl weeks, but nearly all of thic\nwork is now completed, and spraying ie being vigorously prosecuted.\nAll the orchard? in this district\ncame through the winter in excel\nlent condition, and the prospects\n(or a good fruit crop were nevei\nbetter.' Many new orchards will be\nplanted this spring.\nA good plantation when properly\nhandled will bear profitably for twelve\nor fifteen years, and sometimes longer'.\nLogan Berries.\u2014The culture of\nlogan berries has not been extensive\nin British Columbia up to the   pres-\nF. Roney is rapidly recovering\nfrom bis recent misfortune of blood\npoisoning brought on by a shell\nstriking bim in tbe fact.. Present\nindications are that be will be able\nto wear bis new Easter hat next\nSunday?\nAt the meeting of the Farmers' institute on Monday evening J, T.\nLawrence, delegate to the British\nColumbia Farmers' institute, submitted bis report. Owing to the light\nattendance, the discussions on the\nsubjects of \"Cold Storage\" and \"Cul\ntitration\" were deferred until the\nnext regular meeting of tbe insti\ntuts.\nTbis is the busy shipping season\nfor the Riverside Nureries, and ti\nnumber of loads of trees are being\nhauled lo tbe railway stations\ndaily. The sales last amounted to\nabout 220,000 trees. For thiB year\nthe sales are not all in yet, tnit it is\nexpected that tbey will exceed this\nfigure.-\nFrom all reports, the potato acreage iu Ihe valley will be greatly increased this year. J. D. Hon_-\nberger intends to plant sixty, acres\non his ranch, and all tbe other large\nranchers will plant Urge tracts.\nLast year this was the best paying\norop. \u00bb\nLast year J. D Honsberger de\ncided to experiment with a nut-tree\nplantation. He planted a large\nnumber of Franchelle walnut trees,\ntogether with a lttrge\"varie.y of other\nnut trees. He reports that all of\nthem came through the wintei' in\ngood condition.\nCooper Rrothers have increased\nthe size tbeir orchard by planting\ntwenty acres to fruit trees this\nspring.\nJ. D, Honsberger is increasing his\norchard tbis spring by plsnting\ntwenty acres to fruit trees. His old\norchard consists of 130 acres of\nbearing trees, and 280 acres of trees\nthat bave not yet come into bearing.\neither an irrigalional or\ntural surprise.\nhorlicul-\nJ. T. Lawrence and R.W. Hughes\nhave completed installing their electric pumping irrigating plant. The\npump and motor could not work\nbetter,\nThree carloads of potatoes were\nshipped from the city this week.\nThe Grand Forks Gun club tbis\nweek aent an invitation to a team\nof five from the Nelson Gun club\nfor a competitive shoot in thiB city\ntomorrow. The invitton was accepted. It is expected tbat a return\nshoot will be beld in Nelson later in\nthe season.\nThe Yale hotel milk wagon and\nCooper Brothers' automobile happened to meet on the Cooper bridge\non Tuesday morning. Had tbe\nside of tbe bridge been as rotten as\nsome people say it is, the fishes in\nlhe river could have lived on cream\nfor a week. However, a runaway\nwas averted, and all's well that ends\nwell.\nThe slag elevator at Granby smtl\nter has, according to latest reports,\npassed the experimental stage, and\nis now working satisfactorily. Fjveof\nlhe furnaces have been assembled to\nibis automatic method of disposing\nof the granulated slag, and connection is now being made with tbe\nsixth.\nSince Joseph Wibner, late ol\nPhoenix, became part owner nf the\n(irand Forks brewery, tbe beer\nbrewed at tbat institution bas been\nfully equal, if not superior, to the\nbeverage shipped in from outside\npoints. Tbe addition to the brewery\nis rapidly nearing complerion, and\nthe proprietors expect to have the\nbottling plant in operation in tbe\ncourse of another month.\nA small bush fire across the North\nFork opposite tbe city called out\ntbe fire department at 3 o'clock tbis\nafternoon. The fla*nes were quickly\nextinguished.\nThe gun club is holding a practise\nshoot today in order pick out the\nbest'men to meet the Nelson Gun\nclub team tomorrow.\nThe Greenwood Ledge says tbat\nmoving picture shows damage the\ntfieht, and in some cases lower tbe\nmorals of those wbo attend them\nregularly.\nC. F. Andereon, tho new eity electrician, moved his family from\nGreenwood to this city this week.\nIn the county court at Greenwood\na probate has been granted lo Lillian\nBonnett, a step-daughter of the late\nLouis Kholt.\nJ. W. Cook left today for Nelson,\nwbere be will meet one of his\nbrothers from Newfoundland, who\nwill visit the Cook family in this\ncity foF-a short time.\nMrs. Sloan has purchased Mies\nWalker's boarding house on upper\nBridge street.\nWbat reliance can be placed in\nthe  news  of   paper   whoso editor\nthis year's crop have not yet been j ,nerel-v wrile9 his itc,n9 with a view of\ncontracted for. \\ ol>\"\u00bb*nil*g advertising business? Tho\n  business  firms' which   he  cannot\nPeter A. 'L Pure is not uttering a. capture by flattery, he attempts to\n\u2022ingle syllable these days. This secure by threats and false news\npen-up quietness evidently presages items regarding impending competi-\nThe Sunbeam orchard will be increased with twenty\u2014twenty\u2014fruit\ntrees  this  spring.   The   hoxes for\nFair Directors Buy Land for\na Road to the Grounds.\nOther Improvements\nThe direclers of lhe Grand Forks\nAgricultnral association met on\nWednesday evening, and discussed\na number of details in connection\nwith the next fair and the improvement of the grounds.\nThe directors have purohased a\nstrip of land from Mr. Ruckle between the First street bridge and\nhe entrance to the grounds, and\ntbe Bame is to be graded to a first-\nclass driveway,- This work will be\ncommenced au soon as possible.\nDave Shannon submitted a design for an exhibition hall. The\nbuilding, as planned by Mr. Shannon, will be Mix WO feet, with a 25x\n50 foot whig on each side. The\nstructure is of a handBome archi\ntectural appearance, a cupola surr\nmounting the central 60x50-foot Bee\ntion of the building The directors\ndecided to increase the length of the\nbuilding 25 fact, and each of the\nside wings 12* feet, thus greatly in-\nei^asing tbe floor space for exhibition purposes. With these allera-\nlions, the p'sns for the hall were\navorably considered by tie directors, and the building committee\nwas instructed to ascertain the cost\nof the building.\nTbe directors decided to lease the\ngrounds tbis year for the care of the\nproperty.\nTbe baseball diamond will be\nwidened, and tbe earth obtained\nfrom tbis work will be used for improving tbe road to the grounds.\nA committee of three was appointed to ascertuin the feelings of tbe\ncitizens in regard to holding a celebration in tbe city on the 1st of\nJuly.\nA resolution was adopted that all\nattractions to be shown on the\ngrounds must first have the approval of the board of directors.\nA committee was appointed to\ninterview the city council at its next\nmeeling.\nThe various standing committees\nmade their reports, and then the\nmeeting adjourned.\nMETEOROLOGICAL\nThe following is the maximum\nand minimum temperature tor each\nday during the past week. 11s re\ncorded by the government thermometer on Cooper Bros.'ranch:\nMAX MIN.\nFriday  63 82\nSaturday  6.9 28\nSundiy  64 .'12\nMonday    62 27\nTuesday   08 80\nWednesday-!  54 ii\"\nThursday  58 3S\nRanfall during week, 0.00 inches.\nSnowfall during past winter, 66.7\ninches.\ntion. Result: A highly colored and\nthoroughly unreliable newspaper.\nThere are some papers ot this typo\npublished not far from this city.\nThey are not the most acceptable\ncompetitors; but that which can not\nbe cured must he endured.\nFurniture for Sale.- Apply\nWalker's, Bridge strict.\nMiss THE SUN. GRAND FORK.S. BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nHAD THROAT\nTROUBLE SINGE\nCHILDHOOD\nMl Treatments Failed. Relieved\nby Peruna.\nMrs.   Wm.   Hoh-\nmann, 2764 Lincoln\nAve.,   Chicago,   IU\u201e\nwrites:\n\"I suffered with\nI catarrh of Ihe brim\nf ehial tubes and had\n1 a terrible cough ever\nsince a child.\n\"I would alt up ln\nbed with pillows\npropped up behind\nme, but still the\ncough would not let\nme Bleep. I thought\nand everybody else\nthat I had consumption.\n\"So reading the\npapers about Peruna I decided to\ntry, without the\nleast bit of hope tbat\nmul 1* would do me any\nMre. Hohmann.  g00(,; But after talc.\nIng three bottles I noticed a change.\nMy appetite got better, eo I kept on,\nnever discouraged. Finally I seemed\nnot to cough so much and the pains In\nmy chest got better and I could rest at\nnight.\n\"I am well now and cVed of a chronic\ncough and sore throat. I cannot tell\nyou how grateful I am, and I cannot\nthank Peruna enough. It has cured\nwhere doctors have failed and I talk\nFeruna wherever I go, recommend It to\neverybody. People who think they\nhave consumption better give it ___.\ntrial.\"\nTHE CAPITAL OF INDIA\nFIELDS AND FORESTS\nHow Growth of the Forest* May be\nMade to Increase the Grain Yields\nHow can the existence of forests at\nthe sources of a stream affect the\ncrops ln the district watered by the\nstream?\nTbe question Is not hard to answer.\nThe chief need for the growth of all\nplants is water. One of the best\nknown authorities estimates that field\ncrops use .100 to 600 tons of water\nfor every ton of dry material produced. This uses up the water ln\nfrom 2 1-2 to 5 Inches deep of the\nsoil.\nNaturally, the nearer the water is\nto the roots of tbe plants, the eas'er\nlt is for the plants to take up the water and the better the crop will grow.\nWater, whether running free In the\nstream or lying in the soil, will seuk\nthe lowest level. If tbe level of tlia\nwater in the stream falls, then tho\nwater In the soil (first from the near\nneighborhood ot the stream, ami meu\nfrom farther away) will find its way\nto the stream, and the level of the\nwater In the soil will fall and so the\nplants will find it harder to get water.\nIn order to keep up the level of the\nstreams ln the summer, there must be\na constant flow of water from the\nhead-waters. It Is well known that,\nwhen the forests are cut away, the\nwater from the melting of tbe snow\nIn spring and the rains of other seasons flow away rapidly. Often causing damage by floods. The dry seasons ot the summer find the streams\nalmost dry.\nThe soil ln the forest, however, Is\nof a spongy nature and soaks up the\nwater falllUT on It, afterwards giving\nlt out gradually and bo furnishing an\neven supply to the streams and enabling them to keep up their levels.\nThe higher the level of the stream\nIs maintained, the higher will be the\nlevel of the water In the soil, and the\neasier the plants will find It to grow.\nIt Is for reasons often outlined that\nlt Is so Important to the farmers of\nthe West that tlte Dominion forest\nreserves should be maintained. The\nRocky Mountain forest reserve thus\nserves the farmer of Alberta and Saskatchewan, the Riding and Duck\nMountain reserves \u00bbserves the\nfarms of northwestern and northern\nManitoba and the Turtle Mountain reserve a considerable portion of southern Manitoba.\nFrench, German and English am\ntaught ln the schools of Holland, and\npupils are required to pass un exam-\n(nation In these languages before\ngraduation.\nDODDS '\nKIDNEY\n\/PILLS\n;hi s ui*, \u00bb'\\-\nTHR*'\nRemoval From Calcutta to Delhi\nRighto an Ancient Wrong\nThe commercial Instinct of the East\nIndia Company led lt to perpetrate a\ngreat outrage upon Indian national\nsusceptibilities by removing the capital to Calcutta. Ever since tlio days\nof civilization Delhi had figured as the\nGovernment seat. The Hindi;, und\nMoslems both had favored it In this\nway. Off and on In the ciu^se of\ncenturies whimsical rulers had jilted\nIndia's hub for some other favored\ncity, but sooner or later the lucky\nmetropolis always managed to gain\nthe upper hand over its rivals,\nThe East India Company, knowing\nlittle of and caring less for the sentiments of Indians, established the capital of India at Calcutta, for, situated\nas it was on the banks of the Hooghly,\na navigable river, It was easy of access from the sea, whereas Delhi was\nhundreds of miles from any port,\nWhen the suzerainty of the peninsula was transferred from the commercial corporation to the British\nCrown at the close of the Indian Sepoy\nMutiny in 1857, Hindustan hoped that\nlustlce would be done to its imperial\ncity; but lt has been disappointed.\nAgain expectation ran high when\nthe Assemblage was held at Delhi In\n1877, especially ln view of thc fact\nthat the British by that time had\nlearned enough about their Oriental\nsubjects to convene the Durbar there\ninstead of at Calcutta; but the people\nonce more were doomed to disappointment. When King Edward was proclaimed Emperor of India ln 1903 the\nnatives were thrilled by the same\nhope, only to have It dashed to the\nground.\nThus lt has been reserved tor King\nGeorge V. to right this wrong and\nmake all Hindustan happy over lt.\nOnly a very limited number of people\nwill decry this measure. Among them\nno doubt are the alien and native merchants and property holders of Calcutta, who have fed and fattened on\n'hi necessities of those who must per-\n'o'-ce make their homes ln the capital.\nW. N. U. No. 886.\nIdeas Worth Money\nIdeas are worth money. Send in\ngood suggestions and we will pay you\nfor them.'\nThe Pennsylvania Railroad announced recently the results attained by the\nabove order, which was sent out to\nits employees some time ago. It said\nthe response was Immediate. Many\nof the ideas sent in, moreover, proved\nvaluable, and their originators received rewards In cash for them.\nA clerk ln one of the roundhouses\nwon a premium by submitting a plan\nfor Increasing economy by further use\nof carbon sheets, which remain In repair card books after the cards have\nbeen filled in and removed. He devised a way of using this carbon paper with one of the company's forms\nfor ordering material from the warehouses. A tinsmith in one of the\nshops discovered an Improved method\nof fastening in engine cabs tbe boxes\nwhich contain flags, torpedoes and\nmedicine case. He received pay tor it.\nA fireman saw a way to minimize the\nloss of coal through vibration by\nstandardizing the heights of coal\ngates on locomotive tenders, and received an ample reward for the idea.\nThere were many other suggestions\nfrom employees which were consider\ned worthy of financial reward.\nA Lucky Beggar\nRobert Newman telephoned the police:\n\"I want you to find my trousers,\"\nho said.\n\"Did you look under tha umllitss?\"\nasked the telephone clerk ln the\nchiefs office. ..\n\"No,\" said Newman.\n\"Give me the description,\" he said.\n\"All right. The -number on the\ncase Ib 5,574,561 and the number on\nthe workB Is 6,133,476.\"\n\"What are you talking about, anyway?\"\n\"My watch.\"\n\"I thought lt was your trousers.\"\n\"YeB. The watch was In the trousers' pocket. A beggar called here and\nasked me to give him a pair of trousers. I did. After he was gone I discovered I gave him the ones with my\nwatch In.  Find the beggar, will you?\"\nNever Spoke Again\nGrantley Berkeley, In his Recollections, notes one of the shortest parliamentary speeches on record. \"Leonard Charlton tried to ma'tc a milder\nspeech, and, rlBlng ln his place will a\nvery bald head, known too as he was\nto everybody as one of the oldest\nstagers ln all the ways ot the world,\nho began with great affectation of inexperience, and with an exceedingly\nmild voice. 'Mr. Speaker, I am but a\nyoung member.' On hearing thiB assertion from so cratfy a man, possessing bo venerable a pate, the entire\nhouse roared with laughter. Twice\nhe stopped, and three times he commenced with these words, hut It was\nUBelesa. The house would not listen,\nand he never assayed to speak again.\"\nDealer.\u2014Look hero! The bill for\nthat motor car has been running for\nover a year now.\nCustomer.\u2014Let it run. I want to\nhave something connected with my\nmotor car that will run for over half\nan hour without stopping.\n\"Givln' a man advice.\" Bald Uncle\nEben, \"generally don't nmount to nuf-\nfin' but worryln' him wlf talk about\ntroubles dat he knows a heap mo'\nabout dan you does.\"\nEight-four per cent, of Porto Rico's\ntrade during the financial year ended\nJune 30, 1011, was with the United\nStates.\nNo man Is so weak thf* \u2022'\u2022* \"\u00bba't\nbreak a promise.\nQUEER EASTERN DRINKS\nNational Drink of Tibetans\u2014Fermented Coconut Milk\nArra may be said to be the national\ndrink of the Tibetans, being given at\nall times and places. The natives\ncarry It ln long buffalo horns on\nthen* trips from place to place, and\nthe shepherdB deem their existence\nmiserable if they have not their dally\nallowance. Arra Is used also by the\nBlmllans, but the great drink of these\npeople Is marwa. This Is a kind ot\nbeer made from millet. The grain la\nsubjected to a very primitive method\nof fermentation without malting, and\nis stored lu earthenware Jugs; lt has\nto be used quickly, as lt soon sours;\nlt is very light ln alcohol, but ts extremely nourishing.\nNlpa wine made from tho ulpa\npalm, is a common beverage ln Burnish. It resembles ln taste and flavor\nthe palm wine or toddy of India,\nthough by some it Is thought to be\nmore powerful ln its inebriating qualities. But the favorite beverage of\nthe Burmese is shouchou, which greatly resembles sam-tchoo, only lt is a\nlittle more fiery In taste and Its effect Is somewhat quicker and decidedly more lasting. '\nThey also use the milk of the cocoa-\nnut, which they ferment in vast quantities and preserve lu glazed earthenware Jugs, which hold from 100 to 150\ngallons apiece. Like their neighbors,\nthe Hindus and Chinese, they are prolific in the distillation of their many\nfruits, and many excellent drinks are\nmade therefrom. They Import large\nquantities of European liquors, especially gin, and as a rule they prefer\nstrong spirits instead money in payment for what we term odd Jobs.\nOne Kind of Boss    -\nApropos of scientific management\nand the miracles it performs, Jerome\nS. McWade, the Duluth capitalist said\nthe other day:\n\"An interesting part of scientific\nmanagement is the weeding out of the\nofficlouB, Billy, Ignorant boss\u2014the\nboss who, to show his authority, is\nalways interfering with his men.\n\"A boss of this description was overseeing the removal of a lot of dirt on\na railway contract of mine. It happened that one of the workmen's wheelbarrows squeaked dreadfully. The\nman, therefore, turned the barrow\nover, and he was beginning to grease\nit, when the boss rushed down upon\nhim like an avalanche.\n\" Here you I What the blankety\nblank are you doing there Pedro?'\n'\"I'm Just greasin'.my barrow, boss.'\n' 'Who in the blank name of blankety blank told you to do that, you\nmaccaroni-fed asterisk?' \\\n'\"No one, boss.'\n'\"Well, get back to your work then,\nand don't let me catch you at anything\nof the kind again. What the blank\ndo you know about machinery?'\"\nNot What ShTtvieant\nMaud.\u2014I've Just heard of a case\nwhere a man married a girl on his\ndeath bed so that she could have his\nmillions when he was gone. Could\nyou love a girl like that?\nJack.\u2014That s just the kind of a girl\nI could love.   What's her address?\nWhenever you feel a headache coming on take\nNA-DRU-CO Headache Wafers\nThey stop headaches promptly and surely. Do not contain \u25a0\nopium, morphine, phenacetin, acetanilld or other dangerous\ndrugs.   25c. a box at your Druggist's. 12j\nNATIONAL DRUQ AND CHEMICAL CO. OP CANADA.   UMITID.\nClay Pipe Still Here\nThe clay pipe has not quite departed.\nIt Is always to be seen tucked, stem\ndownward, In tbe strap which the\ndustman and the coalman use to hitch\nup the legs of their corduroys\u2014Just\nbeneath the knees. The china cigar-\nholder, however, Ib not only dead, but\nforgotten. Lady Dorothy Nevill can\nrecall the monstrosity: \"Lord, Abergavenny,\" she notes, \"remembers having seen my father-in-law, the Hon.\nGeorge Nevill, born In 1760, smoking\na cigar throughva china holder, about\nthe most uncomfortable method of\nBmoklng possible. These old-fashioned china cigar holders were often elaborately painted,\" Just the very\nthing, in fact, for a birthday present\nto the husband.\nThere will be no occasion in a\nshort time for Prince Rupert, the\nPacific terminus ot the O. T. P. to\nImport its supplies of cement from\nEngland, Germany or even Victoria,\naB last summer there was discovered\nnear Shames, B. C, which is also on\nthe line ot the great Transcontinental\nRailway, a large deposit ot lime stone\ntlmt Is considered perfect tor the manufacture of cement. This Bhould\nprove a powerful stimulus to the\nbuilding boom in Prince Rupert.\nThi Invalid\n\"You know that ball player who\nhas a glass arm, a weak knee and a\ngame ankle\u2014the one wbo only finished in five games during the season?\"\n\"Yes, what about him?\"\n\"He's going to work In a stone yard\nthrough the winter.\"\nMotto of the miser\u2014Never give up.\nReady for the Warden\nTo make sure that tho boy was\nnot disobeying the bass fishing law,\nthe game warden took the string of\nfish out of the water and found only\ncatfish, perch and suckers on the line.\nA few feet farther down the stream\nhe found a large black bass wiggling\non a string weighted down with a\nstone, and asked the hoy what he waB\ndoing with tlie fish.\n\"Well, you see,' answered tbe boy,\n\"he's been taking my bait all morning,\nand so I Just tied him np there until\nI got through fishing.' '\nLast year the consumption ot coal\nln this country was 502,000,000 tons\nin round numbers, in England,300,O00,-\n000 tons nearly, and in Germany about\n350,000,000 tons.\nNothing Like Leather\nFor oyer twelve months now a rotfd\nmade principally ot leather has bean\nlu use at Handsworth, Birmingham,\nand shows practically no signs ot wear.\nIt is another example of the elimination of that commercial bugbear, .'\u2022the\nwaste product,\" for until some ingenious person hit upon the idea of the\nleather road practically no use had\nbeen discovered for the leather waste\nfrom which It is made. The waste\nleather was shredded until it veritably\n.l3?\".?*a pulp* K waB then treafied\nwith bitumen and tar and laid In the\nusual way. The road is claimed >to\nhave many great advantages. It\ncreates little or no dust, gives considerable wear, Is resilient and silent\nand g ves a goood grip for motor tires\nand almllar objects. It \"is a comfortable material for homes to tread on,\nand the heaviest vehicles that have\nbo far passed over lt have made no\nImpression on lt.\nScotch Wit\nA Scotch woman, whose name.wat\nMargaret, did nothing but swear and.\nabuse instead ot answering, the minister.\n\"Ah, Margaret,\" said he, \"dlnna y*\nken where a' the slnfu' gang?\"\n\"De'U take them that kens as well\naB them that speers,\" cried she.\n\"Ah, Margaret, they gang where\nthere be wailing and gnashing of\nteeth.\"\n' By my trow, then,\" said Margaret,\n\"let them gnash that hae them,- for\nde'il a stump hae I had these twenty\nyears.\"\n\"My present patient,\" said the pretty nurse, \"is a peevish old millionaire.\"\"\n'Never mind, he may ask you to\nmarry him.\"\n\"Yes he may. He has about run out\nof other requests.\"\n\"Did you know,\" said a man who\nwas reading about the contraction of\nmetals, \"that a clock ticks faster In\nwinter than In summer?'\n\"No. I .never noticed that about -a\nclock.   But I know a gas-meter does.\"\nFaint ?\nHsve yes week heart, diuy (aeliags, oppressed\nbreathing altar meall P Or do you experience pain\nover the heart, shortness ol breath oa goiag up-stain\nand the many diitretiisg symptoms whieh indicate\npoor circulation sad bsd blood? A heart toaie,\nblood aad body-builder that has stood the test of\nover 40 yeen ol cures is\nDr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery\nThe heart become* regular as clock-work. The red\nblood corpuscles are increased in number\u2014snd tbe\naervsa la turn are well led. The arteries an tiled\nwith food rich blood. That is why aervous debility,\nirritability, (slating spalls, disappear sad are overcome by this alterative extract of medietas! roots\nput up by Dr. Pisrea without the use of aloohoL\nAsk yonr neighbor. Maay have bsea cured of\nscrofulous condition!, ulcere, \"fcver-iores,\" white swellings, ate., by taking\nDr. Pierce's Discovery. Just the refreshing aad vitaUzlag toalo Beaded for\nexcessive tissue wsite, ia convalescence tram fevers er for run-down, anaemic,\nthin-blooded people. Stick to this sab aad sane remedy sad refute sll \" iust\nas good \" klads offered by the dealer wha is looking (or a larger pro St. Nothing witldo you hilf \u2022\u2022 mueh good as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medioal Diioovsry.\nDon't let repairs\neat up your profits\nWhether they represent actual cash outlay, or\nonly the time of yourself and your help, repairs\nare waste just the same. When you make an\nimprovement\u2014no matter how small its cost may\nbe\u2014let it be permanent. Then it is a real investment, something on which you can realize in cash should you decide to\nsell your property; and something that will pay you constant\ndividends in convenience, sightliness and comfort as long as\nthe farm remains your own.\nConcrete Improvements Are Permanent\nThey last as long as the very hills themselves. They do not\nrequire experts to build them. Their first cost, in most cases,\nis no more than for inferior materials.\nAren't you interested in the subject of permanent, modern\nfarm improvements!\nThen write for the book that describes hundreds of them\u2014*\n\"WHAT THE FARMER CAN DO WITH CONCRETE\"\nng\nwit\nIt Isn't a Catalogue. Kvery ons of Its 110 handsomely Hlustrsted pages Is Interest*\n_ and Instructive. They tell how to mm concrete, how to place It, whet csn be dona\nth It   Ths book wss printed to sell for N cents, but ws have a copy fer you, free.\nSend\neYourl\nVour  name  snd sddrsss on a assist will bring this beek\n.     TO YOU ABSOLUTELY FREE\nHall the postcard to-day.    The book will come to you by\nreturn mail.     Addrees\nCANADA CEMENT CO., Ltd.\n63-63 NATIONAL BANK \u25a0UlLMNO\nMONTREAL. P.O. ff\nTHE ST.TW. GHAND FORKS. BRITISH COLUMBIA\nS0RE8 FROM ELBOWS TO\nFINGERS\nZam-Buk Worked a Miracle of Healing.\nReverend Gentlemai. Fully-\nCorroboratea\nMiss Kate L. Dolllver, of Caledonia,\nQueens Co., N. S., says: \"I must add\nmy testimony to the value ot Zam-Buk.\nUlcers and Bores broke out on my\narm, and although I tried to heal them\nby using various preparations, nothing\nseemed to do me any good. The sores\nspread until trom fingers to elbow\nwas one mass ot ulceration.\n\"I had five different doctors, and\nfaithfully carried out their instructions. I drank pint after pint of blood\nmedicines, tried salve after salve, and\nlotion after lotion; but it was of no\navail.\n\"My father then took me thirty\nmiles to see a well-known doctor. He\nphotographed the nrm and hand. This\nphotograph was sent to a New York\nhospital to the specialist', but they\nsent word they could do nothing fur-\nthor for me, and I was ln despair.\n\"Ono day a friend asked me If I had\ntried Zam-Buk, I said I had not, but\nI got a box right away. That first\nbox did me more good than all the\nmedicine I bad tried up to that time,\nso I continued the treatment. Every\nbox healed tbe sores more and more\nuntil, to make a long story short, Zam-\nBuk healed all the sores completely.\nEverybody in this place knows of my\ncaso and that tt is Zam-Buk alone\nwhich cured mo.\"\nMinister corroborates.\u2014The Hev. W.\nB. M. Parker, o'. Caledonia, Miss Dol-\nliver's minister, writes: \"ThiB Is to\ncertify that the testimonial of MIbb\nDolllver is correct aB far as my knowledge goes. I have known her for a\nyear and a half, and her cure effected\nby Zam-Buk Ib remarkable.\"\nWherever there Is ulceration, blood-\npoison, Bores, cold-cracks, abscesses,\ncuts, burns, bruises, or any skin tt.-\nJury or dUeaso, there Zam-B'iu sh.iuld\nbe applied. It Is also a sure euro lor\npiles. All druggists and stores s\u00bblt at\n60c. per box, or post free fi'Oatt '\/.Mil\nBuk Co., Toronto, for pr ce. Hef.iPO\ncheap and harmful lmltatlinc nnd substitutes.\nA species of white ants, called termites, Is noted for Its high hills of\ndwellings. If the houses of men were\nproportionately high, size for size, thc\nhumblest cottage would be a mile In\nheight.\nMothers Value This Oil.\u2014Mothers\nwho know how suddenly croup may\nseize their children and how necessary\nprompt action is in applying relief,\nalways keep at hand a supply of Dr.\nThomas' Eclectrlc Oil, because experience has taught tbem tbat there is no\nbetter preparation to be had for the\n\u2022 treatment ot this aliment, and thoy\naro wise, for Us various uses render\nIt a valuable medicine. >.\nAt most railway stations ln Italy It\nis possible to buy English biscuits,\nand usually, also, English preserves.\nSM\/ofiesGure\nSMt slops coaaika. cm* colds, heals\nIkieataadlaals \u2022     Z8c.nl..\nBUY COCKSHUTT DRILLS\n  Call and let us explain our Special Anti-Sagging, Anti-Friction and Accurate Sowing features.\nJane Austen's Sailor Brother\nThe House of Commons has declined to abolish prize money, and,\nIndeed, when one remembers the great\npeople who have enjoyed and been\nencouraged hy it, one Is not sorry.\nJane Austen's sailor brotherB were\nawarded for their valor in this way.\nCharles Austen was lieutenant of the\nEndyminlon, under Captain Philip\nDurham, ln 1800.\nOn the occasion of the capture of\nthe Scipio tie encounter took place\nin a violent gale; but in spite of .vi.iil\nand weather he put off in a boat 'villi\nonly four men, and boarded the vessel.\nJane v Austen writes to tell her slatar\nCassandra how he spent his prize\nmoney.\n\"Charles has received \u00a330 for his\nshare ot the privateer, and expects\n\u00a310 more; but of what avail Ib it to\ntake prizes it he lays out the produce\niu presents for his Bisters? He lias\nbeen buying gold chains and topab\ncrosses for ub. He must be well scolded. I shall write again by this post\nto thank and reproach him. We\nshall be unbearably fine.\" '\nThese Pills Cure Rheumatlsm.\u2014To\nmany who suffer from rheumatism a\ntrial of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills Is\nrecommended. They have pronounced action upon the liver and kidneys\nand by regulating- the action ot these\norgans act as an alternative In preventing the admixture ot uric acid\nand blood that causes this painful disorder. They must be taken according\n>o directions and used steadily and\n'hey will speedily glvo evidence of\ntheir beneficial effects.\nNever be In your placo of business\nwhen a person wants to borrow money\noff you, because If you are in, you\nwill be out, but if you are out you will\nbe ln.\nOnly One \"BROMO QUININE\"\nThat la LAXATIVE  BROMO QUININE.\nLook (or tho signature of E. W. GP.OVB.\nHied the World over to Cute a Cold tn\nOne Day.      25c.\nStill Safe\n'What do you think of girls being\nallowed \"to propose ln leap year?'\n\"It doesn't bother me as long as\nthere's no year when men are bound\nto accept them.\"\nMlnard s Liniment Co., Limited.\nGentlemen,\u2014My daughter, 13 years\nold, was thrown from a sleigh and\ninjured her elbow so badly lt remained\nstiff and very painful for three years.\nFour bottles of MINARD'S LINIMENT\ncompletely cured her and sho has not\nbeen troubled for two years.\nYours truly.\nJ. V. LIVESQUE.\nSt. Joseph, P. O., 18th August, 1900.\nWhy he Was Lucky\nWhen the man who had been hit by\nthe automomblle at last opened his\neycB a sigh of relief went\" up from the\ncrowd.\n\"It's a wonder you weren't killed,\"\nsaid one of the bystanders. 'You're\nluckier than most of the fellowB who\nget hit.\"\n' I certainly am,\" replied the victim,\nrubbing his bruises. \"I got his number Just before he struck me.\"\nTHE POWER THAT DRIVES\nTHE HUMAN FACTORY\nDr.\nWilliams'  Pink  Pills  Help\nBlood and Make You Well\nthe\n\"Why do you make such palpable\nefforts to avoid your duty as a citizen to serve on tho Jury?\" sternly\nasked the Judge.\n\"Your honor,\" the venireman explained, \"I'm as patriotic as the next\nman, but I'll be hanged if I'll allow\nanybody to make me out such a plumb\nIdiot ai a man seems to have to be\nto be acceptable as a Juryman.\"\nMHfinM\nECZEMA\nAHUM*. CuUCTOT Rotp sad OMaaM IN\nSOlS M drawn. tnS dMt.ll xwerntttm,. Kami\nStash ot tut, vita M-pmo booklH oa th. tut\ntMUfttoM.1 ol IM tkla. will bt Mot ponMno, oa\n_>MMUoaw''Cittlnu\u00bb.\"Mpt,M__M>\u00ab>,U.S.A.\nW. N. U. Ne. Sta.\nThe Balky Party\nA Toronto man In company with a\nfriend waa driving a big car along a\nroad In the Interior ot Hastings\nCounty, when tbey met an old-fashioned carriago ln which were an old-\nfashioned couple. The frightened\ncountry people Jumped to the ground\nand the motor car came to a halt.\nObserving the consternation of the\nstartled couple, the owner left his car\nand stepped toward them.\n\"If you will let me,\" he said, \"I will\nlead your horse past our machine.\"\n\"Nevor mind .the horse, stranger.\n'You lead my old woman past that\nthing and 111 get the horse by all\nright,\"\nMinard't Liniment Curet Burnt, Etc.\nTht Fool and Hit Money.\nTho money that was co recklessly\nsquandered by the young man ot\nwhom we read much In tho newspapers, a member of \"the Idle rich \"\nwas never worked for by blm. It waa\nnever earned, never accumulated nor\nreally appreciated. Its new owner, to\nwbom it was bequeathed, whether unexpectedly, or after long and impatient waiting, had never watched lt\ngrowing; he had never planted the\nteed, nor tilled the soil of which he\nwastes the harvest. Perhaps this Is\nwhy we accept lt as a truth that \"the\nfool and his money are soon parted.\"\nBut we hug to ourselves the comfort.\nIng belief that tho conditions could\nnever affect us In the samo way.\nBrought Down His Man\nHon. Martin Burrell was explaining,\nat the live stock men's dinner In Toronto how hard It was for a politician\nto please everybody. \"I mustn't say\ntoo much In pralso of the horsemen,\"\nhe said, \"or the catUe men will be offended.\nYou may have heard the ttory of thc\nEnglishman ond the Frenchman who\nwere to fight a duel tn a pitch-dark\nchamber, tiring their pistols at a word\nof command. The Englishman being\ncourageous ond tender-hearted, didn't\nwith to kill his opponent, so. having\npreviously located tlio chimney, when\nthe word was given ho fired up tho\nflue\u2014and brought down the Frenchman.\n\"Now, romombor, If you ever have\nto toll this story tn Franco, bo suro\nto make It tho Englishman who drops\nout of the chimney \"\nThe human body Is the busiest factory in tho world. There Ib no eight\nhours day, no slack season, no holidays, no cessation of labor at any\ntime, Day and night work Is being\ncarried on ln the workshop of your\nbody, and it never ceases until the\nengine\u2014the heart\u2014stops forever.\nThe foctory of your body haB its\nmotive power, without which it would\nhave to close down at once. That\nmotive power is the blood, healthy,\nrich, red blood which keeps your\nwhole system efficient and which\ndrives away all diseases that may attack it.\nGood, red blood Is the chief\ncontroller of *every action; the source\nof all the energy you possess. It builds\nup every substance of your muscles,\nnerves, sinews and flesh. It removes\nthe waste and poisonous products constantly created In your body, which,\nIf allowed to remain Bet up disease\nand weakness of every kind. Good\nblood glveB energy and vitality to the\nnervous system, besides regulating\nthe function of the stomach, Intestines\nliver, kidneys and other organB of the\nbody. Briefly, on the purity and richness ot your blood the health of your\nwhole body depends.\nOften the blood begins to tall and\nbecomes thin and poor ln quality. It\nbecames loaded with waste matter and\ncharged with poisons. Then It Is that\nthe motive power of your bodily workshop goeB wrong, your physical machinery becomeB disorganized and you\nfall 111. You become anaemic: maybe\nthe nerves break down, or you begin\nto suffer from indigestion, neuralgia,\ngeneral debility, severe headaches,\npains In the back or side, rheumatism,\nor even paralysis.\nIn all failures of the blood Dr. Williams Pink Pills are the beet known\nremedy. These pills actually make\nnew, rich blood, which brings health\nand energy to every part of the body.\nThousands and thousands of people,\nnot only ln Canada, but all over the\nworld, testify to the truth of this\nstatement. The following Is a bit of\nproof. Mrs. Fred Strieker, Jr., Moose-\nfield, Ont., sayB: \"A few years ago\nI was a physical and nervous wreck;\nV had pains throughout my whole body.\nI hsd no appetite and my stomach felt\nas if there was a big lump in it. The\nleast exertion would make my heart\nbeat violently, and I would be attacked\nwith trembling spells, and such a\nweakness that my breath would come\nIn gasps. I was under a doctor'B care\nfor nearly two months, but got very\nlittle relief. I then tried other remedies, but with no better results. Finally I decided to try Dr. Williams\nPink Pills and this was the first medicine that reached the root of my\ntrouble. After taking the plllfl a few\nweeks I waa much better, and by the\ntime I had taken ten boxes I was entirely recovered. I now always keep\nthe pills In tho house and If I feel the\nleast worn out take an occasional\nbox and feel all right again.\"\nSold by all medicine dealers or by\nmall at 60 cents a box or six boxes for\n$2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.\nOut of 760 samples of milk examined\nlu London during three months 106\nvera pronounced tuiierevwls.\" To\nfind the source of infection 8,750 cows\nhad to be examined. They were located on 102 farms scattered all over\nthe country\t\nHousehold troubles: Headache,\nToothache, Earache, Stomach ache,\nHamllns Wizard OU cureB these aches\nand pains so why don't you keep a\nbottle in the house.\nA Natural Bent\n\"ProfesBor,\" said Miss Skylight. \"1\nwant you to suggest a course in life\nfor me. 1 have thought of Journal-\nIsm \"\n\"WJiat are your Inclinations?\"\n\"Oh, my soul yearns and throbs nnd\npulsates with an ambition to give the\nworld a life work that shall be mar-\nvellouB in its ecope and wlerdly entrancing ln the vastness ot Its structural beauty.'\n\"Woman, you're born to be a mll-\nIner.\"\nOpportunities make us known to\nothers and still more to ourselves.\nWhin Your Eyes Need Cm\nTry Uurlna Eye Remedy. No 8mi.rtln.r\u2014Feel?\nrino\u2014AcU Quickly. Trr It lor Red,\t\nWatery Ejrei and Qrannltted Eyelids.\ntrateal Book In each Package.\nWeak,\nIllut-\nMurine. It\nooDiponndeu Of onr OcQllita-~nol:a \"Patent Ma\nlolnf'-bot Meat tn MtaasMfal PhntoaN'Pn\ntlee fur nftar yean.  Mow dedicated lo tbt Pub*\nHo and told f i vrasibta al jBoand too Der Bolt*\nMurloe K;e Saltern jklepllo Tibet, tt. and tee.\nMurine lye Remedy Oo., Ohloogt)\nCANNIBAL ETIQUETTE\nScotsman'! Twenty-Two Yeart In\nCentral Africa\nMr. Daniel Crawford, who recently\nreturned from the wilds of BrltlBh\nCentral Africa to his native town of\nGreenock, at a publio lecture narrated\nsome of his experiences during the\ntwenty-two years that he dwelt with\ncannibals ln the centre of the dark\ncontinent.\nSpeaking of the cannibalistic traits\nof tlie natives ho said he knew tbe\npostal address of a man who had several bodies burled. Before he feasted\noff one ho would murmur a prayer\nand an apology, \"O corpse, I havo rescued you from the cold, clammy soil\nand I am now going to give you the\nhonor of a human Interment.\" One\nof his \"boys\" accldently Bliot his father, and as lt is a cannibal point of\netiquette that one may not eat one's\nown father, ho passed the body along\nto several of his friends.\nOnce a cannibal chief whom he was\nseeking to improve asked what happened when there had been a battle\nbetween 10,000 white men, and when\ntold that they were alL decently bur-\nted, exclaimed, 'Oh, look at tho waste;\nthe white man kills for murder only,\nbut the black man kills to live.\"\nThe cheapness of Mother Graves'\nWorm Exterminator puts it within\nreach ot all, and It can be got at any\ndruggists.\nAn Ancient Instance\nMethuselah Just turned forty-six,\nWentforth to hunt a Job,\nBut everywhere they told him \"Nix!\nYou're a year too old, you slob!\"\n\"Too old!\" he echoed, with racous\nroar;\n\"You'd better Oslerlzo me, quite?\nYou dubs, I'll live   nine   centuries\nmore!\"\nAnd so ho did\u2014for spite.\nTo'be rigidly exact he should havo\nsaid \"923 years more,\" but he could\nnot have done so without Interfering\nwith the rhythmical necessities of\nthis effect. Don't lay it up against\nhim.\nMlnards Liniment for tale everywhere.\nTho first boat to dock at thc New\nGrand Trunk wharves at Vancouver\nis the Canadian-Mexican liner \"Beck-\nenham\" which arrived via Victoria\nfrom Santa Creez.\nA Drawback\n' It is really an odd thing that counterfeiters are nevor caught.\"\n\"Why \"so?\"\n\"Because the detectives are so often on the trail ot a false cent.'\nWe often pardon those who weary\nus, but we cannot pardon those whom\nwo weary.\nTDD     ATLANTIC\n\u25a0\u25a0-..rK.    STEAMSHIPS\nmm\nWeekly   Sailings   to   and   From\nLiverpool.\nPrepaid Passage,\nGREAT  BRITAIN,  IRELAND,\nSCANDINAVIA,\nCONTINENTAL  POINTS.\nTo\nAll Railway Stations\nManitoba,  Albtrta,  Saskatchewan,\nBritish Columbia.\nAt lowest rttes.   For reservations,\ntickets, details, see local agents or\nwrite\nJ. 8. Calder, Gen'l Agent, Winnipeg\nYOUR\nLIVER\nrequires an occasional stimulus\nin order to keep it working properly, to keep it clean and\nhealthy. When your liver is\nwrong, everything apparently\nseems at sixes and sevens, you\ncan't think right, you can't work\nright and you don't look right\nIt is just as well to take an\noccasional dose of\u2014\nM\nORREL'S\nANITOU\nINERAL\nEFFERVESCENT\nSALTS\nA8K YOUR  PHYSICIAN\n\"Is Ills credit good?\"\n\"Good, I Bhould say lt Is. Why, his\ngrocer trusted him for a pound of\nbutter yesterday.\"\nGood Health is the Target\nof your aim\u2014or should be\u2014and first in importance. Get and keep\ngood health and you can work with hope\u2014find life worth living\u2014rise\nafter nights of restful sleep\u2014have energy and ambition\u2014know\ncontent.   If you are out of health, or in poor condition, see what\nBEECHMfTS PIUS\ncan do for you. Your food will taste right and nourish you better\n\u2014your bowels will be regular and your nervous system corrected.\nYour blood will be purer and you will feel more cheerful. Your\nwhole system will be benefited and you will know why so many\nthousands have found that Beecham's Pills hit the target and\nHit Right Every Time\nPrepared only by Thomae Betcbim, St. Helens, Uncishlre, England.\nSold everywhere In Cmdmd U. 8. Aawrica,  labotoo 21 cteie.\nDrClarK's   -\neer.-.Nir\n1 pills'e\nKIDNEYS\n   _ fortified .vill BR.  \t\nfifty ccnta a box or mailed direct by\nTHK MARTIN BOH & WYNNI OO.,\nSUSPECT YOUR\nKIDNEYS\nwhen ymi have lame back, frequent headaches, rheumatic puna, spot a before the eyes, twinges In tlie Joint*,\netc. Three-quarters of all human ailment a aro duo to\ntbe kidneys failing to properly free the ayatem of\npoiaonoui tici-.a andwnate matter.\n' To alimulrte, tone, cleanse and strengthen the kidneys,\ntake DR. CURK'H SWEET NITRE P1L1-M. Take\nthen the Ant day you have cause to think your kidneys need attention. They contain sweet nitre and\nHto other sovereign curative agent*. Acute or chronio\n__ kidney din-ease can never get a foothold In the ayatera\nCLARK'S SWEET NITRE I'ILLS.   Bold everywhere at\n48\nWINNIPEG, CANADA\nEconomy in little tilings is just at\nimportant as economy in big .blags\nEDDY'S  MATCHES\n\u25a0will answer one of your \"economy question}.\" 60 yews\nof constant betterment has brought them to such perfection that one Eddy Match does the work of several others\nof inferior make.\nALWAYS ASK FOR EDDY'S. THE   SUN,   GRAND   FORKS,   B, C.\nWhen Eyes Grow\nDim With Age\nGlasses become an imperative necessity, and the importance of giving the eyes proper care obtrudes\nitself upon the dullest understanding. Our skilled optician is qualified to test your eyes in a thorough\nand reliable manner. Examination\nFree.\nATA III \u2022 JEWELLER S\n.D.lVlorrison, opticus\n\u00aelj.e\u00a3tf.Mwg&mt\n-iibllshod atUrand Korks. British Colnmbl\n*. A. Kvans    Hdttor and Publisher\nA till*, of iliis paper can be anon Ht tlie office\n,f Meinrn_ Bi 4 J. Hardy Jfc Co., 3D, Ul and 32,\nfleet Htniet, K.U., Loudon, iiti'.'laud, free of\n\u25a0Imrtff., and that firm will be {{lad to receive\niiibscrii.tmuBiitid advertisements on our behalf.\nBUB8CRIPTION HAlBB !\nOne Year *L50\nHue Year (in advance)  LOO\nOne Year, in I'niied States  1.50\nAddress all communications to\nThe Evening Sun,\nfHONH   Hii OBAND FUKKS, B.C\nFRIDAVrAPRIL 5, 1912\nPiiEMiKit McBride is to make another tr p to England this summer.\nThis probably means that tho people of British Columbia will be\ncalled on to contribute an additional\n(511,000 to defray bis expenses. It\nwould be cheaper for the people of\nthe province if Mr. McBride would\ntake up his permanent residence in\nLondon.\nA six FOOT perrigrinating poet\ndrifted into the aSun office this\nweek. He was too large and healthy\nto affront, although our fighting\neditor- is not considered a slouch.\nDiplomacy was therefore employed\nin inducing bim to tjuit the office.\nWe told bim that our contemporary\npaid a better price for such stuff\nturn we did.    Revenge is sweet.\nish Columbia the liquor- trallic is\nmanipulated from Victoria. The\nmunicipalities in this province\nshould start an agitation' for home\nrule.\nIt is not likely that the government power sprayer will find time\nto spray the orchards owned by\nLiberals in thiB valley.\nIt was a great Tory victory, even\nif thc electors were bribed with their\nown money.\nA FRUIT tube planted this spring\nwill be worth two planted year\nyear.\nJust Stay With It\n\"Thelonger I live,\" suid the philosopher, Huxley, \"I am more dis\nl posed to set less value on mere clever-\nI ness und to think that the power of\nenpurance, with persistence, is the\nmost valuable of all.\"\nNow there is encourugemout for us\nordinary folks, who have no wonderful gifts, na> genius, but who may\nhave a lot of grit and bulldog hang-\nemit iveness. If you ore fighting to\nmaster your trade, profession or business, fighting to bring about reforms,\nlighting to get a home, why\u2014\nJ ust stay with it till you win.\nPremier McDkii.e will probably\nfin I some pretext lor visiting Lon\ndon annually\" until he obtains thut\ncoveted titie. Let us petition his\nmajesty to mnke him Sir Richard.\nThen we can keep his expense account down.\nIn tbe old country the demand\nfor home nil :is spreading.   In Brit\nEast,e Day Services\nThe following services will be held\nin Holy Trinity church on Easter\nDay, April 7:\nHoly communionaf 8 a.m.\nMorning prayer and holy communion at 11a. m. The following\nis the proposed music for this service:\nHymn, 16G, Alleluia! Alleluia! Al\nleluia!\nChrist Our Passover, 22o, Mac-\nfarren.\nSpecial psalms, 2, 57, 111.\nTe Deum, 35, 37, 39; Hayes,\nItnssell, Stainer.\nJubilate, 88, M. B. Foster.\nHymn, 163, \"At the Lamb's\nHigh Feast We Sing.\"\nKyrie Eleison, 267, Stainer.\nGloria tibi, 275, Garrett.\nOffertory anthem, \"Now is Christ\nRisen,\" H. E. Nichol.\nSursum Cords and Sanctus, 356,\n357, W. T. Clemson.\nBenedictus, T. Morley.\nAgnus Dei 323, Stainer.\nGloria in excclsis 332, old chant\nHymn 157, \"Jesus is Risen Today.\"\nChildren's service at 3 p.m.\nevening prayer and sermon at 7:30\nwith the following proposed  music:\nIlytnii 168, \"Come Ye People,\nR_ti\u00abe the Strain.\"\n.Special psalms, 113, 114, 118.\nMagnificat 114, M, B. Foster.\nNunc Dimitis Kit, Bridge.\nHymn 167, \"The Day of Resurrection \"\nHymn 592, \"On the Resurrection\nMorning.\"\nSermon.\nOffertory anthem, \"Now is Christ\nRisen,\" H. E. Nichols.\nVesper hymn, 384, Bell.\nSevenfold amen, 381, Stainer.\nHymn 520, \"Jesus Lives.\"\n\u2022'fesf\nhtSsi\nEVERY PURPOSE.\nRIGHT PRICE\nk TOO\nMining Stock Quotations\nBoston, April 3.\u2014The following are today's opening quotations for\nthe stocks mentioned:\nBid. Asked\nGranby Consoliduted. 42.00 44 00\nB. 0.   Copper       6.50 . 7.00\nA Genius\nHe was a genius. There was no\ndoubt about it. His hair was long and\nthere was a dreamy, far away look in\nhis eyes, and he had a scheme that\nwould make 'him rich\u2014rich beyond\nthe dreams of avarice.\n\"What is your scheme.\" asked a\nfriend of his, seeking the secret in-\nsormation.\n\"Come toa quiet corner, and I will\ntell you,\" suid the long-haired one.\n\"Tis thus. It has been estimated\nthat the common female housefly lays\n20,000 eggs in a season.\"\n\"Well,\" answered the friend,\"what\nof thut?\"\n\"I propose,\" continued the other,\nin a triumphant voice, \"to graft the\nnousefly on so the hen!\"\nMetal Quotations\nNew York, April 3.\u2014Silver 58};\nstandard coppor, $15.25(S'15.76,\n(juiet.\njLosnoN, April 3.\u2014Silver, 27 1-16;\nlead, \u00a316 3s lJd.\nCHURCH SERVICES\nHoi.v Trinity Ciiukcii,Henry Steele,\nRector\u2014.Sunday services: Holy communion, ,S:00 a.m.; morning prayer\nand serniain, 11 a. tn.','evensong and\nsermon, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday school, 10\nii.m. First Sunduy of the month\nholy communion will bo celebrated at\nthe 11 a.m. service us well as ut 8\nai m. Week duv and special services\nais they are announced from time to\ntime You are cordially invited to\nworship with us, and we would be\npleased to met you.\nKnox Piiesbytkiiian Chuucii\u2014\nSabbath sej'vices at 11 a.m. and 7:30p.\nm.j Sabbath school and Bible class at\n9:45 a,in. All are cordially invited.\nSeats free. Kev. M. D. McKee, pastor.\nMETHODIST OhUHOH J. Bev. Calvert, 1). D., Pastor.\u2014Sunday services,\n11 a.m. and 7:o0 p.m.;.Sunday school,\n2:30 p.m.; Epworth League, Monday\nat 8:00 p.in.; pruver meeting, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.; Junior League, Fi'i-\ndays, 7:00 p.m. Kverylioaly will be\nwelcome.\nBaptist Ciiukcii, Bev. H. VV.\nWright, pastor.\u2014Services on Sunday\nat 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.; Bible\nel tss anil Sundav school at 10 a.m.\nQUALITY:\nThat's the first tiling yoti wnnt in  Hani,van*.\nbrands wc sell have stood tlie test of time.\nTl\nORE SHIPMENTS\nThe following are the returns of\n; the aire production \"f the Boundary\nj mines for the week, nnd also for the\n| vour to date:\nGrimliy 24,224\nMother Lode  7,830\nRawhide   5,050\n!.Jackpot      .554\nj Athelstan \t\n! Kmnia\t\nOthers\t\nSmelter treatment\u2014\niG.riii.by 23.720\n! B. C. Copper Co... 12,175\n200,664\n101,138\n33.002\n-7,810\n340\n4,901\n2,633\n33(-,97S\n140,498\nPRICE:\nThat's the next thing yon want to know is right.\nWe aro the ones who think it  will pa,y ns to charge\nyou only a fair prico.\nTHOS. A. HcINTYRE & CO.\nllcmcml ier that every added\nsubscribe!* helps to make this\npaper better for everybody.\nElectric Restorer for Ken\nPllOSPhonol ra-slores every nerve in Ilie butly\n; r *\" ils proper tensiian; re.tiires\n' vim aaiial vitality. Premature dcraay rami alt sexual\nweakness averted at once. Phoaphonol will\nmake vaiu a new man. 1'aicc $3 a box, or two lor\n15. Mailed Io any addreaaaj.. Tlie ScoboII Drag\nCo.. It. Cathtuiiui. Ont.\nNEW WALL PAPER K^\u2122.\nNew Wall Papers. The furniture, no matter how good,\ncannot make the room attractive if the walls arc ugh.\nstained or faded. SEE OUR NEW .SAMPLE,^ AT\nONCE.\nWoodland 8 Co., Druggists and Stationers\n\u2022MOW THAT WE ARE IN OUR NEW MARKET,\nJ*S wo are prepared to give the people-of Orand I'orks\nall the Choicest-cuts of\nBeef, Mutton, Pork,\nVeal and Poultry\nOf All Description\nFish, Oysters and all the\nDelicacies of the Season\nP. BURNS 8 CO., Ltd.\nY\"ti will always find tbnt ymi\nwill have to he tho malter of your\nown iiiii'aic.le.\nSoma i eople nre teniipoi tit milking nuisances of themselves.\nThere probably is cowl i\" everv-\nhody, but it never seems brave\nenough to crop out in some folks.\nHansen S Mullen\nCITY BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER\nWOOD DEALERS\nAND GENERAL TEAMING\nO.tice! .\nF. Downey's Cigar Sture\nTkl'*:i*honi*:h;\nOffice, ki.u CfnM Cfrppt\nHaN\u00abe.*-.V UKSII.'EM.F., RMS IHO* UllCCI\nMlJL.iaNL'i RiCSlIIKNOK, ft* '\nINDIAN MOTOCYCLES\nDint a Motocycle\u2014it's the most fusclnnt-\nnlUL Ingot all modern vehicle*. Gives yon\nthe means tn iro any where at any time on a\nmoment's notice Cost of operating in only\nIt! per mile. Free engine clutch and magnet*\non all 1H12 modela. For particulars write or\ncalh\nGEO. W. COOPER, AGENT \u2022\nORAND FORKS. B.C,\nCHAPMAN &WALKER ltd\n\"iSGIKEERS, CONTRACTORS\nAND SCALERS IN\nELECTRICAL SUPPLIES\nP. O. BOX 1353 4488EYMOUR ST.\nVANCOUVER. B, C.\nWE REPRESENT\nMi'i-N (\u25a0\u25a0. Cru-sicy Hr.j-;., Manchester, Kite.\nMultnis \u00ab>( Gus Producer-Plants and Oil\nHugh-en for general power or electrical\nllgiitini? purposes.\nMessrs. Dick, Kerr A: Co*, Ltd., Preston,\nl.hfjiiiixl. Equipment for -Mines and Clou-\ntractors Light Locomotives (stemn and\nelectric*.), etc.\nSterling Telephone fo., portable \"hot-\nfiring iinK.liiui_.fnr millers, contractor.*,\nprii-flpci'tiiis. The best ou the market.\nWrite for particulars.\nWE CARRY IN STOCK\nMotor*. Helternto., Kleotrioal  Supplies-\nKlectnctil Meattrig   and Cooing   Appunt\ntits, Storage !>at*erieB,etc.\nYour emini'ieK will receive  our  prompt\nattention.   Write for information.\nLONDON L1ECT0RY\n(Tn*<lLlifd Annually)\nEnables traders throughout the world to\ncommunicate direct with English\nM ANUFACTURER3 & DEALERS\nIii each class of ty>tidM. Hesides hei rig n com-\nplete eoiiinic'cU.l guide to London nnd its\nBilburbsj the directory coutniut. lists of\nEXPOKT MERCHANTS\ne Hoods t*hey ship, and the (\n\u25a0eltfii .'lilukets they supply;\nSTEAMSHIP LINES\n.,1th the Hoods t*hey ship, and the ('uloiiiiii)\nand I'orctgii 'laukets they supply;\n..rrunged under the Ports to which they sail,\nand indicating the approximate Sailings;\nPROVINCIAL TRADE NOTICES.\nof lending Manufacturers, Merchants, etc.. in\nthe principal provincial towns and Industrial\ncentres of the United KlnKdom.\nA copy of lhe current edition will he for*\nwarded, freight paid, ou receipt of Postal\nOrder for 203.\nUciilcrs seeUhig AgenetcH oan advertise\nheir trade cards lor il, or larger Advertise*\ntnetfft from \u00a33,\nTIIE LONDON dTrECTORY CO., LTD.,\n25, Abohui'on Lane, Lnnilon, E.C.\nTHE MARK OF QUALITY\nORIGINALITY AND LOW PRICES.\nWE EI1PL0Y0NLYSKILIED ARTISTS\nENGRAVINGS OF LETTER HEADS\nCARDS, COOK C0V\u00a3.iS,EUILDIt,C-3\nLABELS, ADDESIGHS.ILUISTRATIONS\nFOR AIL PURPOSES\nFASHION DRAWINGS\nWASH DRAWINGS OF MECHANICAL\nSUBJECTS.BIRDS EYE VIEWS\nRETOUCHING PHOTOGRAPHS\nAND CATALOGUE PLATES OF ALL\nKINDS FOR PRINTING USE.\nESTABLISHED 1896\nEMILCOLSOMCO.\nARTISTS, ENGRAVERS\nDESIGNERS\nHALFTONES-ZINC ETCHINGS\nCOLOR PLATES OF ALL KINDS\nWOOD AND WAX ENGRAVINGS\nAND ELECTROTYPES.\nI67&I69W.WASHIHGT0NST.\nCHICAGO\nPLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER\nCERTIFCATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\nNOTIOE\nOriginal Mineral Cluim, situate lu the\nGrand forks Mining Division of Yalo District.\nWhere located:   In Brown's camp.\nTAKK MJTU.'K that I, Alexander C. Burr,\nPree Miners'Certllleate No. .V-M8R, for\nmyself mik] ns ntrent for Charles K. Ilnlwi.\nFree. Miners' Certificate Nn. S:*8R6H, intend, sixty davs from the date hereof, to npply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate\nol Improvement, fur the purpose of obtain\nlutr a down Hi ant of the iiliove cluim.\nAnil further tike notice that aotloa, under\nsection  :17,  mpgt he-commenced hefore the\nIssuance of   sueh i.'ertlticute  of   Improvements,\nDated this -Mil. day of June, A.D. 1011.\nALEXANDER C.BURR\nLAND  ACT\nFORM OF NOTICE\nYale Land District, District of SlmllkAmeen.\nTAKK notice that Robert F. Pane of Old-'.\nI Alhertu, occupiition Parmer, intends to\napply for \"permission to purchase tho fol-\nLtwlntr described lands:\nCmnmeiiclt'ir at a post planted About. 31)\nchains north of lhe northwest oorner of Lot\nlliWS., on Deep Creek, nud about live miles\neast nf tlie town of Cascade; thence north\nill chains; thtwee we>t Mi chains; thenc*\nsouth 41)ehains;thi_iic\u00ab. east 40chains to point\nof commencement.\nROBERT F. PAOE.\nJ.R. Cranston, Ajrent.\nDated September 2nd, 1911. d\nTHE   SUN,   GBAND   FORKS,   B. C.\nFacts About Indigestion and\nIts Relief \"That Should\nInterest You\nAlthuuj.li Indigestion and Dyspepsia are so prevalent, most people do\nnot thoroughly understand their cause\nand cure. There is no reason why\nmost people should not eat anything\nthey desire\u2014if they will only chew it\ncarefully and thoroughly. Many actually starve themselves into sickness\nthrough fear of eating every good-\nlooking, good smelling, and good-\ntasting food; because it does not agree\nwith them.\nThe best thing to do is to fit yourself to digest any good food.\nWe believe we can relieve Dyspepsia. We are so confident of this fact\nthat we guarantee and promise to supply the medicine free of cost to every\none who will use it, who is not perfectly satisfied with the result? which\nit produces. We exact no promises,\nand put no one under any obligation\nwhatever. Surely, nothing could be\nfairer. We are located right hero,\nand our reputation should be sufficient\nguarantee of the genuineness of our\noffer.\nWe want every one troubled with\nIndigestion or Dyspepsia in any form\nto come to our store and buy a box of\nUexall Dyspepsia Tablets. Take thero\nhome and give tbem a reasonable trial,\naccording to directions. Then, if not\nsatisfied, eome to u\u00bb and get vour\nmoney back. They are very pleasant\nto take; they aid to soothe the irritable stomach, to strengthen and invigorate the digestive organs, and to promote a healthy and natural bowel action, thus leading to perfect and\nhealthy digestion and assimilation.\nA 29c. package of Rexall Dyspepsia\nTablets furnishes 15 days' treatment,\nln ordinary cases, this is sufficient to\nproduce a cure. In more chronic cases,\na longer treatment, of course, is necessary, and dependi upon the severity of\nthe trouble. For such oases we hare\ntwo larger sizes  which  sell for  50c.\nThere arc people who are certain\ntbat one good turn deserves three.\nOf Interest to Farmers\nThe provincial department of agriculture, with the Hs-aistince of the\nminister of agriculture for the -Dominion, offers for 1912 prizes for\nfield grain, potatoes, corn, field\nroots, and fodder crops.\nThese competitions are to be organized by the provincial department of agriculture and conducted\nunder the auspices of the fanners'\ninstitutes, and each institute may\nprovide competitions for not more\nthan two kinds of crops. Competi\ntors will be allowed one entry in\nonly one institute, and fields enter-\nad must be within tbe area gov-'\nerned by that institute.\nNotification of competitions proposed, witB crop\" ..elected, must be\nforwarded to the department of\nagriculture, in Victoria, not later\ntbau May 15. Ten bona fide entries\nmust appear for each competition,\nand au entry fee of not less than M)\ncents nor more than $1,000 will be\nrequired.\nIn each competition not less than\n875 must be offered in .cash prizes:\nFirBt $20, second $10, third $12,\nwith prizes for every additional five\nentries over ten as follows: Fourth\n$10, fifth $8, sixth #6, seventh Si\nOf this amount $60 will be paid by\nthe province, tbe remaining $16 partially defrayed by entry fees, to be\ncontributed by tbe institute.'\nThe British Columbia department\nof agriculture, at it. o_.ij_._Hti. wil\nfurnish judges, but wbere necessary\nthe institute must furnish a non-\ninterested guide to the country.\nFurther regulations governing the\ncompetition will be forwarded  later.\nDisease in Potatoes\nOwing to tho shuriage in the potato\ncrop this year, dealers and some\ngrowers of potatoes find it necessary\nto import large supplies for table and\nseed purposes from Great Britain,\nIreland and other European countries.\nBulletin 63 issued by the Dominion\nexperimental fai m. Ottawa, explains\nhow potato canker has found its way\nacross the Atlantic into Newfoundland with potatoes imported from\nEurope.\nPotato canker is a disease at |prcs\nent unknown in Canada. It is one of\nthe most serious diseases known, affecting not only the farm lands on\nwhich the potatoes are grown, but the\ndisease is also directly injurious to\nthe health of the consumer of affected\npotatoes. Boiling does not destroy\ntbe injurious properties. The disease\nis characterized by nodular excres-\nsenccs which may often be larger than\nthe tuber itself. These cankers affect\ntheeyes of the (potato and ate very\nsmall in the early stages. Any tubers\nfound with smaller or larger outgrowths rising from where the eyes\nare situated should under no condition be used for seed or table purposes, The introduction und establishment of this disease would seriously compromise one of the most im\nportant agricultural industries of\nCanada,viz., potato glowing. Farmers\nand consumers should be exceedingly\ncareful in using potatoes that may\nhave been imported from tireat\nBritain or tbe continent of Europe,\nSuspicious looking tubers sbould le\ndestroyed by fire and not be thrown\non the ground, or the disease, if present, will establish itself permanently\nin the ground.\nThe bulletin referred to explans in\ndetail the character of the disease and\nia available.lo anyone making application for the snme to H. T. Gussow,\nDominion Botanist, Ottawa, Out.\n\"HOME t_AGAIN\"\nThe Bsautiful Picture for Grand Forks Sun and Montreal Family Herald and Weekly Star Subscribers r\nthis Season.   c_\/l_n Inspiration of Love and\nAffection\u2014c_\/l Picture that will be like a\nMember  of  the  Family\u2014A   Daily\nStudy for Old and Young\n'PHI*. Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal, acknowledged to be\n1 the greatest and best family and farm paper on the Continent, has on\nmany occasions given ils renders nwi-t delightful premium picture,\nbut this season they have secured wbat is beyond any question of doubt\nthe best picture ever offered newspaper readers. It is entitled \"Home\nAgain\" nnd describes n touching but joyful incident between two friends\nwho meet after anxious separation. e\n\"Laddie,\" a collie dog, famous for his beauty and gentleness, winners\nof many prizes at dog snows, the pride ol the family and neighborhood,\nhas been stolen, and after many days' absence he escapes one night from\nhis captor and returns home on a snowy winter's morning with thc rope\nwhich ho broke in his struggles for freedom dangling from his collar.\nHis familiar bark brings his little mistress, Marjorie, to the door nnd\nshe throws her arms around her trusty playmate's neck with cries of joy\nwhich bring her mother and brother to the door. \"Laddie\" is equally\ndelighted to be \"Home Again,\" and answers her welcome hy putting his\npaws on her shoulder and resting bis head agiinst her breast with a little\nwhine, which in his dog language means\u2014\"Where I love is Home.\"\nThe sweet-faced young mother, a woman of soft curves, tender eyes\nand parted lips\u2014the two glad-eyed children\u2014an eager hoy with bair like\nhis mother's and the quick gesture of excited boyhood; tbe warm-hearted\ngirl with rippling locks, her affectionate annB around the shaggy neck of\nthe beautiful collie, all go to form a picture tbat will win a favored place\non the walls of any home.\nThe picture is by the celebrated artist, Arthur J. Elsley, famous for\nhis skilful and sympathetic painting of children and animals.\nThe beautiful picture \"Home Again\" on heavy plate paper 22x29\ninches all ready for framing will be mailed FREE to every subscriber of\nThe Sun and Family Herald and Weekly Star for 1912.\nThe small sura of $1.50 will secure the two papers for a full year including a copy of the charming picture \"Home Again,\" which alone is\neasily worth a two dollar bill, in fact it could not be bought at that price.\nEvery home in the Boundary should get the big $1.50 worth this\nWould Be Worth Seeing\nThe mayor of .Quebec has declined\nto accept an increase of salary. Moving picture operators are i.nxi ius to\nsecure a film showing bis worship in\nthe act of dodging the city treasurer\n\u2014Vancouver Province.\nThe only 'policy holder who\ndoesn't need to pay his premiums is dead. The only man\nwho doesn't need to advertise\n18; the, man who has retired\nfrom business.\nOur time, knowledge aiftl\nexperience in the printing\nbusiness is at your disposal\nwhen you are in need of something ir this line. Don't forget this.\nThe high price of living has\nnot affected our job printing\nprices. We're are still-, doing\nhigh class commercial work of\nall kinds at prices satisfactory\nto you.\nMONTREAL\nTHE STANDARD Is the Nation...\nWeekly Newspaper of the Dominion\nof Canada. It Is national in all Its\ntdms.\nIt uses the most expensive engravings, procuring the photographs from\nall over the world.\nIts articles are carefully selected and\nIta editorial policy la thoroughly\nIndependent,\nA subscription to The Standard\ncosts $2.00 per year to any address In\nCanada or Great Britain.    ^.\nTRY IT FOR 1912!\nMontreal Standard Publishing Co.,\nLimited, Publishers.\n_- .a  _-__., MB\u2014\nBetter Look Now\nIf you hnve decided to.take a\niMnnwr cotUE-*. now It th* lit ie\nU l\u00ab\u00abk im thi ClMalflad Adt.\nfor cottar*!) to rout.\nVou will cot a moro oatloran.\nlory ootootion now than you will\nInter on.\nOr I f you wUh to tano ooaratro\nor havo ruicea to ront, now It tho\ntlmo to pitKto your CloMlflod Ad.\nCEMENT\nBy the Barrel or Carload\nJUST ARRIVED\u2014A  full line of Seed Grain\nand Garden .Seed.\nMcNeil  & Henniger\nj)\nWATER   NOTICE\nTHE\nFOR A  LICENSE TO TAKE  ANO USE\nWATER\nmoth\n11     llll\n _._     B,.   -\t\ntider .ttiiart Ml, nfl.ut 8671, 1'. 0. 1J\n\u00abia, Grn\u00bbd Korks, will apply fur a llcem-n to\ntnke nml use one cubic fun' pur wecum! of\nwater nut nf North Pork Kd'le Itiver . rei'li,\nwhich HnWK in a southerly ilireotimi Ihiotiish\nLot Still uml. :ini> ies lut\" K ft tie Itiver m ar\nOrand Foi ks, 'lli.* water will he divert eil up-\npo-m; tin' tow unite of Ni.m_mi.iuid Will In*\nlined for irrigutioi purpn-es on the la d de-\nui ribed (in Fruit L ind.-about 1T.4 ui-r s.\nTills notice was posted on the ground on\ntin' \u25a0\u2022dth duv oi' Mi'ivh, 1912 < he ttppli.'utiou\nwill be Died in the office of the Water Ke*\nco'der at Fairview.\nObjections may be hied with the said\nWater Recorder \"r with tho Cmi. pi roller of\nWuter Itiuhts, Parliament Buildinc*. Victoria, H. 0,\nO. A. 8. HEM.,\nApplicant.\nWM. DINSMORE\n\"($e Shoe Shop\nRepairing of every description neatly and\npromptly done.\nShop Next CP.R. Hotel. Columbia, B.C.\nW.F.ROBINSON\nGENERAL TRANSFER WORK\nWOOD   AND  ICE\nOFFICE AT CHALMERS* STORE\nPH01.F64 GRAND FORKS, B. C.\n1 he OliverTypewriter\nfor 17 Cents a Day!\nPleas? rend the lieadlhiejover Hitnfn, Then it*\ntremeiidoiiH sk'tiillciiniT will iuwn upon you\nAn Oliver Typewriter\u2014the Ftatidard vlidbl.\nwriter\u2014tho inust highly peri(  ted typewrite)\n\u2022mi tlie market-youfa for l\" cunts     dny!\nThe typewriter whuteconquest of tho com\nincrcfnl world is a matter of history\u2014yours fo\n17 cents a dny!\nThe typewriter that Is equipped withscoreiof\nsuch corivenlunees as \"the Hulumx' Shitt\"-\n\"The Killing Hevice\"\u2014\"The Double Release\"\u2014\n\u2022'The Locomotive Bate\"\u2014-The AutoOiR-la\nSpacer\"\u2014\"The Automatic Tabulator\"\u2014\"The\nUlsappcaritiftlndlcafor\"\n-\u25a0'The Adjustable Fa-\npor FlugunT-'-Tho s,-i-\ncntlfio t'oiidL-iiM-.i Key\nboard\"\u2014all\nYours for  17\nGents a Day!\nWe aiiounced   thli\nnew sales plan recently, Jnst to (eel the pulse of\ntho people. Simply a small cash puy incut\u2014\nthen 17 cents a day. That is the pint) lu a nutshell.\nThe result has been such a deluge of applies\ntions for machines tliat wo are simply as\ntouhded.\nThe demand comes from people of all cfaii&\nall Hgcs, all occupations.\nTiie majority o( inquiries has coine^rom pco\nb* of known finam-lnl stuiiilliiK who wt-icm\ntmcicd by the novelty of the ptopoi.'mt! An\nimpressive demonstration of the Immon \u00bb\u25a0 pup*\nutarltyof u..\u00ab UlW\u00abrTypewriter\nA startling confirmation of our belief tlmt\nthe Km of Universal Typewriting lb at hnnd.\nA  Quarter  of a Million People\nare VI ;. i g Mney with\nTlje j__\nOLIVER\nThe Standard Visible Writer\nThe Oliver Typewriter   is   a   i.im,,*v-iniik.-r\nright from the wordL'-'w!\" Ho easy to run thnt\nbegtUtietU soon Ket In ibe \"expert\" cbiH-.   Kum\nas ymi leum.   Cot tbe machine ray Iha 17 cents\na iliiy-ntnl nil above that Is voiirx.\nWherever you are. there fi work to be done\nami money to be made by using the Ollvor. The\nbusiness world incallliiK for Oliver operator*-.\nThere are not enough tn supply tlte demand.\nTheirnalMrk'H are considerably ahove tliose ol\nmany ('lansesni' worketv.\nAn Oliver Typewriter in Every Home!\nThat It tho battle cry today. \\ve Have nude\nLlicOliver supreme In iitefulliQsiaiid absolutolj\nIndispensable 111 btlllougg. Now conn's the eon\nguest of the homo.\nThe Blm pll< Ity and strength ofthe Oliver lit It\n(or family  tue.   It  Is ..ei-mnlim an  impoilMiil\nraptor in the home training oi young peoplo.\nA n educator as well n- a money maker.\nOur now lolling plan pnis the Oliver on the\nthreshold of evory homo in America, will vou\neiose the door of your home or oflice on this re*\nworkable Oliver oflerT\nWrite for further details of onr ca*v nlier ami\na fire copy ol tne new Oliver cutoI\u00ab\u00ab.   Address\nThe Oliver Typewriter Company,\nOliver Typewrlt-i. Sulla,! 11 j,\nCHICAGO, ILL.\nCOPPER^\nHANDBOOK\nNew Edition Issued Nov. 15, 1906.)\nIs a do'\/en books-in one, covering the\nhistory, geography, geology; chemistry, mineralogy, metallurgy, terminology, uses, statistics and nuances of\ncopper. It is a pracical book, useful\nto all and necessary to most men en\ngaged in any branch of the eoppes\nindustry,\nIts facts will pass muster with the\ntrained scientists, and its language is\neasily understood by the everyday\nman. It gives the. plain'facts in plain\nKnglish without fear or favor.\nIt lists and describes 40,1(1 copper\nmines and companies iu all parts of\nthe world, descriptions funning from\ntwo lilies to sixteen pages, according\nto importance\"of the propel ty.\nThe Copper llaiid'ioaak is conceded\nto be the\nWorld's Standard Reference\nBook on Copper\nThe milling man needs the book for\nthe facts it gives him about mines,\nmining and the metal.\nThe investor needs the book for the\ntactsit gives'him about mining, mining investments and copper statistics.\nHundreds of swindling companies are\n\"xposed in plain Knglish.\nPrice is 80 in Buckram with gilt\ntop; (17.50 in full library morocco.\nWill be sent, fully prepaid, ou approval, to any address ordered, ami\nmay he returned within a week of re\nceipt if not found fully satisfactory.\nHorace J.  Stevens,\nKditor and Publisher,\n45.) Postoffice Block,\nHoughton, Michigan.\nIF YOO SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE\nYOU CAN GET THE\n52 WEEKLY ISSUES OF\nTHE YOUTH'S\nCOMPANION\nfor 1912 for only $1.75; also all the\nissues for the remaining weeks of 1911,\nI'ree. It is your last chance to get\nthe paper at this price. On January\n1, 1912, it will be advanced to S2.00.\nSerials and Other Stories.\nThe 52 issues of 1912 will contain\nthe equivalent of 30 volumes of the\nbest reading, including nearly 3MJ\nStories, Articles by Famous Writers,\nAthletics for Hoys, Chats with Girls,\nthe Doctor's Weekly Counsel, etc.\nSend fororlnntiuncrment for 1012 and Sample\nCopies of Tlu, youths ComPanton, 1-tee,\nFREE to Jan. 1912\nEvery Naw Subscriber who cull ont\n\u2022nd sends this slip (or mentions this\npaper) with S1.75 for the 52 issue* of\nTha Companion for 1912 will receive\nAll Iha issues for Ihe remaining\nweek* of 1911 free, including the\nbeautiful Holiday Numbers( also s :\u25a0\nTha Companion** Picture Calenrtof\nfor 1912. lithographed in 12 co..j_i\nand gold (an extra copy being ter.t lo\neveryone making a gift subecriptnrl.\nThan Tha Companion for the M\nweek* el 1912-all for 11.75 v-.\u00bb\nlast chance at this price. Oo .'*.>\u25a0 i\n1, 1912, it will be advanced M ....\nTHE YOUTH'S COMPANION\nBOSTON, MASS.\nHtw SihKfiptiooi Rcceivfd r.l Tb'il Oiiicl. THE SUN. GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA. I\nNA-DRU-CO\nRuby Rose Cold Cream\nA toilet delight, with the exquisite\nfragrance of fresh roses. Makes\nchapped hands smooth and soft and\nkeeps them so. Preserves the most\ndelicate complexion against exposure\nto ths severest weather. Try It\u2014\nyou'll certainly appreciate It.\nln 25c. opal jars, at your druggist's.\nNATIONAL Dl.ua AND CHEMICAL CO.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED.        16*\nStyles In Ailments\n\"Well, here I am,\" announced the\nfashlonahlo physician In his    breezy\nway.   \"And now what do you think\nIs the matter with you?\"\n\"Doctor, I hardly know,\" replied the\nfashionable patient.\u2014What is new?\"\nSPLENDID WORK\nIN PARRY SOUND\nQUICK CURE OF W. 8.    KETTYLE\nBY DODO'S KIDNEY PILL8\nSuffered for ten months,    but   wm\ncured by   a single   box.\u2014Splendid\nreputation of Dodd's Kidney Pills.\nGolden Valley, Parry Sound District,\nOnt. (Special).\u2014W. S. Kettyle, well-\nknown ln this district, has added his\ntestimony to the   great   mass   now\ncoming forward to prove that Dodd's\nKidney Pills cure kidney disease, no\nmatter where lt is found or in what\nform It is found.\n\"I suffered from backache, gravel\nand headache for ten months,\" Mr.\nKettylo states. \"My sleep was broken\nand unrefreshlng and the least exertion would make me perspire freely.\nUtter taking one box of Dodd's Kidney Pills I was completely cured. That\nwas a year ago and I bave had no return of my trouble since.\"\nDodd's Kidney Pills have done a\ngreat work In thiB district. Numerous\npeople can be found who have been\ncured by them ot almost every kidney disease, including rheumatism,\nlumbago, dropsy, and Bright's disease.\nThey are looked upon by all who use\nthem as the ono sure cure for kidney\ndlsecse.\nMen have found a mass of native\ncopper weighing 420 tons, and they\nhave discovered a chunk of pure silver weighing one and one-half tons,\nbut the largest nugget of gold that has\nbeen seen weighed only 190 pounds.\nAnd gold seekers nre Informed that\nlarger finds In the future are unlikely. \t\n$100 Reward, Slow.\nThe ruder, of thia. paper will be pleased to letm\nUut tben Is at least one drraata-al dtfletute that swore\nhas laaaen able to cure la all Its llmta*. and that Is\nUatarrh. Hall's Catarrh cure Is tbe only posith-o\ncure now knoan to the medical fraternity. Catarrh\nbeing a constlttitlonal disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken la-\n.crnslly. Acini, directly upon the blood and mucous\nsurfaces of tbe system, thereby dcstroylnit Ihe\nfoundation ot tho disease, eial giving the patient\nrrtreufth by building lip the constitution and aaaetaat-\ntng nature In doing Its work. Tbo proprietors have\nso mueb faith In Its curative powers that they .after\nOne Hundred Dollars for any caso thut It falls to\ncure.  Send for list of testimonials\nAddress F. J. CHKXEY & CO  Toledo, O.\nBoltl by sll Uriunrlsts, 750,\nlake Hall's Family Pills for consUnatlott.\nDrastic Cure\n\"Lady,\" said. Meandering Mike,\nwould you lend mo a cake of soap?\"\n\"Do you mean to tell me you want\nsoap?'\n'Yes'm. Me partner's got 3* ale-\ncups and I want to scare bim.\"\nMinard's  Liniment  Cures  Dandruff.\nWillie.\u2014Wonder what all tho anl-\nmals did during those forty years ln\nthe ark.\nTommy.\u2014Oh, they Just lay around\nand scratched themselves I guess.\nWillie.\u2014Scratched themselves nothin'! What'd they scratch for when\nthere was only two fleas?\nSCOTT'S\nEMULSION\nhaa Helped countless\nthousands of thin, weak,\ndelicate children\u2014made\nthem strong, plump\nand robust.\nIt creates an appetite,\naids digestion, fills the\nveins with rich red\nblood.\nAfter illness or lost\nof weight from any\ncause, it brings strength\nand flesh quicker than\nanything else.\nsll osuoaisrs\nii-u\nIN THE HOUSE OF POMITIAN\nInteresting Discoveries In the Palace\nof a Roman Emperor\nProf. Bonl's explorations of the\nhouse ot Domltian, on tbe Palatine\nbetween the house ot Augustus and\nthat ot Tiberius, are leading to Interesting archaeological discoveries. So\nfar the researches have been limited\nto the areas of the atrium, or roofed\ncourt, with Its prolongation, or tab-\nllnium, and to the triclinium, or dining hall.\nIn the court a rectangular central\npiscina with remains of an octagonal\nbasin Inside of it has been discovered,\nwhllo on the walls small nltches and\nlow marble pillars have been found,\nand these are evidently Intended for\nsmall bronze statues and figures of\nbirds and animals, which serve as\nornaments to the fountain. All the\nmarble facing of the piscina has disappeared and only the bricks which supported the marble slabs that covered\nthe sides and bottom of the basin havo\nbeen found.\nThe finds In the triclinium consist\nof a great portion of the pavement in\nsmall slabs ot precious marbles laid\nover bricks placed upright so as to\nprevent dampness trom damaging the\nmarble, several large fragments of\ncolumns and broken pieces from tho\nwalls and celling. Evidently the building collapsed owing to an earthquake\nfollowed by a fire which completed its\ndestruction. Perhaps some ot the\nsculptures were save from the ruin,\nbut tbe building was left as tt fell.\nIn time earth accumulated over It\nand the grass grew. Pope Paul III.\nbetween 1534 and 1650 laid out the\nFarnese Gardens over the site where\nthe house of Domltian stood. Two\nhundred years later the first excavations took place and the archaelogist\nBlanchlnl discovered the walls of the\ncourt and dining-room covered with\nrare marbles, which he removed. He\ncarried away sixteen Corinthian columns of Numldlan marble of extraordinary size and excellent workmanship,\ncolossal statues ln marble and bronze\nand other works of art, some of which\nare In the museums ot Naples and\nParma.\nAttacks of cholera and dysentery\ncome quickly, there seldom being any\nwarning ot the visit. Remedial action\nmust be taken Just as quickly it the\npatient Is to be spared great suffering\nand permanent Injury to the lining\nmombranes of the bowels. The readiest preparation for the purposo is Dr.\n.1. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial, lt\ncan be got at small cost at any drug\nstore or general dealer's, and lt will\nafford relief before a doctor can be\ncalled.\nDiscriminative\n\"She married him nfter a week's acquaintance.\"\n\"Wasn't thnt taking a risk?\"\n\"Not so much as walling.\"\nSMo\/i'sGun\nJ slickly stops con ribs, emt.. cat**, heals\n,o Ihrost a id laeja \u2022     29 cents.\nNot Strong Enough \"\nA Press Agent says that Dr. Cook\n' tells a fascinating story.\"   You bet!\nBut \"story\" Is not the word we uso.\nA VALUABLE MEDICINE\nFOR YOUNG CHILDREN\nBaby's Own Tablets are a most\nvaluable medicine for Infants and\nyoung children. They break up colds,\nexpel worms, regulate the stomach\nand bowels, and ln a natural way promote healthy sleep. They contain no\nInjurious drugs and cannot possibly\ndo harm. Concerning them Mra. J. A.\nIllx, Ebbsfleet, P. E. L, writes: \"My\nbaby was troubled with her stomach,\nbut Baby's Own Tablets speedily cur\ned her and now sho is a bright healthy\nchild.\" Tho Tablets aro sold by medl-\nicne dealers or by mall at 26 cents a\nbox from The Dr. Williams Medicine\nCo., Brockville, Ont.\nA Bountiful Harvest\n\"As a man soweth, so shall he\nreap;\" and youth Is the time in which\nhe must do his sowing If the granary\nis not to be empty when old age overtakes him, as It surely will If he lives\nlong enough. Tho making ot money\nand the saving ot money, as distinguished from the miserly love of money,\nshould be the ambition ot everyone;\nbut It does not necessarily follow that\ntt you muko money you will have it ln\nyour old age, as many a one-time millionaire has died ln tlio poor house,\nBut II you take advantage of the Can\nadlan Government Annuities system,\nand out of your wages, salary, or income pay the amount fixed to be paid\neach woek, month or year, or as otherwise arranged, provision for old age\nmay be made with absolute certainty\nand at much less cost than on any\nother safe plan. You may lose everything else you own but the Annuity\ncannot be lost or taken from you by\nany proper source of law, no matter\nw long you may live. ABk your\n-.ostmaster for literature on this subject, or write for the same to the\nSuperintendent of Annuities, Ottawa,\nto whom all letters may be addressed\ntree of postage.\nEpigrammatic\n\"Dat wasn't a bad epigram of the\njudge's,\" said Plodding Pete. \"What\ndid he say?\" \"Taholty days.\" 'Dat\nain't no epigram, Is lt?\" \"Sure lt is.\nI asked a fellow what an epigram iB,\nan' ho says it's a short sentence dat\nsounds light, but gives you considerable to think about.\"\nSpasms of\nCoughing\nAnd   Frantic   Qacplng   for   Breath\nCommon to Bronchitis and '\nAsthma.\n8YRUP\nOF\nDR. CHASE'S\nLINSEED AND\nTURPENTINE\nBoth bronchitis and asthma are diseases of the nerves aB well as of the\nbronchial tubes, and for this reason\nonly slight irritation or excitement is\nrequired to bring on the terrible\ncoughing spells and frantic gasping\nfor breath.\nThere is nothing like Dr. Chase's\nSyrup of Linseed and Turpentine to\nbring relief to sufferers from bronchitis and asthma.\nIt soothes the Irritated nerves, cases\nand prevents the attacks ot coughing\nand enables the system to throw off\nthe disease. In fact the great popularity of this medicine Is largely due\nto Its success in curing bronchitis and\nsevere chest colds.\nSince permanent recovery depends\nlargely on getting the nervous system thoroughly restored, Dr. Chase's\nNervo Food Is ot the greatest assistance ln revitalizing the wasted nerve\ncells. This combined treatment Is\nIdeal as a cure for bronchitis and\nasthma, tor, while the Linseed and\nTurpentine brings relief to the organs\nof respiration, the Nervo Food restores\nthe body to full health and strength,\nand enables lt to tight off disease.\nThere are many Imitations of Dr.\nChase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine. Tho portrait and signature of\nA. W. Chase, M.D., are on every bottle ot tho genuine; 25c. a bottle, at\nall dealers, or Edmanson, Bates &\nCo., Limited, Toronto.\nThe appearance of Watrous, the\nthriving young Saskatchewan town 1.*\nto be greatly enhanced this sinks\nby the laying out of parkB on >liher\nside of tho Orand Trun!: Pao'.flo de\npot.\nIt Is only those who are. despicable\nwho fear being despised.\nScarcely any man Is clever enough\nto know all the evil ho docs.\nBoth Ways\nThe hotel visitor had taken his dinner elsewhere with a friend. When\non coming to pay his bill, he found\nhimself charged with a day's board,\nho protested vigorously. It was explained to him that the American plan\nadopted there was based strictly on\na day rate, and that it he chose to eat\nelsewhere lt was his own look-out.\nTho man, however, refused to be pacified, and paid tbe bill under protest.\nThen, to everyone's surprise, he asked\nIf dinner was still on.\" He waa informed that lt lasted until nine ln the\nevening.\n\"I've eaten ons dinner,\" he exclaimed, \"but I'm going to get my money's\nworth out of this house If I suffer all\nthe torments of dyspepsia!\"\nHe rushed into one of the dining-\nrooms, seized a bill of fare, and ordered overythlng he could think of.\nWhen he finally reached his limit, the\nwaiter handed him a bill for a good\nround sum.\n\"What's that for?' he demanded.\n\"Your dinner,  sir.\"\n\"But I have already paid for my\ndinner ln my bill,\" protested tho unfortunate man. \"I am staying here\non the American plan.\"\n\"Then you should have gone Into\nthe other dining-room,\" said the waiter. \"This part of the hotel Is conducted on the English plan.'\nTrial la Inexpensive.\u2014To those who\nsuffer from dyspepsia, indigestion,\nrheumatism or any ailments arising\nfrom derangement of the digestive\nsystem, a trial of Parmelee'B Vegetable Pills Is recommended, should the\nBufferer be unacquainted with them.\nThe trial will be Inexpensive and the\nresult will be another customer for\nhts excellent medicine. So effective\nis their action that many cures can\nlertainly be traced to their use where\nnlier pills have proved Ineffective.\nLast winter tho Ice was loo 11 hi to\ncut. This winter It Is too thick. The\nconsumer never cuts any Ice. And\nthere Is the cold truth.\nARLINGTON CHALLENGE\nWATERPROOF COLLARS\nThe Arlington Co. ol Canada, Ltd.\n58 Ira'ad Ave, Toron.aa. Ontario\nUAl\/C VAN aLanpialheBreut.ot\nllni la IUU \u00ab Growih oo .ray part of\nIhe body, or \u2022 Sore thst will not hnl >\nIf you have, write, describe the trouble, and\nmention trite paper and we will mail FREE 1*\nplain env-lope, particulars ot the\nPainless Home Treatment\nWrite to-day.\nTBE CANADA CANCER INSTITUTE, UaUal\n10 Caaraaill Ave., Teroslo.\nHOT AHD HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.\n__Us.Wixa.r-ow'!! BooTiurfO Svaltr has been\nnud for over SIXTY YEARSlav MI..MON8 ol\nMOTHIiKS for their chii.uken whilb\nTBKTIIING, with PBRPnCT SUCCESS. It\nBOOT1I1.S the CHILD, SOI'TENS the GUMS\nALLAYS rail FAIN -, CURES WIND COLIC, sr*!\nis the best remedy for DIARRHO.A. It Is .*\u00bb\nsolttU'ly harmless. _3e sure and ask for \"Mrs.\nWinslow's Soothing Syrup,\" and Uke w olkcc\nkind Twenty-five cents a bottle.\nLARGE PROHTS IN MAKINGBRICK\nBricks can be made from Cttty, Shale\nor Sand.   Full Information upon rciiuosL\nThe Berg Machinery Mfg. Co., Limited.\nToronto, Ont.\nW. N. U. No. see.\nNo man or woman Bhould hobble\npainfully about because of corns when\nso certain n relief Is at hand as Hoi-\nloway's Corn Cure.\nBusiness man (explaining)\u2014When\nihey flay \"money Is eaBy\" they moan\nsimply that the supply Is greater than\nthe demand.\nHis Wife.\u2014Goodness! I shouldn't\ntlilnl; such a thing was possible.\n\"James told me a touching little\nstory Just now.\"\n\"He told me the same one this morning and it touched me for $5.\"\nSend (c\u00bb tree sample to Dept.N.C,National Drug ft Chemical Co., Toronto.\nPILES CURED IN a TO 14 DAVS\nlour claaj\u00ab_fa\u00bbi will refund money if PAZO\n01N'i'4i__M' talis to cure any case ol\nli-niia*. mind. Bleeding or Protruding\nlilts in t to 14 days.    60c.\nThe eloquence consists In saying\nall that is necessary and nothing but\nwhat Is necessary.\nMinard's Liniment Relives Neuralgia.\nPrisoner.\u2014I admit that In a moment\nof weakness I pinched the ptano.\nMagistrate.\u2014A moment ot weakness! Good gracious, what would you\nhave done In a moment ot strength?\nIndividual Effort\nThis Is essentially an age of cooperation, and wisely so, for It Is Just\nas true to-day as lt ever was that \"In\nunion there Is strength.\" But this\nhighly developed spirit ot unity, however wise in other respects, has some\nregretable features. There Is a growing belief that individual effort\ncounts for naught\u2014that it Is only\nthrough some powerful organization\nthat real results may be obtained. But\norganizations, at their best can only\nwork for the betterment of the Individual, a function which the Individual Is highly equipped to perform for\nhimself. Ill fact, If the world was\npeopled wltb a race ot perfectly developed Individuals, such organizations\nwould not be needed. So here\u2014In\nself-betterment\u2014we find a field where\nIndividual effort finds unlimited opportunities.\nGet busy!\u2014By Maurice Floyd.\nGravity Is a mystery of the body\ninvented to conceal the detects of the\nmind.\n| 1SEASES OF MEN7\u2014DR. DEAN,\nspecialist, 1 College St., Toronto.\nPreparing His Speech\nA reply very characteristic ot the\nstatesman and diplomat who made it\nIs given In tho \"Autobiography ot\nAlfred Austin.\"\nLord and Lady Salisbury were\namong theguests at Hewell grange.\nLord Salisbury had come to speak at\na publio meeting. On tbe morning\not the day when the speech was to\nbe. delivered, seeing Lord Salisbury\npassing into the study, I said to htm:\n\"I suppose you are going to think\nover what you will aay tonight?\"\n\"No,\" said he, In his Ironical way,\n'rather to think over what I must not\nBay.\"\nThe potato crop of Great Britain\nfor 1911 Is estimated at 3,830,218 tons.\nWeU, WeU!\nJIMS-\u25a0\u00bb HOME DYE\nANYONE\nrl dyed AU. this*\n-DIFFERENT KINDS\nof Goods\n.= \u25a01.1. the SAME oil*\nI used\nDYOLA\n|ONEM_*^NNDS\u00abH\nI\nOLCAN and SIMPLE to UN.\nNOriwn\u00abOfflim*.At3?70^G*^*\u00bb'*\u00ab*\u00abt*Ooo4i\non* has lo color. All color! (tarn s^l*' Dr\u00abfti\u00abl ot\nPealir. FRF.fc ColorCtrdsnJ S'OftY W\/*l*ttl\u00bb.\nTbo Johiuow-WcfcirJw Co..   JmUtd, fcmatfttl' 5\n\u25a0i\nTHE SUN. GRAND FORKS. 2HITISH COLUMBIA.\n.TRUE\nj     LOVE!\nA Story Attempting lo Prove\nThat It II Immortal\nBy T. 0. APPLEBY\nCopyright by American Press Association, 1911.\nwere united through tneir cnuaren. ror\nno children were born, to them. It wai\na case of unity between two Individuals whose Individuality was lost 'In\neach other. And I shall show you by\nan Incident which occurred that this\nlove continued after tbey were separated by death. I cannot prove that\ntbe love of Ihe one who was taken continued Ihe same as before, for we cannot see beyond tbe veil tbat Providence bus bung between us and tbat\nwhich lies beyond. I must confine myself to the one wbo remained hers\namong us. -\n\"Mme, Leroux fell ill and died tea\nyears alter tne pair were murneu. tue\nchanged condition of her husband after her death was simply tbat be did\nnot now see ber, did not hesr ber\nvoice; tbere was no contact. The wife\nwa\u00bb burled In Pere Lacbalse cemetery,\nno) that tbe widower mlgbt go tbere\nto weep, for be did not consider ber\nmortal past ss aught except corruption, but that be mlgbt conveniently\neeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee\n1'rofessor Markbstn, wbo occupies\nibe chair ot anatomy st \u2014 college, Is\ns materialist. Ills friend Taylor, professor ot psychology, Is an extremist\n'en tbe opposite side, taking tbe ground\ntbat man Is an eternal spirit, Inelosed ; visit her grave occasionally to see that\nIn a material body. Tbe two .were die-  tbe plants sho best loved and wbich\ncussing questions based upon thess , bo had placed there be nurtured.\"\ntwo very different opinions, wben Pro-!   \"Why,\" \u00bb*'ko*1 ^teaaoT Uarkbam.\nlessor Markhnm said: |\n\"Take, for Instance, love. To bs\nmore particular, let us confine ourselves to love between tbe sexes. You\nmen of spiritual bent consider tbat tbls\nis a spiritual condition, s mingling of  \"hero the faculty of sentiment should\nexist.  Tbe widower did uot place the\nflowers tbere for tbe dead, but for the\n\"it tbere was only corruption beneath\nthe sod wero the shrubs tbe womnn\nbad loved planted tbere? Corruption\nbas no appreciation?\"\n\"In you materialists,\" responded Professor Taylor,  \"there la  n  vacuum\ntaking np a newspaper, read a notice\nof the marriage of Jnles Bombardier,\na Franco-American, who bad recently\nreturned on a visit from bis adopted\ntountry.\n\"Leroux tired tbe same life, so far as\nwomen were concerned.1* that be bad\nlived wllb his wife. In other words,\nafter ber death be continued to live\nwith her tn tbe spirit\"\nThc narrator paused for a moment\nthoughtfully, then concluded:\n\"It I bare not proved my case I bars\nat least made It equally strong and fsr\nmore acceptable tban your theory that\nlove Is but a means by wblcb nature\nproduces procreation.\"\n\"I admit that you hare,\" replied\nMarkhnm. \"There Is a barrier tbst\nneither of ns can pass. I reason from\nanalogy based on cause and effect that\nI see In material things about me,\nwhile your reasoning Is based on the\nsame premises ln a spiritual sense. We\nare botb confined witbln our narrow\nsphere. Nevertheless from tbe foundation of the world love has been recognised as a divine attribute Indeed, the\nonly divine attribute we possess in tbe\nflesh. If It Is not eternal we may well\nassume that all things die.\"\ntwo souls. We materialists tsks It to\nbc In the Initiative at least, simply a\ndevice of nature to compel obedience\nto one of her laws, procreation.\"\n\"Which we deny. Love Is eternal.\"\n\"Then wben a couple who lore are\nseparated by death wby Is tbe place\not tbe one wbo bas been taken filled\nby another?\"\n\"Cases of real love are rare.  In such\ncases tbo piece of the departed ons\nliving womani To blm the thread of\nher life bad never been broken. More-\nI over, In our natures there ts that\n' which we call association, and there\nwas to htm a pleasure In associating\ntbe plants ahe loved with tbe place\nwhere her mortal part lay.\n, \"One evening nbout sunset Leroux\nentered tbe cemetery of Pere Lacbalse\nto visit bis wife's grave and see tbat\nall was In order tbere.    As he ap\nis not filled by another. 1 bave known proached It he was astonished to see a\nsr beard of several Instances of tbls\ntrue love, but only one wbere tbe conditions 1 bave stated were fulfilled. It\nwas related to me wben 1 was studying medicine In Paris, and tbe principal figure In the story bad been a professor lu tbe university wbere I received my education.\n\"Jean Leroux, n bachelor of thirty-\nmnn, uncovered, bending over the\nmound, apparently absorbed in grief.\nWbat could It mean? Leroux bnd\nnever beard his wife speak of a brother or other male relative near and\ndear to ber, nnd ho wondered wbo\ntbls monrner conld be. Advancing, be\naddressed the stranger:\n'Pardon mc.   Mny I ssk wby you\nsix,   n   botanist,   wns  ons  morning  \u00abre thus grieving for my wlfeT\ntramping through tbe southern prov-1   \"The mnn turned.   The grief his\nInces.  bunting for plant specimens, countenance bad worn was turned to\nwben be came upon a chateau In anger.\nwhose gardens wore mnny beautiful    \"'Your wife! Then yon sre tho man\nflowers.  In bis enthnslasm he Jumped who robbed me of my love.*\ntbe wall and wss soon lost to every- I   \"'Your lovet  She never bad but one\nthing except the objects of his study,  love, and tbnt surely was not yours.\nBe was bending over a variety of sxa- I Wbo ars your\nlea which be bnd never seen, tbougb I   \"K)ne who loved the woman who\nbe wns familiar wltb It through bis \"\u00ab\u2022 there*-\nfaooks. wben suddenly bo wss recalled to himself by a musical feminine\ntolce saying:\n*' '.Monsieur Is absorbed In tbe flowers.'\n\"Leroux looked np Into s pair of\neyes that were looking Into bis.\n\"Now. If you anatomists were to\nclaim tbat lore acts ss two chemical\naffinities, wbich on meeting become\none'and tbe sams substance, I could\ntn s measure sympathize wltb you.\nBotb  tbese persons  admitted  after-\n\" 'She doss sot He there.' Interrupted\nLeroux. 'Sbe Is In heaven. Hnd you\nloved ber as yon Bay, you would not\nspeak of ber as lying there.'\n\"'I say i loved ber,' reiterated tbe\notber fiercely, 'and sbe loved me. We\nparted In anger1- \/\n\" 'Real love Is never angry. It may\ngrieve for nnother's fault, but lt cannot be angry.'\n'\"I left her for a foreign land.\nAmerica. There I have been since\ntben; tbere 1 prospered.   1 returned\niwnrd to tbe other tbat tbs moment to do penance nnd claim my love. I\ntbelr eyes met they loved. : heard- tbat some one bad won ber\n\" 'Pardon,' said Leroux, 'I sm s tree- hand, though I know that no one but\npasser. I bave been led by my love myself could have won her heart; tbat\nfor my profession to examine your the bad died and was burled bere. I\nplants.   I will withdraw at once.'        jcume to ber grnve to weep for her.\n\" 'On ths contrary, you srs welcome snd fate bits brought me the man wbo\nto study my plsnts to your heart's believed be occupied my place.'\ncontent, and If tbere sre sny thst you\ncovet 1 shsll be happy to give them to\nyou.'\n\"For Ihe* rest of that morning Leroux and tbe lady wandered about ln\nthe gardens, bs giving ber mucb Information about ber plants.  She loved\n\"'1 know not wbat tbls means.' Leroux rejoined. 'If my wife bad a lore\naffair before ahe married me she knew\nlhat tt waa not true love and would\npain ns to Speak of It; therefore sbe\nrefrained.'\nWbo are you to assume this\u2014you.\ntbem for themselves; but, loving them. Iwho If you received sny love st all,\nIt pleased her lo learn of their nature, j received a dead love.'\nSbe was Mile, de la Fontayne, wbo j \"Tbe man. provoked by tbe uncom-\nlived witb ber old mother on the , promising certainty of one he consul-\nplace, her fhtber being dead. Mnde- cred his rival, was by tbls time beside\n.noisette wss some half dozen years , himself wltb anger.\nLeroux's Junior, nnd since botb of them\nbad passed the heyday of youth tt cannot be claimed tbat tbs love wblcb\nflashed Into being between them was\nof the grosser type.    Leroux when\n\" 'Had we weapons I wonld soon\n'convince you tbat I nm tbe rightful\nmate of the woman who lies tliere;\nthnt you are an Interloper. Ths only\nrecompense you cnn grant me for tbe\nasked afterward If lhat wns not tbe  robbojy you committed Is n meeting\nhappiest morning of his life replied\nthat it wns far happier tbsn sny bs\nbad known before, bnt no happier\nthu those tbnt followed.\n\"Mile, de Is Fontnyne would not permit Leroux to depart without partaking of luncheon, or, rather, tbe second\nbreakfast of the French people, and\nsfter tbe meal they returned to the\ngarden. In spirit the professor never\nleft the chateau so long as Mile, de ta\nFontayne remained there. But sbe did\nnot remain there very long-at least\npermanently, for Leroux was obliged\nto be st tbe university In Parts, where\nbe lectured, and the two found It ex-\ncruclatltqf to be apart No great-time,\ntherefore, passed before they were\nmarried, residing during the winter In\nParis and In tbe summer at the De Is\nFontayne chateau.\n\"These two lived, so far ss their rotations lo each other were concerned,\nin perfect happiness. No word of sailer ever passed between tbem.'.'\n\"Was oot thnt thp result of normal\nnervous system perfectly assimilated?\" asked the listener;\n\"I do not ndmll It I bellevs that\nfrom tbelr meeting tbey bnd become\none being.  Nor cnn it be said that tbey\nFer Afternoon Wear.\nTailored wear Is tbe approved style\nof costume for afternoon dress, but\nnow French tailored garb Is anything\nbut severe und utilitarian ln type.\nTbts charming suit is built of snow\nwblte cloth over a petticoat of blsck\ntomorrow   morning ln ths  Bols de\nBoulogne.' bo said.\n'\"Since my wife through a mistake\nonce may bave thought enough of you\nto engage herself to you 1 shall not\nharm a hair of yonr head.'\n\"Tbe stranger felt convulsively for s\nweapon be knew he did not hare about\nhim, then, taking out a enrdrase. threw\na card at Lerout's feet, saying. 'If\nyou are not n coward 1 sbalt bear from\nyou.' Then he strode out of tbe In-\nclosure snd down the avenue toward\ntbe cemetery gate.\n\"The card bore tbe name of Jules\nBombardier.   Leroux. calm as wben be\nentered Ibe cemetery, attended to what\nbe had come lo do. then returned to\nPorts.   On \"the wny he tried to think\nof some mention of n love affair bis\ni wife bad passed through before meet-\nI tng him. but be could not.   Neverthe-\n, less be was content to remain In Iguo-\ni ranee concerning It.\nI   \"This Is whnt I call true lore.-and I\nI will show you thnt Ihe stranger who\nI manifested all the outward appearance\nI of love had not experienced it.    Not\nsix mouths after Professor Leroux hnd\nmet blm weeping nt the grave of the\n' woman he believed he loved Leroux,\nMAKING JOLD PENS.\nThe Metals That Are Used snd tht\nProcess of Manufacture.\nThe tiny tip ot white metal seen on\nthe under side ot tbe point of n gold\npen may be of platinum, bnt It Is more\nlikely to be iridium. Iridium ts s very\nbard metal, and It Is expensive. II\ncosts abont four times as much as gold\nTbe purpose ot tbe Iridium tip Is. of\ncourse, to give tbe pen a more durable\npoint i\nTbe gold pen maker buys his gold at\nthe assay office in bars of pure 34 carat\ngold, which be melts snd alloys wltb\nsilver and copper to tbe degree of fine-\nness required. Gold ot 14 carats Is\nused In the manufacture of the best\nAmerican gold pens, tbat being tbe degree of fineness deemed most suitable\nfor pen use, but good pens made In\ntbla country for sole In Prance are\nmnjjp of 18 carats, the French government requiring tbat oil articles exposed\nfor sale In that country as made ot\ngold shall be of not less tban IS carats\nTbe gold from which the pens are to\nbe made Is rolled and rerolled until\nwbat was originally a thick, heavy bar\nof gold bos been rolled Into a thin gold\nribbon shout three feet In length by\nfour Inches wide. Then tbls gold ribbon Is put Into n machine whicb\nBtamps out ot lt pen shapes, all still\ndnt Then on tbe top of each ot tbese\npen shapes Is fused tbe Iridium point\nand- tben tbe shapes go to a slitting\nmachine, which cuts the silt In the\npen. From tbo slitting machine the\npens go tbrough another, which gives\nthem their rounded, familiar pen form,\nand tben tbe liens nre ground and polished and finished ready for use.\nAmerican gold pens In fountain pens\nor as dip pens are sold in every country ln Europe tn competition wltb pens\nof British or of German manufacture,\nand under the same competition they\nare sold throughout the world in South\nAmerica, Africa. Japan, Cblna. wherever pens are used.-New York Sun.\ntailored sorr or white cloth.\nvelvet and the wide black velvet collar adds a distinctive toucb. The buttons are white crochet wltb hand\nworked buttonholes between each pair.\nWith' this suit will be worn buttoned\nboots of wbito buckskin, ~ltb blsck\nintent leather ramps.\nCleaning a Woolen Skirt.\nA small amount of soap tree birk\nwill easily clean a black woollen skirt\nPut tbe bark Into a gallon of water\nand set tt ou tbe store, allowing It to\nboll ten minutes. Then strain and pout\nIhe strained water Into n tub containing sufficient amount of warm water\nto wash tbe skirt. Rub thoroughly In\nthis water. Do not use n board, bui\nrub tbe garment between the hands.\nPut tbe strained water back on the\nstove wltb cold water und heat It Just\nwarm enough for rinsing water. Illnse\nlhe skirt In tbls aud hang out to dry.\nWhen It Is almost dry take It from tbe\nline and iron It on the wrong side\nwhile It Is still damp.\nA bit of old kid glove or old canvas\nsewed under the bands of the skirt\nJnst wbere tbe hooks aod eyes nre to\nbe placed will prevent tho bands tear\nleg sway.\nDurability of Steel\nNearly all the failures of sleet occur\nvery early In Its history. A bar or a\nplate ot steel tbnt lasts a year In service mny be regnrded as perfectly durable. Continual bending backward and\nforward, ns In whnt Is cnlled**pantlng\"\na boiler's end. Is (he most trying for\nsteel which, according te an expert. Is\n\"tumultuous In youth, trustworthy In\nmiddle age nnd beyond reproach In\nold age.\"\nSILENT JEN.\nWatlensteln, Whs Never SmlltrJ. Wes\nthe Mast Dramatio of All.\nWashington's reserve made him\nstiff, formal aud III at ease In company, but It also prevented bis plans\nfrom being betrayed to the enemy and\nthe country from being deceived by\nbis promises.\nWilliam tbe Silent was frugal of\nwords, because n reserve that concealed bis designs, even from tbose acting\nwltb him. was necessary to the Independence of the Netherlands.\n,Tho most dramatic of silent men\nwas Wallcnsteln, the antagonist ot\nGustavus Adolpbns aad tbe commander ot tbe emperor's armies In tbe\nThirty Years' wnr He Insisted thnt\nthe deepest silence should reign around\nblm. His officers took care tbat ao\nloud conversation sbould disturb tbctr\ngeneral. Tbey knew a chamberlain\nbnd been hanged for waking blm without orders, and an officer who would\nwear clanking spurs Is tbe commander's presence had been secretly put to\ndeath. In tbe rooms of Wallenateln's\npalace the servants gilded as tf phantoms, and a dozen sentinels moved\nnround bla tent charged to secure tbe\nsilence tbe general demanded. Chains\nwere stretched across tho streets and\nroads In order to guard blm against\nthe disturbance of sounds. Wallen-\nstein's taciturnity and love of silence\ntbat caused blm to be Irritated at tbe\nslightest noise was due to bis constitutional temperament He never\nsmiled, be never asked advice from\nauy one. and be could not endure to\nbe gazed at, even wben giving an order. The soldiers when be crossed\nthe ramp pretebded not to see bim.\nknowing that a serious look would\nbring them punishment-Exchange.\nCenerste 8lays Put.\nAs- concrete gets'older It becomes\nharder and more durnble-that ts. of\ncourse, If Ibe concrete Is properly\nmade Tbe usual means of wrecking\na bouse bare not tbe slightest effect\non concrete. Tbo sledgehammer, tbe\ndrill snd dynamite must be used.\nAcids mlgbt be nsed to disintegrate\nthe concrete, but tbe expense would\nbe enormous. Tbe only tblng to do ts\nto loosen tbe material with explosives\nand tben break It free from the steel\nre-enforcement wltb sledgehammers,\nand tbat ts s long, tedious Job.-Boston\nAdvertiser.\nTHE SPRING STYLE.\nNew Sailor Hat Fer\nWear st Palm Beaoh.\nniw till OBOwmo SallLOB.\nBere Is the most radical change Iff\nsailor bat styles tbat bas been seen Is\nmany a day. Tbe crown of tbls new\nsailor la almost tbree times as high si\ntbe brim is wide, snd the very bross*\nvelvet band nnd bow Increase the ap\npenronce of belgbt materially. Naturally tbls new blgh crowned sniloi\nwill be a bit trying, especially at first;\nuntil tbe lines of the shape bare be\ncomo familiar, but tbe hat Is really no\nhigher than some of tbe low crowned\nsailors of previous seasons. Tbe bl|\ncrown settles down over tbe bead almost to the tops of tbe esra, and tbs\nbrim at the bottom of this big structure\nof crown surrounds the face like ao\noutstanding frame.\nMaking a Ousts.\nHard Looking Customer (slinklnf\ninto pawnsbopi\u2014Say. bow much can f\nget on this gold wntcb?\nPlain Clotbea Policeman (suddenly\nappearing)\u2014Let mo see It H'm, mj\nfriend. I think ye'll get about a yesi\ntin tbst\u2014Chicago Tribune.\nJealous.\n\"How did you happen to loss out?\"\n\"Some of my misguided friends got\nup nn automobile procession for me,\"\nexplained Congressman Wbangdoodle,\n\"Most of tbe voters, however, bave M\n\u00bbatomoblle.\"-Knnsns City Journal.\nAlways Possible.\nStella-You can't nut an old hesd oi\nyoung shoulders.\nBella-But you ran put a- new walsf\nline on any aged woman.\u2014Judge.\n\u25a0j-i'i'i trti i-ii 111 it i iii-i 1111\nThe Proerastlnatore.\nThe trouble with some of us ',',\nIs tbst we wait till we're triced ;;\nup by tbe thumbs before we'll .\nconsent to take a braes.\u2014New [\nYork World.\nui AS I.I i 1111 li I IsM 11111-11 tt\nThe Latest Version.\nMary bad a little lamb-\nI read it In a book.\nThey thought ahe did not need It, so\nAway the lamb they took.\nWhen Mary got It back again\nFrom a Chicago ehop\nBhe had to pay about two bits\nFor every little chop.\n\"Leave ma tha wool at least,\" said ahe.\nBut actio answered: \"Nay.\nThat part of It la tangled up\nSomewhere In achedulo K.\"\n\u2014Washington star.\nWorried.\n\"Say, come over here, old man. I\nwant to ask you something ln confl-\ndeuce. Is there anything peculiar looking about me?\"\n\"No.   Wby?\"\n\"Tbat tall, handsome woman Just beyond tbe punch bowl asked me a moment ago whether I fiddled or played\nchess.\"\u2014Chicago Record-Herald.\nOystJrs of Japan.\nJapanese oyster* grow on the rocks\nbetween high sud low tide levels and\nadhere so fast that they cannot be\ntaken off. When tbe tide Is low the\nJapanese gather the oysters by open-\nIng Ihe shells and Inking tbem ont\nwithout trying to break tbem loose\nfrom the rocks.\nTrie Running Otar.\n\"Tou aay you bnre a new musical\ncomedy?\" asks tbe manager. \"Have\nyou a scenario of ll?\"\n\"Yes. I brought It along.\" answers\nthe author, producing a collapsible\nevening bat a seltzer bottle, a set of\neccentric whiskers, pink silk tights, sn\nartificial nose ond s German dialect\nJoke-Life.\nDeep Sas Life.\nAnimal life, existing nnder a pressure of fire and a half tons to tbs\nsquare Inch, has been found In tbe\nTonga basin, near New Zealand, at s\ndepth of four nnd three-quarter miles.\nTlie greatest ocean depth -known Is\nless than s mile deeper.\nTable Hints.\nHe who aata tha proper way\nMay live to aat another day.\n-Chicago Record-Herald.\nWhile ba who bolta hla beana and pie\nMay never live to awat tha fly.\n\u2014Springfield Union.\nHowever low hli pride may atoop,\nNo one ahoultl ever farglo aoup.\n\u2014Birmingham Asa-Herald.\nAnd ha who proper training shows\nDon't epi Inkle pepper up Iiii note.\n\u2014Tonkera Statesman.\nWhy, Certainly!\nMrs. Cltlly-Brldget. wbo was that\nat tbe door Just now?\nBrldget-A leddy wanttn' to know if\nwe had furnished rooms.\nMrs. Clttly-Whst did yoo tell ber}\nBridget-Sure, an* I towld her tbat\nall our rooms were furrnlshed. She's\nlookln' st the llh'ry now.\u2014>\"\nBets snd Pigeons.\nTwelve bees released at s distance\nof tbree miles from tbe hives wers\nfound to travel boms faster than\ntwelve pigeons released st the sam\u00bb\ntime, THE   SUN,   GRAND   FORKS,   B. C.\nNEWS OF THE CITY\nDr Simmons, dentist, Morrison\nblock.    Phone lt :-0.\nOn Eastar Sunday special services\nwill lie held in the Methodist church,\nboth morning and evoning. Special\nfeatures in the morning will be a\nsolo by Arnold Carter, and an anthem. \"Christ tho Lord is Risen Today,\" by the choij. Tho following\nis the Hitler of the evening service,\nbeginning utS:;iU: Doxology; prayer;\nanthem, \"Our Mighty bold is\nRisen,\" choir; hymn; solo, \"Face\nto Face,\" Mr. Tweddle; Scripture\nreading; hymn; offering; solo,\"Lord\nJesus, in Thy .Mercy.\" Mrs. Davis;\nEaster stjrmon, Dr Culvert; anthem,\n\"The iiesuiTeetion,\" choir; hymn;\nbenediction.\nThe sehool board held a special\nmeeting on Tuesday evening for the\npurpose of having a conference with\nMr. Carey, the architect who is to\nfcubinit plans for the new addition to\nthe public, school building.\nPete Santure this week sent fifteen\negga from thoroughbred Black\nMinorca hens to Alberta,'receiving\n$5 for them.\nThe Sacrament of the Lord's\nSupper will be dispensed in Knox\nPresbyterian church next Sunday\nmorning at 11 o'clock.\nIving Ballew, of Danville, is being\ngroomed hy his friends to enter the\nprimary race for the Democratic\nnomination for cheriff of Ferry\ncounty.\nH. E. Woodland, the druggist, returned on Saturday from a two\nweeks' visit to Vancouver,\nJames McArdle left on Monday\nfor a business trip to Vancouver.\nAl. Traunweiser, of the Ynle, returned on Monday from Calgary.\nF. B. McKeehan, immigration in\nspector at Marcus, was in the city\non .Monday.-       ' .-.   . .\nI. A. Dinsmore, of Greenwood,\nchief \u25a0 provincial constable of the\nBoundary district, was in the city\non Tuesday.\nHorses for Sale \u2014Apply E. Barron, West End.\nRobert Mcintosh, the architect,\nleft on Tuesday for Victoria, where\nhe will locate permanently.\nThe Retort Critical\nProfessor Hurry Thurston Peck, the\nbrilliaat critic, said at a dinner in\nNew York;\n\"The painter vows tlmt none but\nthe painter is competent to criticise\nhis pictures; and a playwright suid to\nme tho other day:\n'.. 'You never wrote a, play. What\nright have you, then, to puss judg-\nI have for sale, Silver Spangled ment on the 4rama1!s\nHimil)iirgs,Partridge Wyandottes, s.c \" 'Wel1' '\"? dettr f<jllow>' ,aid *\u2022 'l\nI!. Leghorn cockerels; also eggs of nevor laid ttn eK8- eithe,'i but tl,e\nBrown Leghorns, Blue Andalusians minute I taste one I know whether it\nand Silver Spangled Hamburg*.- is S00'* or ba(1 '\"-New York Sun,\nRobert Clark, noith of Winnipeg\navenue bridge.\nA. L. Bradley, of Danville, is\nspoken of as n possible candidate\nfor the Washington legislature fioni\nFerry county.\nTake your repairs to Arm-ion's\nHoot and Shoe Hospital, llrialge\nstreet, (Irand Forks.\nWilliam   Sands, of  Danville, bus\npurchased a half interest in a black- ,1ft^Sc!.SS1rS::K.yi;,\",,n'.^i\u00bbi,,;i<',S\nsmith shop al   Itepuhlic  from Ben M3,KTOS\\&te\u00a9it\nti\\ it l.nx, nr three tor 111),   Milled to nny address.\nTh> Scobell l\u00bbru(? Co.. St, Cut liar ine... Out\n10 CAUSE TO DOIT\nA Statement of Facts Backed\nby a Strong; Guarantee\nWe guarantee immediate and positive relief to all -sufferers from constipation. In every case where our remedy fails to do this wo will return the\nmoney pail us tor it. That's a frank\nstatemet of facts, antl we want you to\nsubstantiate them at our risk.\nRexali Orderlies a're eaten just like\ncandy, are particularly ,prompt and\nagreeable in actiou, may be taken a\"t\nany time, day or night; do not cause\ndiarrhrea, nausea, griping, excessive\nlooseness, or otlier undesirable effects.\nThey have a very mild but positive\naction upon the organs with which\nthey ceme in contact, apparently acting as a regulative tonic upon the re\nlaxud muscular coat of the bowel,\nthus overcoming weakness, and aiding to restore the bowels to a _uiore\nvigorous and healthy activity.\nRexall Orderlies are unsurpassable\nand ideal for the use of children, old\nfolks and delicate persons. VVe cannot\ntoo highly recommend them to all sufferers from any form of constipation\nand its attendant evils. That's why\nwe back our faith iii them with our\npromise of money back if they do not\ngive entire satisfaction. Three size?:\n12 tablets 10 cents, 3G tablets 25\noents, antl 80 tablets' 50 cer.ts. Remember, you can obtain Kexall Remedies in Grand Forks only at our\nstore\u2014The Rexall Store. H.E. Wood-\nlaud.\nEggs for Sale\"\nFrom thoroughbred utility birds\nSingle-comb Rhode Island Reds ami\nsingle-comb Whito Leghorns. Won\nI.S firsts and 9 seconds, besides 8 spe\ncials, at Grand Forks, Greenwootl and\nTrail last fall and winter; cup ul\nTrail for best pen In shew on S.C.\nRhode Island. Reds, also special foi\nbest Red in show, either comb. Ijggs,\n13 00 and So.UO per setting. T.\nIjOWkn, (irand Forks (Columbia P.O.)\nA Gallant Cabman\nAn old lady was getting into a cub\nin (irufton street, in Dublin, ws\"\nheard to \u00bbay to tho driver: \"Help me\nto get in, my good man, for I am\nvery old.\"\n\"Bceorru, ma'am,\" snid ho. \"No\nmatter what nee yuu are, you dou'i\nlook it.\"\nDr. de Van's Female Pill?\nArnold.\nFor Sale at a Bargain\u2014Two horse\npower gasolene engine.\nPlath, box 10, city.\nDon't forget that Tho Sun has the\nApply J. H.  best job printing deparrment in the\n\u25a0 -Boundary country.\nSome business men ure so fond of\nbeing deceived that Ihey _.,_:., . .\ndeavor to believe that they can reach\nthe consumers of this district without advertising^ The Sun.\nShow cards for widnows and inside\nare a fine form of silent salesmen.\nMake them brief, terse and pointed\nPrint them plainly, to be read at a\nglance.\nYou might as well cut oif\nyour legs because you arc run- j\naing well in a footrace as to\ncut oft' .your advertising be- j\ncause your business is too'\ngood. |\nA new lot of latest tlesigns of pro\ngram and menu cards just received at\nThis Sun job office. '\nFIELDING &.0TARRELL\nBRITISH COLUMBIA LAND SURVEYORS\nAND CIVIL ENGINEER\nMINE   SURVEYORS\nGrand   Forks, B. C,\nSuits to Order &18 twtds\n'; We are agents for some of tlie leading tailoring establishments in the east. When you order from us you have\nthc advantage of being measured by a practical tailor,\nensuring perfect fit. We guarantee satifaction.\nII Our spring stock of Scotch Tweeds and English Worsteds will be in shortly. They are the best you can buy.\nWe guarantee you the best made clothes in the country\nat thc lowest prices. We always have men that know\ntheir busines making these clothes. Call and see our\ngoods and prices. We want your trade, and we can give\n- you satisfaction.\nGeo. E. Massie, the Reliable Tailor!\nWOOD AND FENCE POSTS\nPHONE   A 14-\nDry\" four-foot Fir and Tamarac.   Cedar and\nTamarac Posts. Prompt attentionto phone orders\nA. GALLOWAY, \u00ab_Z.E., COLUMBIA p. o.\nHOTEL PROVINCE\nBridge Street,;,.'\nGRAND PORKS, B.O\nThe 'best and most\n\u2022n but initial l.re-i.roM\nhnUffiiitflu the Bou n-\nrhiry pouiitry. He-\ncent ly com pit? ted and\nii c w ly furulidied\ntliroimhniit. Kqiiip-\nijeil with all modern\nBlnotrlcal conveniences, fl'entrally lo-\n(ited. Kirst-eliisa ao?\n\u25a0oiiiiiioi-.iitiuns for the\ntravelling public.\nHu. nnd Gold Ruths\nBittt-CUsiB.tr, Pool\nand Billiard Rooms\nIn Connection.\n^-J_*TP.%'^\n-4r '^Ilrv\nE1MIL.   LARSEN,   PROP.\nmi\nPrintin\nWe are prepared to do '\nall kinds of\nCommercial Printing\nOri the shortest notice and in\nthe most up-to-date style\nHECAUSE\nWo Imve the nfiint modern jobbing plant\nin the Houndnry Country, employ com\npetent workmen, and carry a complete\nline of Stationery.\nWK PRINT\nBillheads -nnd Statement*.,\nladici'lii'iuls and Envelopes,,\nPosters, Dates and Dodgers,\nKindness nnd Visiting Cards,\nLodge Constitutions and Bylaws.\nshipping Tugs, Circulars and Placards,\nBills of   Fare and  Menu   Cards,\nAnnouncements   and Counter\nPuds,   Wedding  Stationery.\nEverything turned out in an\nUp-to-date Printery. -\nnoon PRIMTIMfi-the ki\"a we a\u00b0\u2014is in \u25a0tse\"\nww l \"'--I * sx*i\\M   an advertisement, and a trial\n. order will convince you that our stock and workmanship nre nf the best.    Let us estimate on   vour order.\nWe giiiiraintee satisfaction.\n, PICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Order.\n-. Also Repairing uf all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly  Done.\nr. McCutcheon\nHRST STREET, NEAR CITY HALL\nDowney's Cigar Store-\nA COMPi-BTB BTOCJK UK\nCigars, Pipes and Tobaccos\nA Fresh i'imn_>,'uiii.>tit<if.\nConfectionery\"\nReceived Wefkly.\nPostoffice   Building\nW. G. - CHALMERS\nAlways Carries in Stock\na Fresh Supply of\nFRUITS, CANDIES, TOBACCOS\nAND CIGARS\nIce Cream and Summer Drinks\nCOR. BRIDGE AND FIRST STREETS\nPalace Barber Shop\nKazor Honing a Specialty.\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\n1st Doon North of Granhy Hotki,,\nFirst Street.\nC3 YEARS'\n?omru tallica.-\n-.,..._ , .... ,\u201e.\u201e_.__.., on Paienu\n\u2022cm Irar*. UMmI aMner forKflfl_ll.il pflaa.nl.\n1'aatcaiU Uken through tlrjm. A Co. NOilTt\nijmIoI nolle* without Atria, In IS*\nScientific American.\nA tunuUomoly Uluitratad weekly. Urgent Mr-\ngllatloo of ur Mlontlflo Journal.   Terror, (or\n.nulla. 13.76a ins, pouaio prepaid.   Bold br\nLMIBmtei.,1\ntrgUWaaMiwiaCD..:\nReaching the People\nA prominent rail aetata daalar\nIn Toronto aaya thot ho got*\nbetter ond quicker roaulto trom\ntho Cleaalfled Wont Ado. thon\ntrom any othor1 kind of publicity.\nHo atates thot tho roaulto oro\nout ot proportion to tho omoll\nexpense Involved.\nThere la o morel In thot for you\nIf you wont to reeoh tho people.\naif\nWe carry the iimst fashionable stock\nwedding   stationery in the Boun\ndary country. And we are the only\notlice in thia nection that have the\naorrect material for printing it. The\nSun job office","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":"Evening_Sun_1912-04-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0341902","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 Evening 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"}]}}