{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0388754":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"9ce2db31-0607-4568-bd90-a041e9fa48df","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":"2020-02-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1930-08-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0388754\/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":" 29tliYear=No. 44\n'Sfp GRAND FORKS SUN\n '\u25a0\"         \"'   '\u25a0' \u2122    ' -* \u25a0gg^*^MaMfB^aaeJt t{  *\u25a0   tf^^Sfc-JJJJ\u2014 I.   a \u2014.   ._.    \u2014a.aaai.spai     i..        isayaaj\u2014aaaa-aa.aafa\u00bbaaa\u2014a.a..-aa.aaaapaaajBB^>..1sts.ja.-..J.....B......,.\u2014,,  , ..      . ,.,.,. , .\u2014\u2014.\u2014\u25a0 \u25a0 a, a^ajaaa\u2014\u2014. a,    ., \u2014, i\u2014  \u2014a^a,\u00bbt|\u2014^a^aa^\u2014--aa\u2014\u25a0\nw\n\"Tell me what you Know is true,\nI can guess at well as you.\". '\nFriday. August 29. 1930\nLOCAL WEATHER:\nWarm; exceptionally dry.\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nRates OnZ\nBeC Fruit\nLowered\nVICTORIA Aug. 25,-Export of\nBritian Columbia fruit to tbe mar-\ntsts of the world will be put on a\nnew and advantageous basis by reductions In railway rates from the\nOkanagan to Vancouver, to be In-\nauguraasd almost Immediately, Tt wm\naiwounoed at tbe Legislative Build-\nAs a result of representations by\nPlWBlw Tolmie tp the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Canadian Nt-\ntlenal Railways, the new freight rate\nfor fruit will be twenty-eight cents\nper 100 pounds, Instead of forty cents.\nThis will brine the Canadian export ralb down to tbe level of the rate\nprevailing for tbe United States fruit\nIndustry from the Wenatchee district west to Seattle.\nAt \"present the B O fruit Industry\nIs seriously penalised in world markets by the competition of American\nfruit traveling on much lower rates.\nLast year the Premier took this matter up dlrecit with E W Beatty, president of the C P R and Sir Henry\nThornton, president of tbe Canadian\nNational, and they agreed to meet\nthe American rats. Imposition of the\nreduction, however, was delayed until the completion of the fruit 1nves-\n: tigation of Sanford Evans. This Is\ncomplete how and arrangemenU are\n: being made to Impose the twenty\neight cent rate in time to cover the\nmovement! of the present apple crop.\nTo complete final details of this\nplan and discuss rates generally, Mr.\nEvans will meet representatives of tlie\nrailways ln the Okanagan September\nt. The Provincial government Is anxious to secure further rate reductions into pralrje markets and. at\nthis time has an appeal on tbis'sub-\nJeet before the Canadian Privy -Coun-\nell The change of government, of\ncourse, has delayed a finding on this\nhis own expense by \"an upstanding\nfirm of chartered accountants\" followed hto recent argument with Minister of finance Shelley over the current borrowings of the government\nAfter an analysis of current finance\nMT. Pattullo declared \"British Columbia's finances are getting into a serious condition and tbe publls should\nknow tbe faStb.\"\nGovernment\nAnnounces\nFruit Duty\nDepartment's\nNews of The\nFruit Market\n(By the. B.C. Department\nAgriculture.)\nVictoria\nOTTAWA Aug. 16.\u2014Action against\nthe dumping of certain fruits and\nvegetabtea Into Canada, from* tbe\nUnited States, has been taken by Hon-\nE B Ryckman, minister ot national\nrevenue. Mr. Ryckman annouosd this\nafternoon that the following will be\ntbe values of duty for certain fruits\nand vegetables when Imported from\nthe United States:\nApples, 6 cents per pound; Cabbages, 6 cents per pound; Cantaloupes\nIS cents par pound: Celery, 10 cents\nper pound; Onions, 4 cents per pound;\nPeaches, 12 cents per pound; Pears,\nB cents par pound; Plums and prunes,\n8 dents par pound; Tomatoes, 10 cents\nper pound.\nSteps wcre taken by the minister of\nnai'.-nal revenue under section 43 of\ntha Customs Act and Order-ln-Councll\nKb, 1087, dated August 20, 1830. Mr\nRyckman previously consulted with\ntho department of agriculture. The\nrtlues named are to remain ln force\nMr. Ryckman stated, until otherwise\nordered.\"\nThe City Council\nHolds Short Session\nAt the regular meeting of the city\noouncll on Monday evening all tbe\nmembers were present with lhe exception of Alderman Simmons.\nThe amendment to the water and\nlight bylaw was reconsidered and\nfinally passed.\nOutside of this, lhe session was\ndevoted to the transaction of routine\nbusiness.\nVICTORIA, August 26.\u2014Weather\nconditions unchanged. Vegetables of\nall kinds from local gardeners are\nsupplying tbe market demand! The\nfirst car of Italian prunes from.wash-\ningtpn arrived today. These are sell-\nbig wholesale at 90c to $1 per box.\nPears, Bartletts, are selling from\n$2.60 to 62.76. Peaches at $US\nIt will be of interest to fruit growers to know tbe percentage of apples\npacked to Extra Fancy, Fancy, O\ngrade and Household, as compiled'by\nthe interior committee of direction.\nTaking 16 leading varieties, the gross\npercentage of Extra Fancy apples\npacked Is 3.04, Fancy 28.26, C grade\n33.02, Househould 26.88. Prairie eon- \"   \t\nBurners are demanding bulk apples In\ngreater volume, as a low price cou- S imr> \\ijnifi,'er\npled with good qualiuy can be secured v***1'- .\/\u00abBls.vCr\n\"y this means during the harvest season. Fancy apples  are  more In demand than C grade after the harvest is pastL\nThe following copy of wire from\nCalgarv gives the latest prairie market news: \"Weather has turned considerably cooler and there ls a touch\nof fall ln the air. Some rather severe\nstorms have.been experienced in the\nsurrounding country, but the cits\"\nItself had Its first rain of any consequence yesterday. The local fruit and\nvegetable   market   shows very little\".\nimprovement. It Is sincerely hoped luptlzed in the Kerrisdale\nthat the successful harvesting of the\npresent crop will pull some life ln the\ncountry business, as it has been nothing short of disastrous to date. American fruits still dominate tbe markets, the latest arrival being Washington Italian prunes. Jobbers are\nquoting these att a dollar. The laid\nIn cost ls 80c. Oliver cantaloupes are\nbeginning    to   arrive Jn quantities.\nBaptises Fri'h^r\nAnd Daughter\nOn his recent trip to the Coast,\nAid. John Donaldson was present at\nInteresting and rather unusual eventl\nOn, Sunday August IT, his granddaughter, the infant daughter of Mr!\nand Mis. Stanley Donaldson, was\nRyeraon\nUnltted Church by Rev J R Robertson\nwho was pastor of Knox Presbyterian\nchurch in this city in pioneer days,\nand who christened the father of the\nlit I c girl in that church. After the\nchristening the assembled gathering\nhad a very nice buffet lunch and the\nectfona caused a4telay in tbe negotiations.\nNew Zealand is willing to review\nthe position according to the Canadian attitude. Premier Forbes said he\nwould consult the government of Canada on his way to the Imperial\nConference next month.\nMINIATURE GOLF\nSWEEPS CANADA\nOTTAWA, August! 28.\u2014Other lined\nof business are being affected, some\nDominion\nMigratory\nBird Laws\nA summary of tbe Migratory Birds\nConvention Act is given below. Thjs\nis the lew which ls based upon the\nTreaty with the United Suites. The\ndistrict officer Is J A Munro, Okanagan Landing, B C and enquiries may\nbe addressed to nun or to the Commissioner, National Parks of Canada,\nDepartment   of the Interior, Ottawa,\nOpen seasons, both dates inclusive:\nBritish Columbia\nDucks, Geese, Brant and Coots-\nEastern district, except in the provincial electoral district of Creston,\nSeptember 15 to December 31. In the\nprovincial electoral district of Creston, September IS to November 30.\nDucks, Geese and Coots\u2014Western\ndistrict, October IS to January 31.\nBlack  Bnurt\u2014Western district,  No-\nthe term used by Dr. J L MacDougal,\nnational president of the native\nof Canada, to descrbe the history\nbooks used by Canadian school children during the past fifteen years.\nTrue facts of the war were not recorded and children did not| appreciate the wonderful achievements of\nCanada because they could not read\nthem in their text books, he said.\n^'Marriage of\nPopular Young\nLocal Couple\nadvemely and same -favorably by the vmber\nspread of miniature: golf. From the     \u201e\u201e.., ,.\u201e.      \u2014 ,_.        .    ,\nmanufactures of   golf   clubs   It   is J**\"****? as^^rlT^\nlearned that order, for putters, the \u00a3 f\u2122*\u2122' 8epten*er 15 to ^\nonly club which Is used on the miniature courses, are months behind and\nthe rapid growth   in the number   of\nthese courses which   are being con-\nAHtPLANES SOON\nWILL SEEK WATER\ni VICTORIA.\u2014While fruit growers In\nmost parte of tbe Interior were worrying over the lack of water in their\nirritation systems and consequent\ndamage to crops and trees the govern-\npreparing to conduct a\nlew irrigation survey of\nthe fruit country in an effort to provide it with new water supplies for\nfuture, and to put its fruit production\non an entirely new basis.\nTbe flrst step in this survey, the\nmost ambitious of its k'nd ever undertaken In Canada, will be a detailed search for new water supplies with\nuse of airplanes. Planes will fly over\nall the country tributary to the Okanagan Valley in an effort to locate\nlakes not now known and to trace the\noutlet of many bodies of water for ln\ntbe hills which have never been examined in detail. Acting on the 'n*\nformation secured \" from tbe air,\nground parties will lnveslgate the\nwater supplies and report how they\ncan be turned Into the irrigation\nflumes of the fruit growers.\nThe importance of this drive for\nnew water is not appreciated except\nby fruit man. According to the report\nof Sanford Evans, what the Okanagan needs more than anything else !s\nadditional water. With. all. the water\nIt could use, tbe orchards there would\nIncrease their output enormously with\nIttle extra overhead cost, thus bringing prosperity to many growers who\n. sjtoples will be taken care of under\nare making little or no money now.\nThe financing of the   new water\nthe new system of irrigation charges,\nCalifornia and Washington melons balance of the day was spent very\nof all kinds have enjoyed tbe largest\nsale In their history. Watermelons,\nparticularly, have hid a banner year.\nAmerican peaches and plums are sUll\nIn the forefront of the market! but demand very limited. There, is a good\ndemand for ripe tomatoes. The prfce\ntodayto $1.10 per crate, being fitlrly\ngeneral Cucumbers, are ln good de-\nplcasantly in a social way. Miss Bernlce Donaldson, who accompanied\nher father tp the Coast, will remain\nlr Vancouver during the coming Win.\nter,.and will attend the high echooJ\nin which Stanley  \"Donaldson Is   an\ns .meted is expected to make the demand for putters Increase even more.\nTbe moving picture industry is said\nto be feeling adversely the effect of\nthe popularity of the new diversion.\nIt is the claim of\" numerous moving\npicture houses tbat a noted decrease\nhas been found in the number of paying pa'.irons since this novelty has\ncome Into vogue. It is stated that the\nmoving picture houses do not atftri-\nI bute the decrease in patranage to the\ngeneral economic depression as much\nas to the growth of popularity in miniature golf.\nIt is also found that thc miniature\ngolf courses ore tending tp have a\nconcentrating effect on other types\nof business such as soft drink stand,\ngasoline   and   quick   lunch will be\nI construcbd to get the trade from the\ncourse.\nMiniature golf has undoubtedly hit\nthe particular liking of a numver of\nCanadians     throughout   the   entire\nmand   and   Jobbers are expecting a instructor, and take her senior mat.\nare poor In color but stock clean and\nwill ^temporary swrtege. Local\nroot and ground vegetables of all\nkinds supplying the market.\nWire received today, from Pentlcton: '\"Weather much cooler. Pears\nfrom Oliver and Osoyoos cleaned up.\nJ. H. Hale peaches will move in quan-\ntltv from this district next week.\nOravenstefn and Wealthy apples are\nmoving from Pentlcton and should\nhe over the peak this week-ewLBart-\nlett pears are about at peak. Prunes\nfrom southern points mil be ready\nshortly.\"\nVancouver\nThe weather has remained clear\nand seasonably warm during the past\nweetWlth the exception of a few sr*\nrivals of Gravensteln apples from\nnearby Washington .points, the supply ls now from local and interior\nBritish Columbia points, with Wee*\nthies and Duchess predominating, a\nfew b7c. Oraveristetas are now obtainable but in limited qus\u00bbtlt(|es.\nWealthles wholesale at 11.76 and\nDuchess at $1.60. Local green cookers\nare in good supply sad go as .high as\n81.50 for reasonably stated fruit. Bulk\nBarlett pears are now In from YaU-\nma and Wenatohee and wholesale at\n81.50 for the 86-pound tag as against\n82.60 tor- the wrapped fruit in the 40-\npound standard box. This Is\" an un*\nusually low figure, Local and Interior\nplums are now available andiUsos\nfew of the Wickson variety from Ya-\nriculaUon time\nWilson's Snipe\nEastern   district,   September 15 to\ni December 31.\nWestern district, October 15 to January 31.\nClosed Seasons\nThere ls a closed season ln the\nprovince of British Columbia on\nswans, elder duck, black-bellied and\ngolden plover, 'greater and lesser yellow-legs, dowitchers, knots, oyster-\ncatchers, phalaropes, stils, surf-birds,\nturnstones, and all other shore birds\nexcept Wilson's snipe.\nThere is a closed season throughout the year on the following non-\ngame birds: Auks, auklets, bitterns,\nfulmars, garnets; grebes, guillemots^\ngulls, herons, jaegers, loons, murres,\npetrels, puffins, shearwaters and terns;\nand there ls a closed season throughout the year on the following insectivorous birds: Bobolinks, catbirds,\nchickadees, cuckoos; flickers, flycatchers, grosbeaks, hummingbirds,\nkinglets, martins, meadowlarks, night-\nhawks- or bull-bats, nuthatches, orioles, robins, shrikes, ' swallows,\nswifts;   tanagers,   titmice,   thrushes,\ncountry and the   number\u25a0* courts ^ warw       wftx.\nts Increasing every day. The change | _,J_T!!L-*Z.\u00bb-.\u2014 \u2014 .\u25a0    -~.~   \u00ab\u00ab\u25a0\nhas come about within the period of\nLate Mrs. Baumgartner\nLaid   to  Rest  Sunday\nThe funeral of the late Mrs. Augusta Baumgartner of this city, who\npassed away last Wednesday, following a shorn illnesss, was held on Sunday, August 24 at 2 p.m., from the\nPresbyterian Church. Reverend John-\ns i;n conducted the services.\nA large crowd of friends were present to pay their last! respects to one\nol the pioneer women of this city and\nthe many beautiful floral offerlni*s\nand the great! sympathy expressed to\nthe bereaved husband and children,\ntestifies to the esteem with which she\nwas held by her fellow citizens.\nThose acting as pall bearers were\nJ R Mooyboer, E W Stuart; C C Deported, A E McDougall, E C Henniger\nand C Wolfram.\nInterment was made in the Evergreen Cemetery.\nMINISTER OF MINES\nSEES HUGE SUMS\nSPENT, DISTRICT\nHon. W A McKenzie, minister of\nmines, visaing 'he Kootenay dls-\nj.-lct for tlie first time in b*\u00ab official\ncapacty, stated last night that in\nthis mjnjng disilrjct much money had\nbeen appropriated for the building of\ntrails and roads. In the Kaslo-Slocan\nliding alone approximately (2,000,001)\nhad been spent in this sortl of work\nsince 1921, In the fiscal year 1929-30\nthere were 140 applications for this\ni.ort of roads ln this district.\nThe .completion of the Kuskanook\nroad this fall or early next spring\nwas another heavy expenditure in\n\"jtiis district that must be taken Into\nconsideration.from the government's\npoint of view.\nAir. McKenzie complimented highly the work of Eastern Brisish Columbia in advertising the properties of\nthe distinct throughout the mining\nworld.\na year.\nAn Old Resident\nOf City Passed\nAway Yesterday\nHerman Brunner, aged 68 years,\ndied at his home In the Westl End\nat 12:30 on Wednesday night.\nDeceased was an old and respected\ncitizen of thic city, and h'*< passing\nwill be mourned by a large number of\nacquaintances and friends.\nHe Is survived by his w'fe and\ntdiree grown sons, one of whom lives\nin Trail, another in Kimberley, and\nthe third ln Lethbrldge, Alta.\nThe funeral will be held from the\nfamijsy residence in West Grand\nForks on Sunday afternoon.\nCONSOLIDATED MAY\nBAVE DAIRY RANCH\n;'..'\", IN NORTH FORK\nOver a hundred Doukhobors have\nbeen engaged In clearing a tract of\nabout   150   acres of   land   between\nLynch Creek and the Hummingbird\nOLD  FA1BVIEW MILL MOVED\nOLIVER.\u2014Memories of the old\ndays when Fairvtew was a booming\nmining camp and hopes by many\nstill resident here that fortunes would\nbe made were called to mind with\ntbe removal this week of the old\nstamp mill. This stamp mill has\nbeen moved to the Dividend mine,\nan old gold producing mine In the\nRltcher Fan, long idle due to litigation among the owners,\nThe old stamp mill removed from\nFairvtew was built there 35 years ago\nduring the mining boom,\nNo one Is clear, It is said, who 1\u00bb\nthe owner as no taxes have been paid\non lt for a |*reat number of years, the\ngovernment agent. It) ls understood,\nhas allowed Its removal to the Dividend property on conditions thai*\nshould an owner turn up, the Diyid-\ndend lessees will Bettle with him. Of\ncourse, back taxes would likely eat\nUp anything that might be realised,\nsay those who know.\nPATTULLO ABKS AUDITING\nBOOBS AT OWN EXPENSE\nVICTORIA\u2014So that) the public may\nknow the facts of provincial finances,\nT D Pattullo, Liberal leader, today\naddressed a formal request to Actfng\nPtemler Pooley for   an audit of the\nr^a!?^r^t^fiSiuot the j bridge this summer. It is generally\ntop figure. Elberta, Crawford and\nRochester peaches are corning to from\nWashington points ln mixed carloads, but the heavy end of the deal\nIs yet on Elbertasfrom OalUOHUs.\nPrices range down from 61.76 per box.\nDuring the uast month there was\nquite a heavy movement of canning\ncherries from Washington coast points\nto some of the local canneries. There\nshould be possibilities for same of\nDOUKHOBOR COMMUNITY\nWILL REBUILD SCHOOLS\nBURNED BY FANATICS\nVICTORIA, August 28\u2014School build\nIngs burned by fanatical Doukhobors\nat Glade, will be rebuilt at cost of\n$6000'by the Christian Community of\nthe Universal Brotherhood, a wire\nfrom Inspectptr Sheffield at Nelson,\nreceived at.the Parliament Buildings\nstates.\nAssurance that the Glade School\nwould be reconstructed and paid for\nby the Doukhobor community has\nbeen given the government by Mr\nVeregin, president of the Christian\nCommunity there.\nPOST OFFICE NOTICE\nOn Monday September 1st, Labor\nDay, the Post Office wickets w'll be\nclosed all day with the exception of\none hour from nine till ten s,m.\nwhen the General Delivery Wicket\nwill be open.\nThere will be \"\u00b0 delivery of mall\nen Rural Route Number 1, on Labor\nDay.\nunderstood that this is to be a hay; WEALTHY APPLES,\nranch. A report has recently gained! CANTALOUPES AND\ncirculation that this land has been. PEACHES THIS WEEK\n'acquired by the Consolidated Com-,- VANCOUVER\u2014Receipts from the\npany and (hat the company will xtwte' okanagan are at present largely con-\nits dairy to the North Fork. Conftr-' fln6(j to tomatoes and a few early ap-\nmation of this report is not available pleSi wllllam Muir of the Canadian\njat presentl but the scheme seems ja^jt Distributors reports,\nthejocal srbwers to \u00a3*\u00bb *SJ'5S}|.'reasonable. One of the reasons why. The wealthy apples are Just begin-\nLnowingV'Dr'v Afield fomrtoeVtht \u00b0Uf smelter has to operate a'nlng to move and should be available\non the market with prices rangging dairy is, that In certain part's of the in Vancouver this week\n^firm'^stock.*1*50 \"W\"pouna lug|ptant the workmen are compelled tt;   A few Oliver cantaloupes have ar-\n\u00b0The following are   the   fruiti   and drink a quart of fresh milk each day rlvexj, Dut supplies in abundance will\nvegetable Imports into Victoria and\nVancouver diking the week endbw\t\nAugust 20:\u2014Washington: Apples, 287 *\t\nboxes:   plums,   630   crates; prunes, NE*w ZEALAND REMOVED |   peaches from the   Okanagan   are\nonlonr\"?* \"I^^i&s- ' PBEFERENCE ON AUTOS, tilo expected towards the middle of\nWuhtngton:     Pears.     6879    boxes;:    AUCKLAND N Z-The British pre- ^.j,*, week\npeeehe* BMOboxes M.tans of these ..jence enjoyed by   Canadian made    Mcintosh apples, which are being\n\u25a0to countered the smelter fumes.        | not be on the street for a few days\ni yet\nautomobiles and auto accessories for awaited by many housewives, are not\nmany years, has been withdrawn by aue for nearly a month yet, the move-\nwere~rondemned at Victoria).\nCalgary\nWeather   Is   unsettled and cloudy.' Premier George Forbes In retaliating ment of this variety usually starting\nThe firsti WealBUes ofthe \u25a0H\"5S4JE*;-for the setion of thfe government of' wound the \u00bb0th to the 26th of Sep-\nHo^hoTanTo*^ Th^'wereYcanad. In increasing   the   du\u00aby on \u00a3J*  *\nof fair size but showing very UtUe New Zealand butter, from one cent to  -^\t\nSSSelSrt Waiver *eaSSj *\u00b0ur \u2022\u00ab*\u2022\u25a0 \u2022 P\u00ab>\u00bb\u00b0* EDMOND HOOD,\nlopes arrived the beginning of this     They have been placed on the gen- BOUNDARY QLDTIMER,\nweek  and cleaned  up -very readily. \u20acral    BtaSi    appifcttbie  t o   foreign PASSES AWAY SUNDAY\nmhrtse'^romn2r1to M'fand soldaB countries effective from August 22. n^r, death occurred Sunday In the\n33.60 per orate. A ctaightcar'of Wash , The (fade In Canadian autos and-fo^i n0gpital, of Edmond Hood, of\noSSifflf'BS^^ \u00abSVBlue,,   inthe   V,C,n- Beaverdell,   who    died   following a\nare   fairly   plentiful   but .heavy to tty of   318,000,000 a   year. It   fs not'lengthy illness,\ngreem^ The market is a little short .^opogej   to  increase   the   duty   on     xne Iate Mr. Hood   was abouti 64\nwea!0Sd8range Iromllto $1.10 per goods already shipped and in transit. * years of age and was very well known\n4-basket   cfate.    Washington   r<ears \\ The government says the Premier lD tne Boundary country. In the old\n'hTrSartsd tnrteeeverai*& ts generally averse to a policy of re-' ^ he   used to haul   freight here\nhave orders   rolling   of   unclassified taliatlon, but the Increase of the duty from Bosburg to Camp McKlnney..\nW^ngloa^This6un^med\u00b0grra*; \u00b0n_*ew Zealand butter has created     He is survived   by his   wife, two\ncontain! a very good sample of wrap, a serious position. The government, sons and two daughters,\nped orchard run pears and   Is   re- j^ added, bas been negotiating with     The   funeral    services   were held\nTto^W^Wsshln^'prorS Canada^W- April last erJeavoring in cvapssr'ai Undert|aking   Parlors by\nwings, woodpeckers, and wrens, and\nall other perching birds which feed\nentirely or chiefly on Insects.\nNo person shall kill, hunt, capture,\ninjure, take, or molest migratory\ngame birds except that certain kinds\nmay be taken during the open season\ngiven above. Sale of these birds is\nforbidden.\nThe killing, capturing, taking, injuring, or molesting of migratory in-\nbirds is prohibited. The possession\nsectlvorous and| migratory non-game\nof migratory game birds killed during the open season i\u00ab allowed in\nBritish Columbia for fourteen days\nafter the close of the open season, provided, however, that no person shall\nhave any migratory game birds or any\nparts thereof in any shop, public mar-\nket,. storehouse, restaurant, hotel,\nclubhouse, camp, or any other place\nwhere merchandise is being sold or\nwhere meals are being served to the\npublic; or, upon any delivery cart\nor wagon in use for or (belonging\nthereto, or upon any dining car belonging tp any railway company, or\nIn any galley or dining room of any\nvessel, or among the ship's stores of\nany vessel.\nDally Bag Limits\nDucks\u2014Twenty of all kinds in one\nday   and   not more than 150 of all\nkinds in a season; geese, 10   in   one\nday and not| more than 50 in a season;   coots,   25   in  one day and not\nmore than 150 in a season; Wilson's\nsnipe, 25 in one day and   not   more\nthan 150 in a season; brant, 10 in one\nday and not more than 50 in a season;   band-tp-iled   pigeons, 10 in one\ndas snd not more than 50 in a season.\nGuns and Appliances\nThe   use   of automatic (auto loading), swivel or machine guns, or battery,  pump or repeating shotgun,  or\nany    gun    larger    than    number  10\ngauge   Ik   prohibited.   The   use of a\nrlflo    In    hunting    migratory    game\nbirds and of live decoys In the hunting    of    band-thlled  pigeons  Is  prohibited, and the   use   of   any   aeroplane, power boat, sail tooat of night\nlight, and  shooting from any horse-\ndrawn or motor vehicle ls forbidden.\nThe   shooing   of   migratory game\nbirds In the province of Brjtjsh Columbia earlier than one hour before\nsunrise or later than one hour after\nsunset  Is prohibited.\nPenally\nEvery person who violates any provision of this act or any regulat'ons\nshall, for each offence, be liable upon\nsummary conviction to a fine of not\nmore than three hundred dollars and\nnot' less than ten dollars, or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding\nsix months, or to both fine and imprisonment.\nDUMPING DUTY ON\nIMPORTED FRUIT\nOTTAWA, Aug. 25.\u2014It is reported\nhere today that, while the offlclal announcement is not yet ready, the new\ngovernment will apply dumping duty\nby order-in-council to Imported fruits\nand vegetables In order to meet the\ncompetitlion of which Canadian provinces have complained.\nHAVE $1600 FOR TRAIL\nLABOR DAI EVENTS\nTRAIL Aug. 27.\u2014With approximately $1600 available for the Labor\nDay celebration here, appropriations\nto the various committees have been\nconsiderably Increased. An addition\noi 1000 bags of peanuts and of candy\nhave been ordered, making the total\n2000 bags of each treat to be distri\nbuted to the children, as well as 165\ngallons of Ice cream. The Elks band\nand the Orange fife and drum band\nwill provide music.\nFILM BATTLE OF MONS\nTORONTO August! 26.\u2014The story\nof the Battle of Mons ia likely, lt *s\nuderstood, to be made Into a motion\npicture iby Ontlarlo government cameramen, who arc now in England arranging for the lilming invasion of\nthe French and Flemish battleground.\nGRAPE INDUSTRY\nIN INTERIOR NOW\nGROWING IMPORTANT\nVICTORIA Aug 25.\u2014Production of\ngrapes on the bench lands in tho In\nterlor of the province may lead to a\nnew grape wine IndusDry in B C, \"t\nwas stated by J G Thomson, secret,\nary of the Fruit Industry Commission\nPlanters who experimented with\nvineyards on a commercial scale last\nyear sold the best of their products\nIn the retell market on the prairlos\nand hod their surplus grapes Hnappcd\nup by a Vancouver Island winery.\nThis year, with additional acreage\nunder cultivation for the purpose thc\nwineries are t|aklng the surplus product In 150-ton lots, and the best of\nthe crop finds a ready sale in the\nbasket market..\nA very charming wedding was solemnized at Holy Trinity church.\nGrand Forks on August 26th, when\nElsie May, eldest daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. J Cadden of Kaslo, was un-\nI Ited ln marriage to Eric Sergissoo\nAtwood. second son of Mr. and Mrs.\nCAS Atwood of Grand Forks. The\nRev. Norman Larmouth of Trail officiated.\nThe church, decorated by girl\nfriends, was a profusion of summer\nblossoms, the guest pews being marked with flowers and white streamers\nTo the strains of the wedding march,\nplayed by Mr. J Orisdale, the bride\nentered the church, on the arm of\nher brother, Mr. Leonard Cadden.\nAwaiting her at the altar, was the\ngroom, attended by Mr. Harold Mc-\nInnes of   Trail.\nThe bride was a vision of loveliness\nin a dress of white French georgette\ncrepe, cut on the prevailing princess\nsllhouet!):, with a veil of French embroidered net, held In place with\nclusters of orange blossoms, she carried a sheaf of gladioli and fern,\nwith streamers of sliver ribbon and\nsnillax. She was attended by her sister, Miss Marjorie Cadden, who looked charming In a dress of sea-spray\ngreen georgette', with large white mohair hat, and blond shoes and stockings. She carried a bouquet of pas-\ni;l shaded sweet peas, and maidenhair fern. Little Mary Prances New-\nbauer, was a dainty little flower girt\nln peach crepe-de-chene with ruffles\nol ecru lace, and a bandeau of flowers, she carried a basket of rose petals.\nDuring the signing of the register,\nMrs. E S Reynolds rendered a delightful violin solo. The bridal party, on\nleaving the church to the strains of\nMendelssohn's wedding march were\npreceded by the littpe flower girl\nscattering rose petals.\nThe reception was held on the\nspacious lawn at the home of the\ngroom's parents, on Victoria avenue,\nwhere the guests were received by\nMrs. Atwood Br., who wore a gown\nof grey satin and grey hat tp match,\nshe was assisted by Mrs. Cadden, mother of the bride, who wore an Imported gown of blue flat crepe, and\na small white hat The bridal tpMe\nwas centered by a four tier wedding\ncake, surrounded by pink tulle and\nsmilax, with pink tapers and silver\nsconces and small vases of pink\nsweet peas.\nA delightful buffet! luncheon was\nserved, the dainty tea table was presided over by Mrs. J G Murray and\nMrs. Sheads, and the Ices were cut\nby Mrs. N L Maclnnes. The toast to\nthe bride was given by the Rev. N\nLarmouth, who also read several telegrams of congratulations, the groom\nresponded to the toast In a few well\nchosen words.\nAfter throwing the bridal bouquet,\nwhich was caught by Miss Evelyn OA\nDonnell, the happy couple left 'mid\nshowers of rice and confetti on a\nmotor trip to the Coast cities, the\nbride travelling In a smart! ensemble\nof green satin, with white felt hat\nand Deauvllle sandals to match, and\ncarrying a traveling coat of fawn\ntweed. On their return they will\ntake up their residence on Vlctprla\navenue.\nNINE FALL FAIRS\nBEING HELD THIS\nYEAB IN KOOTENAY\nNELSON Aug. 25.\u2014Nine fall fairs\n?.lll be held this year In the East and\nWea \u25a0 Kootenays. The first will be In\nFernle from August 25 to 27 and from\nhen ether towns will hold their var-\ni'lU.-i exhibitions until Creston closes\nne fair season on September 23 and\n14.\nOther fall fair dates are: Cra,i-\nbrook, August 28 to 30; Natal, September 1; Invermere, 8eptero.br.* 4\nto 6; Crawford Bay September S;\nOrand Forks. Sep'i*!mb:r 9 and 10;\nEdgewood. September 15 and 16; Ns-\nkusp, September 17 and 18.\nJudges will be Mrs. O A Hunter.\ntoiti?i\"'ii work: District Horticulturist E C Hunt, fruit and vegc libit*.*,\nand District agriculturist G L Lin-\ndon, field crops and poultry.\nMvernment's books at Mr. Pattullo's wag unloaded here on Monday. 'These to maintain tbe one cent! duty until Reverend Johnson of the Presbyter\nown expense. C02L.41,^brf1!f\"ii^*n^tfa\u2022tiE a dlrect trftde   \"Wwernen1   had been  )an church. Interment took place in\nTh, demand   for   taves3gatt\u00bbn at|g^pg&\u00a3? ^om sramn.        cxmsummated, but the Canadian el- Bvergreen Cemetery.\nSAYS  TEXT  BOOKS\nNATIONAL DISGRACE\nTORONTO August 27.\u2014\"A national\ni disgrace and a colossal shame\" was^ pleasant.\u2014\"Horace.\nHXPECT TO SHIP\n30,000 CRATES OF\nPEACHES THIS YEAR\nOLIVER, Aug 28.\u2014Peaches started\nto move in large quantities tfi's week\naccording to present estimates made\nby grower!* it Is expected there will\nbe In the neighborhood of 30.00J\ncrnles shipped from here this season.\nAt present, off and early varieties are\nmoving. The big peach movement\nconsists of Hales and Elberta. These\nare sizing well and are now being\nshipped.\nERECT LARGE ARCH\nTO GREET TOURISTS\nROSSLAND Aug. 22.\u2014In connection with the Labor Day celebration\nto be held here on Monday, September 1, an arch of heavy timbers is\nbeing erected at the junction of the\nI'aterson-Norhport and Rossland-Cas-\ncade highways. The arch will stand\n20 feet high and when comple i-d will\ncarry the wording, \"Welcome to Rons-\nland,\" thc letters being worked ou >\n\u25a0n native woods. It will remain at Wis\nJunction of the highways to express\nRossland's welcome tp tourists.\nMingle a Utile lolly with your wisdom; a little nonsense now and then\nAn effort Is being made to start! a\ngolf club at-New Denver. Dr. Francis\nlocal physician, is one of the pro-\nwaters.\n The Grand Forks Sun\nmt (granH Katka \u00a3mt\nG. A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER\nSubscription   Rates,  Payable  in  Adv\u00bb'\u00ab\"\u00ab\nOne Vear, iu Canada and Ureal Uritain  zz.'X\nOne Vear, in tbe t'nirfed States  1.50\nAddress all r-om...   ni,-allows ru\nThe Grand Forks Sun,\nPHONE  101 .. Grand  Forks,  B. C.\nOlfice:    Columbia  Avenue   and   Lake   Street\nKIUA1,    VLti---.**\n'M,   ,\"..o'0\nv\\\nITH college days upon the threshhold, it might be\nV well Ipr perents to stop and consider the kind of\ni ciiools to which they are sending their children to be\neducated. A tidal wave of atheism and Bolshevism *s\nsweeping the world. This iniquitous vis'tation would not\nbe difficult to face and put down if it came to us jn 'ts\no\u00abn clothes, but unhappily It does not. On the contrary,\nt comes in the guise ol education and Modenj.lst religion.\nNot only are many institutions of learning permeated w'th\ndie lawless and indelity spirit liut many churcnes are\ncursed with it. We make a lot of fuss about bootleggers\nand bank bandits\u2014and the Lord knows both, of these el-\n- ements are bad\u2014but neither one of them possess the po-\nteutiiiliies for mischief that can be laid at the door of\nthe cultured scoundrels in our schools and in our churches\nwho are so active tliese days to undermine the ris'ng generation. J\n-i N EXCHANGE sounds a timely warning when It says\n*\u00bb that every thinking man and woman ls alarmed sp'r-\n\u2022tually and patriotically, over tlie terr'ble lawlessness aim,\ncontempt for authority  which prevails all over the Em;-1\nlisn ..pcaKiiu- world. To what depths will we sink If this)\nspirit of lawlessness is not checked. The, homes, the na\ntioiis und the governments cannot exist in honor, brotherhood and in security il thjs contagion (s not stamped out.\nThere la only one thing to it. We must get back to fun- j\nuamuiitals. The parents are largely the ones with whom\nthe responsibility rests. Lack of education and the sjn of\nthoughtlessness and scllisiines are   at theroot   of it all.\nTiie Ten Co.iUiiaiidments are needed in tills country today than ever. The trouble which prevails ts not necessar-\nly because cl a lack of education. There is a sufficiency\nof schools and there ls   no excuse for ignorance. People\nnave MioA'ieugc, alright, and knowledge is power, but how\nio o...  muoeni knowledge and power being used? that's\ntlie question.\n. Dili,' u ROCKEFELLER, Jr., lecturing to a class at\n\" the caiiiegie Institute, declared that there was no such\ntiiiiiB as iuuk. \"No mauar what sserns to be lucky,\" he\ndeclared, \"will prove strictly u case of cause and effect,\nwhen carsiuily analyzed. It ss work and ability of some\nscio that manes success, even for those chaps whom we\naic prone to call lucky.\" \"And yet, Mr. Rockefeller,', in-\nterupted a student, \"1 have a friend who really is lucky,\nwith nu sort of wuik or ability connected with It.\" \"You\nHave io show me,\" grinned John D Jr., and the class- declared that its fellow member did make good when he\nHam: Well, I have a friend who's got a wife and a cigarette lighter and they both work.\"\nIn\nUWSPAPER men visiting the Stockholm Jndustrjal\nun.., exhibition this year will be placed on a steel\nmast 'Aim.li wnl rise 250 feet above .the exWbjtjon grounds\nUiaos wans will give the journalists a fine V'ew of the\nctuuui piazza, wncre pageants und festivals will be held,\nW vveii us u line panorama of the bay long the shores cl\nwfiiun tne exiiiouiQu is laHd out. There w*U be a num-\nbei bit teiepuones in private booths so that the corres-\np^iiu,.n,,i tun coIiimun:cate with their papers, and a\ncontinuous press service will keep them informed on the\nvuiioua events on the daily program.\ni Hi, federal Government is co-operating with the Prov-\nA inoial government in appeal'ng* to all cVzens to check\nforest lire destruction. The actual work of fire fighting is\ndune uy uniy a few men in each district, but there is\nwoi-K tnat all can do if we would. The development of\nthat forest lire consciousness in every branch of our community iue rests wiui every 'nidvldual. Destruction of\nthe iorests means that everyone suffers a share of the\nless, Nobody can escape. Nobody can sidestep the responsibility.\nONTa'IUO can still .boast Anier-ca's richest gold pro-\ndliccr in its rightly famous Hollinger mi\/ie insomuch as\nthat mine y eicled, up to the end of 11)26, gold to tbe value\nof $lio,Uuo,uG0. The production of so much gold has entailed tne m lling of 17,000,000 tons of ore. The Hollinger s\npresent suosurface workings, if placed end to end, would\nreach from New Xoik to Albany and a l.ttle beyond, a\ndistance of nearly 130 miles, and Its underground railroad\nsystem has a length of mure than 91 miles.\nFamilies of Blakeburn\nMine Victims Need Aid\nPRINCETON, B. O, August' 24, 1930.\nUPPORT of every sympathetic person is enjoined (n a\nprovnee-wide drive for the relief of widows, families\nand dependents of forty-five Blakeburn miners who lost\ntheir lives in a tragjc explosion at the No 4 mjne Wednesday, August 13.\nThere is a real need for such assistance. A long depression in the coal industry has depleted what reserve the\naverage miner lias laid aside, and the terrible calamity leaves many of theistricken ones in dire need.\nTwenty-eight were married men, seventeen with fam-\nlies residing at Blakeburn. Children'of each family range\nHum cne to teveu in number. It is only rarely one comes\nacioss a miner who has laid aside a nest egg, nd 1n Blakc-\nourn there are some really needy cases. Households Just\nutile to scramble along before have been robbed of their\nsole support. \u2022\nuniy two or three of all these men carried any form of\nijjsuiance. Compensation provides a regular jncome but\nna sutticient to permit the widow and dependents to have\nd lair opportunity in l'fe.\nfrom ail parts of the world messages of condolence have\ncome lm Many nations are represented among the casualties. Wherever* iiuman sympathy abounds, a plea is\nmaoe on beiiall of those who are left ln need.\nPrinceton and district will sot the lead and the Associated Board of Trade were tlie flrst to line up. A strong\ncommittee baa jbeen lined up, headed by W A Wagenhau-\nser, president of tne Associated Board as chairman; Dave\n'fayior, district press t representative 1s secretary; and W\nMcKiiuion, accountant of the Coalmont Collieries, is\ntreasurer.\nEach town oi newspaper In tliat town is urged to launch\na public subscription list and to publish such contribution.'; us are received. Where there is only one paper, Board\noi Trade and civic oiilclals are urged to cooperate every\nway. Wnere there is more than one paper, as in Vancouver, eacn will b asked to conduct its own drive, separately\nhandling monies received.\nMonies received should be cleared as quickly as possible\nto tlie chairman at Princeton, together with a complete\nstatement Uieieou, These , will be acknowledged through\nregular statements to the provincial press.\nSuch monies will be turned over to the treasurer, who\nwill account iur all disbursements therefrom. Disbursements will be based on thorough investigatons by a committee ol the workmen, who are In the best position to\nsee that justice is done in the matter. A workman's relief\ncommittee already in existance, will carry out this duty,\nunder personal supervision of the chairman.\nThe objective required is varously set at between $25000\nand $40,000, but there is no limit to what can be used to\nsplendid purpose.\nAn immediate start on this work Is h'ghly essential.\nPublic sentiment varies with publ'c Interest, and Interest\nu the tragedy will 3oon wane.\nMoney can be used at once, and already, immediately\nafter the fund lias been launched, distribution has been\nmade Where money was urgently needed.\nThe support of the press is strongly urged. It is doubtful if there was ever a more vital appeal, and the press\ncan bast push this drive to success. Publicity should be\ngiven this matter in nation-wide news serv'ces, as it 's\nquite possible donations would be made from far distant\nparte by sympathetic individuals.\nIn conclusion, wiiole-hearted spuuort of each and every\ninterested person is urged. Let them not only give generously, but carry the message to others.\u2014W A Wagen-\nhauser, Chairman. ,\nWhile The Sun is in hearty sympathy and fully endorses the above plan of raising funds for the needy families of the dead miners, it-prefers, owing to the location\nof its office, that the stations for taking subcrlpWons\n\"Should be located down town where the public can morn\n.adily reach them.\nHealth Service\nOP THE CANADIAN MEDICAL\nASSOCIATION\nSUNSHINE\nAll Set\nThe small boy was making a tiny\nwreath of grass and leaves.\n\"Who is lt for?\" inquired mother.\n\"You know you said you beard\nmouse in the pantry   and   tbat you\nthought of buying a trap? Well, if\n;~y i. t ou aad anu if you catch\nthe mouse, and   if they   drown tbe\nmouse after it is caught, and if tne\nshall   need a\nEven Split\nAngry Mistress\u2014In the time it\ntakes me to tell you to do the work,\nI could do it myself.\n. Houseman\u2014Yes'm, and in tbe time\nlt takes me to listen to you, so could\nI.\nc    *    *\nFoolish Chance to Take\n\"George was killed going to pay a\ndebt.\"\n\"There!   That is   what   comes of\nwanting to pay one's debts.\"\nIt,\noftoner.\nhe\nnow for\nIt is easy to get divorces in Russjs. he magazine Time\ngves the following example; \"This week a Russian couple\nset a new record in the brevity of a married JJfe. Twenty-\nfive minutes after they had been made man and wife\nthey came back to the registry and got a divorce. They\nsaid they could not assfte on where to\" live,\"\n,. OTuRCYCLE policemen patroled all streets nea\/\n\u2022\"\u2022\u00ab scuoui uuildings at Ventura, Calf., to halt vandalism\noi uiuuiL'ii Dent on improving their teeth by chewing tar.\nuiuce the report tnat tar chewing bu.lds strong teeth wa<\naccepted <by the children, repeated raids have been made\non Cue city streets. Tar has been dug from the joints of\nthe concrete unoroughfare and the city fathers declare\nroadut-us nave been damaged by the resultant seepage of\nwater through the cracks.\nRESENTMENT over being neglected by the taxgatherei\nis somewhat of a novelty. The tax collector of New\nGuinea was once approached by a delegation from one of\nthe Faraway Islands, who protested ln this wise. \"What\nwrong have we done that we should be Ignored The ides,\nof those Kerepuiia people paying taxes and we not. We\nare just as proud as they.\" And the tax collector had to\npacify them by taking their tax money!\nA PEW weeks ago one of tliie big railway systems of Oa*\nnada furnished a two weeks check on the sex of\npassengers In the height of summer travel and lt was\nIxuiXt tliat eighty per cent of Ifhe travellers In the sum\nmer are women and twenty pur cent men. This disparity\ndocs not exist all (lhe year round. A similar check taken\nln the winter discloses that there is practically an even\nbreak between tht number of female and male travelers.\nPntf. Elnstons theory of life, he expresses thus: \"Never\nfcrget that the fruits of our work are not final In them-\nsdlves. Product on is meant to ennoble and make our lives\neasier, to give our lives a touch of beauty and refinement.\nNdver should we allcw ourselves to be degraded into mere\nslaves of this thing we call production.\"\nSooner or later the merchant who does not advertise to\nsell goods will have to advertise to sell the business. Merchandising is one of those unbeataable laws of economics,\nand the friggest influence in merchandising Is advertising\nin the home newspaper. This isn't a theory\u2014Jt js a fact.\nOne s:n# sparrow may have as many as 20 different\nsongs, says Nature Magaaine, each as much hs own exclusive property as though copyiight. But all of these, as\nwell as the songs cf all ot,her song sparrows, have certain\nqualities, that proclaim that the singers belong to that\nspecies and no other. ,    _\nANCIENT HISTORY\nrWENTV  YEARS  AGO  IN   GRAND  Fl\/RKS\nFrank Hoelzel is erecting a $2000 residence on hjs\nranch, nine miles up the Nork Fork.\nThe Kettle River Lumber company is now operating ;ts\nfruit box printing press.\nFour or five coaches of United-States soldiers passed\nthrough the city on Tuesday, en route to Republic to\nfight forest fires.\nIf we only had a little soot to go with all the forest fire\nsmoke, lt would not be difficult to imagine that Grand\nForks is a second Pittsburg. (\nGrand Forks poultry men captured four prizes at the\nVancouver exhibition.\nBorn Thursday, August 20, to Mr. and Mrs, John McDougall, a son; August 23,to Mr. and Mrs. A C Burr,\ntwins\u2014both  girls.\nPQtiMS  FROM THE FAR'' EAST\nARMENIA\nTill; ARMENIAN MAIDEN\nIn the hush of the spring night dreaming\nThe crescent moon have you seen,\nAs it shimmers on apricots gleamjng,\nThrough velvety masses of green,\nHave you seen, in a June-tide nooning,\nA   languorous,  full-blown rose\nIn thc arms of the lilies swooning\nAnd yielding her sweets to her foes?\nYet. the niDiii In Us course and tbe roses\nBy Armenia's maiden pale,\nWhen she coyly and slowly discloses\n1'he glories beneath her veil.\nAnd a lute from her mother receiving,\nWith a blush that a miser would move,\nShe treads a soft measure,  believing\nThat music Is sister to love.\nLike a sapling her form in its swayjng,\nFull of slender and lissomy grace\nAs she bends to thc time of her playing,\nOr glides with a fairy-ljke pace.\nThe lads for her beauty are burning,\nThe elders hold forth on old age,\nBut the maiden files merrily spurnine\nYouth, lover, and matron and sage.\n\u2014Raphael Patkanian.\n, MEASLES\nMeasles is one of the most common and dangerous diseases of childhood. It is difficult to understand\nwhy so many parents look upon measles as a trivial disease, as one which\nis not to be compared with diphtheria or scarlet fever. It Is thought mouse is buried, ' we\nso little of that some parents, regard- wreath, shan't we?\"\ning it as   something   inevitable that \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nmust occur sooner or later, od not\nhesitat\u00ab to expose their child so that\nhe may have tbe disease and get it\nover with.\nMeasles never dies out altogether;\nthere are always a few cases, and usually, every two years, there is a\nreal epidemic. Measles causes more\ndeaths than scarlet fever, and in epidemic years, it death rate os often\ngreater than that of diphtheria.\nOne reason which may account for\nthe feeling\" that measles is not particularly  serious  Is thai tbe deaths\nor a large number   of children after, Education's Costs\nan attack of measles are shown to \"Since you gave your son a car bas\nhuve been directly caused by broncho- he kept bis promise to do more study-\npneumonia. | Ing at college?\"\nParents think their child was a vie-     *j.m certain   of\ntim of pneumonia.   This ls   true of writes home much\ncourse, but the pneumonia would not money for books.\"\nhave occurred hod it not been for the a   a   a\nmeasles. The real cause of the child's' Trained Caddy\ndeath is measles, and this should,be1    The Collie\u2014Loafing as usual\nclearly understood. '        |   The Terrior\u2014Nopel I   gotta Job, I\nIn the years which see a measles get a   pork chop Just for retrieving\nepidemic, there is also noted a con-] that little ball and dropping it some-\nuiderable Increase in   the number of where near the bole,\ndeaths of children   under   five years *  a  \u2022\not age from pneumonia, I   Maid\u2014I'm afraid I must leave you.\nThese facts should be sufficient to| You don't seem to trust me.\npersuade parents that   measles Is a    Mlstiess\u2014But I gave you the key\nserious disease, and that they should 0f the cellar, of my Jewel case and of\ntake every reasonable   precaution to the master's desk.\nprotect their children from its seri-    Maid\u2014Yes,   ma'am   but   none   of\nous and frequently fatal results. them fit\nMeasles ls infectious from the time \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nthe first   symptom   shows Itself.   It    Dub\u2014What    was\nstarts with what is apparently a cold'name?\nin the head, and the rash   does not]   Rub\u2014Caroline.\nappear for some   days. Dining   the\ndays  before the appearance of the1\nrash,   the disease   is spread   by the,\nsecretions from the mouth and nose.'\nThis is one of the reasons for keeping children who   suffer   from colds\naway from other children Colds are\nbad enough in themselves, but what\nappears to be a cold may often be a\nstill more serious condition.\nThe serious results of measles\nwould be prevented ln many cases if\nproper care were given. Bed is tbe\nplace for a child who ls developing\nmeasles, and there he must stay until he has recovered, no matter how\nmild the attack may appear to be.\nFortunately we have learned something about preventing measles ln\nthose exposed to lt. Blood serum\nfrom a convalescent measles case can\nbe used by the physician to prevent\nan attack or to lessen its severity If\nit occurs.\nbis first   wife's\nQuestions concerning health, art\ndressed to thc Canadian Medical Association, 18-ti college St. Toronto,\nwill be answered perscnally by lette..\nCOMAiUNITy\nEUlLDINe\nGREEN STREETS\nTrres are good citizens. They'rarely disturb the peace of city streets,\nsuch ah there ls. They offer shade\nand decency against the violence of\nthe great town. At best a modern\ncity street ls harsh, unbalanced, crazy. Only the trees reclaim it from its\nalienation and make It livable.\nThe little grassy yards and trees\nthat people plant before their bouses\nsave Washington boulevard for civi?\nIization. People care for things like\ntrees and grass. Where they cannot\nfind then naturally they Bet them\nout in little squares, behind small\niron fences, to remind them of ser-\nent realities beyond the city's border.\nThey smuggle nature ln. The rows of\nelms are green beside the surge and\ndrive of motor cars and men along\nthe road. Trees are good citizens, al*\nong with those who plant them.\nVARIETIES OF HEDGES\nThere is no limit to tbe beauty possibilities of hedge plant'ng. The hedge may be trained to nave all sorts\nof variations. It may ibe buttressed at\nthe ends, it may be t:: ,\u2022 .,'\nvarying outline on top with some part\nhigher than others. The top, may be\non square or curved lines. Tbe hedge\nmay even be trained over an opening\nin the hedge to form an arch. In fact\nhedges are almost Indispensable ln\nthc intensively developed landscape\nscheme.\nA well-kept hedge fs so ornamentsT\nthat it will pay every borne owner ito\nconsider its use ln bis plantf og\nscheme. i\nDub\u2014And bis second wife's?\nRub\u2014Caroline, also.\nDub\u2014Strange I But   what's   he do-\"\ning now?\nRub\u2014Crying for tbe Ostfo&ines.\n\"How much are rooms here?\n\"Two dollars and   three - dollars a\nday, sir.\"\nWhat's tbe difference?\nThe two dollar rooms are all taken, sir,\"\nft.,   a     *.\nReason Enough*\nOld Gent\u2014Now, can you give me a\ngood reason why I should give you\na nickel\nSmall Boy\u2014I sure can. If I was an\nold gentleman with a nice plug bat\non and there was a lot of nice Mack\nmdd handy, and a kid askwd me for\na nickel, I wouldn't start no argument.\nEVERYBODY CAN\nassist  in  the i reservation of\nthe forests of British Columbia from  the ravages of fire,\nbut not everybody does. Elaborate ai d far-reaching measures are being employed  to'\n^control  the  annual cut, but   ,\nthe general public can do the\nmost to eliminate the annual'\nwaste.   BE CAKEFUL WITH\nFIRE AT   iLi TIMfcS AND\nKVFRYW11E11K.\nPREVENT FOREST F1M&\u2014TM CAN HELP I\ntmssik.\\*mmsmsset.\\wM^\nBUITISU C J\u00ab aJM.ilA A< JHiiST SERVICE\nNOTICE RE SPRINKLING\nOwing to the excessive amount of\nwater now being used and being\npumped at a great cost to the cltlxem*\ntbe Council have Issued strict instructions to enforce the sprinkling hours\nas set oat In the Waterworks bylaws.\nNe further warning will be given, but'\nprosecutions will follow any known\ninfractions.\nBy Order,\nPOLICE DEPARTMENT.\nJ\n1MK\nCOISOUUTED MINING &SMELTHH;\nCOIN OF CUt LIMITED\nOffice, Siiiclt.'nstu'id Hrfiui ,-j Department\nTRAIL, BIUTISII COLUMHI \\\nSMELTjtfiiS   AND\njFttrchuwrrf . of t.i>H, & he.\nZ.i>cO*2s\nProti-acore \"If (\u25a0JoM, i*>iivcr, \u00a3\u25a0.>,>per. .'i|\u00a3  Load  and\nZinc\nTADANAC BRAND\nRIFF ERS\ntopper.  Load  and\nMatter of Gender\nLittle Girl\u2014I    wonder   why tbey\n\u25a0y 'Amen' and not 'Awomen.'\nLittle   Boy\u2014Because    they   sing\nhymns and not hen, stupid.\nMother (admonishing small boy)\u2014\nAnd don't forget I'm your motner.\nSmall Boy\u2014yes, but I do wish you\nwould quit bragging about it.\not\n!!\nBEAUTY IN SLATE ROOFS\nWe have by now passed out ot 'the\nperiod when slate roofs looked like\nsnunooth blackboards. We are liter idly having a revival of its uses in' our\ncoutry. because the manufacturers\nhave gone back to the old traditions\nand brought them to the front. Ttotlay\nwc can secure as beautiful a slate\nroof for our house as any In the Wrld.\nand yet have it laid with more technical skill. Thus while tbe old ways\nhave been revived new lite bag been\ninjected into them.\nWhy, ihomail\nMaster\u2014What is the   feminine\nbachelor, Thomas?\nThomas\u2014Please, sir er-ah-a lady-in\nwaiting,\na   *   a\nFutile Question\nThe question Is not   whether man\ndescended   from   the   monkey,   but\nwhen he is going to quit descending.\na     a     a\nMaybe Blind\nLittle Al'ioe had a very bad cold.\nHolding, up a rose to her mother-*\nnose she asked:\n\"Does it smell sweet,. Mummy?\"\n\"Yes, dear,\" the mother answered.\n'\u25a0Can't -you smell lt yourself?\"\nAlice shook her head solemnly.\n\"No,\" she said, \"my nose is deaf.'\n\"Garidhl has committed no crime;\nhe bt* been arrested under a regu-\nlaUor, for 'indiscreet language.'\"\nMerely a ease of lmpropsgandhl.\nO a    a    \u2022\nBeal Cooperation\nHer Father\u2014I   doubt   very   much\nv\/hether you would be able to tup-\nport my daughter, I can hardly dolt\nmyself.\nThe Suitor (bright-Let's pod\nour resources,\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nThe Gee-Gee la Laughing Last\nThe true value of hone sense is\nclearly shown by the fact that tits\niorse was afraid of the automobile\nduring the period \"\u00bb whloh the pedestrian laughed at It * \u25a0;'\na    a   .a\nCondensed Cannon Fodder.\nGermans ar e so small that there\nmay -as many as one billion, seven\nhundred mlllio n of them in a drop of\nwater. (News, Item from a Mobile\npaper. '\u25a0\n\u00bb   i ..te\nNow Teach  Him tbe Crawl Stroke\nClergyman '(who has' Just christened the baby)\u2014 -Oh, Mrs. Jones I have\nnever seen a child thati that has behaved so well   at a christening.\nMrs.. Jones\u2014 Well you see, it's because my husfe and and I hare been\npractising on him wltU, a waterjuw\ncan,, ior a whojj e weak,     u j\n. \u25a0\nWhat the Rural Weekly\nPress of B. C. Can\nOder\nTHERE arc fifty-Uve regular weekly newspapers in Britisb Columbia, Tbey are published in a widely scattered\nfield in communities with populations of from 300 to 4W to\none of 10,000. Sixteen are published in communities of less\nthan 1000 population; fifteen ln communities of 1000 to 2000\npopulation; seven in communities of 4000 to 5000; four in\ncommunities over 5000 to 10,000, These weeklies appeal to\n145,000 ef British Columbia's population. The news in these\nnewspapers is mostly all local, because that, is what Interests tbe readers, and the advertisements for tbe most part\ntell what local merchants are doing. The country editor\nknows the people he serves; they are farmers, lumbermen, miners, fishermen, prospectors, laborers, all. It Is estimated that the average farm family spends $2000 every\nyear for things which arc not necessary to raise crops. Tbe\ntotal sum that is spent by farmers ln the United States for\nthose (bings with which to live well Is the appaling sum ol\nthirteen billion dollars. Seventy-two per cent, of all automobiles sold go to people living In towns and comunilies ol\nless than 5000 population. Using thc same proportionate\nfigures to estimate Ibe buying power of the rural population of British Columbia served by thc weekly newspapers\nof the province, and wc bave something like 70,000 automobiles purchased by residents of the province hi towns and\ncommunities of less lliuu 5000 population, and $8,000,000\nspent every year by these rural families for things which\nare not necessary to raise *.. ops. If one Is Inclined to think ,\n(bat only a few people, and an insiiriisf icam few at that,\nlive In country communities served by tbe weekly uews-\npapi-s let him study these figures or consult tho lost cen-\ntioi i ..'Islics.\n'Closer Cooperation  Between R\u00abral and\nIndustrial British Columbia\nNot 'Room Enough\nLora\u2014Why do Eileen's   people ob-\n-Cause for Happiness >\n...Ouinbo\u2014I'muto happiest man alive\nI've got the finest wife in the coun-\nt\u2014 , Ject to her future husband?\nMudd\u2014Yeah,   that   does   make a    Dora\u2014Well, there are seven In tbe\nman nappy, inavirig his wife in the family, and   he's   only got   a two-\ncountry.\niseater.\n\u25a0\n-!-Tr?.?-\u2014r\"'.-=m\n GREATER ROUMANIA\nSCtn  WEEKLY TRAVELOGUE\nRUMANIA,.the latest of the\nworld's monarchies to change\nkings, has undergone such\ngreat changes hi the past doaen years\nthat lt has ln effect had a bloodless\nrevolution. This period has seen tbe\ndistribution of 8,500,000 acres of' land\nto more than 1,400,000 peasants.\nBefore the war Rumania was a\ncountry of the landed ricfi and the\nlandless poor. Today the maximum\nholding permitted to one individual\nis 1,3*5 acres. Kings and nobles gave\nup their estates to fulfill to demand\nof the agrarian reform. What Russia\nMexico and other countries have done\nin the matter of land distribution at\nthe cost of many\u00bblives and much\nmoney. Rumania accomplished without a shot.\nBut reform was not without cost.\nUncertainties, lack of organisation to\n, meet new conditions, and lack of\ntransportation facilities increased the\ncost of borrowed money to 12 and 14\npar cent Credit Is tight ln a country\nwhere all the money ln circulation\nmust pass through the national treasury as taxes three times per year.\nGreater Rumania is nearly three\ntimes as large as pre-war Rumania.\nThe new nation took in Transylvania,\nthe Banat, Bucovina and Bessarabia,\nand has yet to digest them. Old Rumania was the sise of England. Great\ner Rumania ls larger than England\nadding to itself Wales, Scotland and\nIreland. Like the units of Great Britain, each Is different; Bessarabia is\nan extension of the Russian\nearth prairie;\nThe Grand Forks Sun\n(J\nBays American Automobiles\nDespite the depression and lack of\nreads, sales of -automobiles, most of\nthem American; cdntlnue to increase1\nIn 1028, 12,000 were sold-a record\nMany of them go to the oil fields\nwhere they permit tbe engineers to\ncharge ot outlying wells to get to\nPloestl occasionally for the' enjoy-\nment of companionship in the Inter-\nnational club.\nAutomobiles are the biggest item\nof American Imports which include\naccessories, films, oil field equipment,\nradios, phonographs and records, engines, Insecticides and electrir refrigerators to the amount of $12,000\/100.\nWalnuts and fur skins are Rumania's\nchief exports to the United States.\nAmong the improvements to which\nRumania looks forward ls the reclam\nation of vast areas of swamp land\nSeven thousand square miles of\nmarsh will afford ample land for the\nremaining landless peasants, numbering about 600,000.\nBucharest (Bucurestl), capital of\nRumania, has long been known as\n\"Th3 Little Paris of the Balkans.\" It\nhas many earmarks of the French\ncapital, One of Its wide tree-lined\nthoroughfares, ls called the \"Little\nChamps Elysee\" and there Is an Arc\nde Trlomphe, both of which suggest\nthe atmosphere of Paris. The bridle\npaths' flanking the thoroughfare constantly resound with the thud of\nhoofs of blooded hones, mounted by\nyoung dandles whose perfumed mustaches preserve their dignity by\nreaching straight out instead of turning up at the ends. The women are\nchic.\nSome Striking Contrasts\nThe few fine buildings are mixed\nin with unassuming structures which\nj would never be at home In Paris or\nBerlin, and opposite the Imposing\nWar College Tzigane women may be\nseen working at a noisy power saw\nwhich is rciuclng crooked poles to\nfirewood. The few main streets are\nlined with modern building and new\nresidence avenues are stretching out\nVIEWS AMD NEW;\nFOR THR FARMER-\n'Why\nWhy Get\nget stung\"\nas a rule,\ntoward the periphery of the clrculer have the unpleasant habit of dihput-\ncity;    but in the crowded   centre of Ing the ownership of trie surplus, and\nthe town the confusing litter of tiny \"\u2022>   the   Dominion   apiarist   puts i\nstreets and alleys   reminds one of a \"their method of arguing tbe question\nrabbit warren. is not .only  pointed,  but painful  to\nIn the markekt place,   the traveler the person of the opposition.\" The old\ngets a glimpse of the rural folk who familiar method of settling the dis\ncluster  about    stands  of    vegetables pule   has   been to first destroy the\n&**n parts-nest of agriculture the question\nis the pertinent  ai meat supplies for the return tripi\nobservation  of C  B Gooderham,  Do-j fc ^lc&?f Se^unrf\nminion  Apiarist,  discussing  methods, Canada to buy the best beef by gov-\nfoi- the   removal of   honey from the ernment brand with its guarantee of\n.,,    \u2122,    .      ^ .        ,   .     \"    real quality. When her visit to Cana-\nhive. The bee does not work by tha| da ended and R-100 cast off her lines\nclock, nor does it cease work when itsi\u00a3or   the   flight home she carried on\nown use   This sutdIus Is the reward i 5*5?2 ,a fPP'v of choice \"Red Brand\"\ncwn use.  inn surplus is uie reward| individual steaks sufficient   for   two\nof  the ibeekeeper\u2014providing   he  has! meals for all on board. The govern-\nthe   nerve   to take it.Bees, as a rule ' zrieai_ brar\u00bbd removes the element of\nYou can buy Salada quality\nat three cups for a cent\nsmart looking men and women; and\nblack | the seemingly endless mass of pedes-\nBucovlna, a   forested trtans strolls ln a gay mood with no\nregion; Transylvania an upland notable for Industries   as well as agriculture; the Banat a lowland.\nFarming Conies Flnt\napparent destination.\nBucharest as Fine Shops\nBucharest   Impresses   the   traveler\nfrom the time he emerges frm one of\nwhich they bring to the city from\nthe rolling farm land nearby. Here\nthe men seem to display no particular type of costume, most of them\nwearing European coats and trousers\nand there are as many derbies as\nthere are caps and soft hats and fez-\nshaped woolen   head   coverings. On\nDeed w.th suiunui' fumes und Uicu\ntake all the honey ln peace; but, like\nkilling the goose tbat laid the golden\negg, ll lestroys much valuable property A newer method is by the use of\nthe \"boH escape\" to take the honey\nwithout the bees knowing anything\nabout It, and witliout getting stung.\nsummer\nshod.\ntime that all    feet arc not\nthe other hand the women folk blaze *\u00abHiut   how   this   is done is rescrfcbe-d\nforth In .bright colored shawls which in departmental bulletin No. 33 issued\ncover the   head and   shoulders, and by the publications branch oi the Do-\naprons with stripes of half a dozen' minion  department  of  agriculture.\nunblendlng colors.   Their dresses are' _o_\nJust short enough   to   reveal In the1 Market|nf pou\u201ery\n'The poultry market duuni* thc bal\nince of the year is going to be a try-\ni ing   one,    perhaps    tile most   liltlciill\nj tw.ougi, wnitn me industry has pess-\nj ex  jn  ttitajiii\"  yeats,'   ucseive  exjiei't-*\n! 01 uie ijouitiy muricet service or Uie\nuonimion  department' of  agriculture.\n| Not any are storage stocks heavy and\nproduction lully up to normal, but the\nmaritet m which dressed poultry can\n  I cj  sold  to  arvantage  materially  re-\nI htric'ci   this  year  tnrough  the  new\nBy Edson R. Waite j uiuteo. Stales tain barried. Producers\n__ *'    - ,. 'are urged to pay particular attention\nWhy would it not be a good thing  u, to* yropei  utting of poultry for\nfor province or state to have some-  mars*.,  and  to the  development\nflip yc>*j\nEVEE SYCIP\nTOTtUNtt!\nIP\nI ment brand removes _\nguesswork as to qualty entirely from\nthe purchase of beef throughout Can-\nada_and every housewife by insisting\non being supplied with Red or Blue\nbrand beef can buy the best of beef\nwith the same assurance of quality as i\ndid the purchasing officer if R-100.\nSaskatchewan Still Leads\nThe pen of Barred Plymouth Rocks\nentered iby Mrs. W. J. Thompson, of\nSaskatchewan, continues to lead in the\n11th Canadian egg laying contest at\nthe Dominion experimental farm,\nOttawa, with a score of 1770.1 points.\nThe pen lead ls now 46.9 points ahead\nof the nearest competitor, with but\na lew points .sc-'MirulIng the second\n.mil third pens. A.-: thc contest enters\nthe 40tli week clone scoring between\npens and \u2022 Individual layers brings\nadded interest. At the present time\nproduction Is belter than for the corresponding week In any preceding\ncontest, an all round improvement\nbeing shown by layers.\nClover Seed Prospects\nTho seed branch of the Dominion\ndepartment of agriculture estimates\nthat the production of alsike clover\nseed for 1930 will be better In quality\nboth with respect to color and purity\nthan last year's crop. Ontario production Is not expected to exceed one-\nthird of the 1929 crop, when 70,000\nbushels were\need market\nSALADA\"\nTEA\n'Fresh from the gardens*\n:rop,\nited.\nFOURTEEN POINTS FOR\nThe following\nand comfort! this weather,\n1\u2014Don't overwork.\n2\u2014Don't overplap.\n3\u2014Don't  overeat.\n4\u2014Avoid excess of alcoholic drinks.\n5\u2014Wear light,  loose clothing.\n6\u2014If you can do It (lake a nap at\nnoon or rest as much as possible'\nduring the day.\n7\u2014Drink plenty of water or of cold\nnon-alcoholic drinks If water Is distasteful.\n8\u2014Avoid fats and excess of\nand starch.\n9\u2014Eat plenty of fresh vegetables\nand fruits.\n10\u2014Avoid overexposure to the direct rays of uhe sun. Gradual exposure\nbeginning with a few   minutes tbe\nharvested.   The   alsike I first day and working up to an hour\nis  not overly promising\nbeauty and comfort   to the planter\nGOOD HEALTH and his family or prove to be ugly.\nrules mean   health displeasing eyesores to all who gaaa\nupon them depends upon how wisely\nthey are selected.\nsugar\nsota   mair.i;t    in    isuv   uvciy    U1U1111B111M    afean.   ta   jrt.,\u201e   \u2014,\u201e      \u201e_t  .      . _   .\nat the present time. Better prospects ,after 14 days may not be harmful.\nof\nAfter the war Rumania saw visions; \"> modem hotels   downtown. Shops one m its ^ ln ^ form ' ^gfflffiH\nol an Industrial future. The country j \u00ab* fine as can be ln most capitals of year\u2014the story   of Its   progress, Its having been properly finished through\nhaa ample resources: oil, water power, wood, ore, and a good labor supply. Ten years have dimmed the vision but have not wiped lt out. Bight\nout of ten Rumanians still are farmers so the nation has decided to make\nthe world line the   business streets. \u25a0 wealth,\npens until fully grown and properly\niu resource* and all th. in.' special ieeuiug, and young stock\n'Behind large Dlate glass windows \u00ab \u201e \u00bb?iW^T!i^S a i a ^' M*ld never b? put inti ttnishing\n, uenina  large piaie    glass    winnows finite variety of facts that    interest, pens unl\"\nthe   American   traveler   finds   such( thoSe who Uve f^^ who vWt> wh0 matured.\nfamiliar articles as American -made invest there? I\nflashlights, radios and phonographs.] There te fttjeast one state that's\nIt Is not necessary to find an auto- fortunate enough to have such a\na good Job of farming before turning mobile salesman to see American mi-- vear boon of Iactg p^ ngnres, and\nto industry. Cooperatives have been tomobiles on display. The streets are *hat )s Texas. The Texas Almanac\nformed Groups pf peasants find they full of them In front of a hotel or|ond atate m(justrlai guide is publish\ncan afford to buy American farm ma- business building six or eight of a ea by the leading publishing house\nchlnery. A grain grading law waa do-aen automobiles are oopular Amer- of the statei Wbjch also publishes\npassed in 1S38. Silk culture starting lean makes and across the street a The ballas News, The Dallas Journal\nfrom nothing has Increased to an en- ( billboard ls plastered with the ad- The Semi-Weekly Farm News, and\nterprise enlisting   4000   workers and vertlsement of a popular car made in owns   \u201e,,]   operates   Radio   Station\nMichigan. The doorways of the large jwFAA. The broad editorial and re-\ncolored advertisements with the na- Bearch facilities of this company\nmovie or cinema houses display bright make tt u^ ldead fporaca 0. uvs M.\nmes of American actresses emblaaon- manlCi whlch it j^ published inter-\njd in large letters. | nittently ever since 1867. So ably and\nBucharest ls a walled town without efficiently is the book handled that lt\nthe walL Crowded, as was the custom is possible to place It in the bands of\nwhen the city walls were the main readers at only sixty cents per copy\ndefence,. Bucharest drops away from by mall.\nthe glitter of tbe Galea Vlctorlel and As I look through this volume there\nthe boulevards to the rundown OrK is nothing I can think of that ls not\njntiallsm of the outer sections and. here. Thousands of statistics of all\nthen abruptly to tbe empty, dusty! sorts; lists of officials, of institutions,\nplain. Its population bas more than of industrial and commercial bodies\ndoubled in the last decade and nous-'and their work; facts, facte, facts,\nes, as elsewhere   in Eastern Europe,     Every   school   room,   every office,\n4000\nlU.OOO.OOO  capital.\nSince the World war Rumanians\nhave turned definitely irom wheat to\nAmerican corn. Greater acreage is\nplanted in corn than wheat. Corn\nmush displaces bread as a national\nfood Bessarabia looks like Kansas.\nBut in 1028 a second drought hit the\ncountry. Ine corn crop was a failure\nand Rumania, a country which has\nexported cereals for years, had to import corn. The government acted to\nforestall famine ln some regions.\nThe similarity of parts of Rumania\nto Kansas extends to sunflowers for\nwhich both regions are famous. In\nRumania sunflower are a standard\ncrop; 394355 acres were planted in\nsunflowers last year. Oil pressed from\nsunflower seeds serves as a constituent of butter substitutes.\nFour foundation stones support life\nIn Rumania; cereals, oil, lumber, and\nlive stock. Production of oil and lumber has progressed vigorously, not\nenough, however, to offset losses ln\ncereals and livestock.\nevery home, should have a copy of\nthis booklet In order to know what\nthe largest state in the Union Is doing and something of the opportunities and marvelous development that\nls taking place there.\nThe Dallas News and Its publishers\nare doing a splendid work. Well may\nHelp  Wanted!\nEASY W^RK-BIG BIG PROFITS\nSTART IN BUSINESS FOR YOURSELF IN YOUR OWN BOMB\nTOWN AND BE INDEPENDENT. A PLEASANT AND PROFITABLE\nBUSINESS OF TOUR OWN AT WHICH YOU CAN MAKE   '\n$10.00 to $20.00 per Day\nWI SHOW YOU HOW\nOPPORTUNITY OF A L1FJ2TIME\nTO MAKE BIO MONBY IN YOUR   FULL   OR   PART   TIME\nFor 88.00 we will start you In the In tbe Carpet Cleaning . Business!\nsending you a half gallon if QUICK CARPET CLEANING POWDER\nwh|ch will dean twenty rugs of carpels at) $2.50 each, total $50.00,\nalso we will give .you FREE of charg: a long handle and brush, making\ncomplete outfit. '\nThis eliminates kneeljng and makes work easy. Hundreds of Carpets\nand Rugs to Clean in your neighborhood, also upholstery on Cars and\nChesterfields, Etc., Etc.\nQUICK CARPET CLEANER works Instantly, cleans thoroughly and\nremoves all spots and stains from carpets, rugs, etc., and restores It to\nIts natural color, leaving the Nap sort and pliable. It| Is a real wonderworker and takes only one half hour to clean a large size carpet. Work\nbeing done without removlnb carpets or rugs from the floor, Dry ln\none hour.\nFull dlricalons together wlttojnany suggestions and helpful hint*\ntent with Woe*.\nGu'iriuve d liarmle s 'i o Thc H* est Fnbrics.\nCon'iiiiin mi Acids, Lye or P.>t sh.\nEvery Home will welcome you, and means   repeats   and new. orders,\nFILL IN the COUPON and be one oi   our   HAPPY   MONEYMAKERS.\nQUICK CARPET GLEJUilhG CCWM\nMANUFACTURERS  OF QUICK PRODUCTS\n1008   1st, Street West, CALGARY, ALBERTA.\nHerewith find enclosed $9.00, being, for one half gallon of QUICK\nCARPET OLEANTNa POWDER, abo one brush handle to be sent\nFREE of charge, also' full particulars as mentioned above.\nNAME\nADDRESS-\nTOWN......\t\nare at a premium. It requires Influence, persistence and bribery to get\ninto one of the few hotels the main\nattractions of which are the dining'\nrooms, often open to the sky.\nSurrounded as is by rich fanning\ncountry, Bucharest has not lacked for'.\nfood,  and the restaurants are well\nfilled at   all times.   The Rumanian the leading publishers of other pro-\nloves the uniform, and high heels on vinces and states follow the example\nsoft,laced   boots   like   those of the| _! \u201e__\nFrench aviators suit the fancy of the MODEKN ENGUSH youth\nLACKING IN  SENTIMENT?\nHundreds of church bells through-\nou'.i England are silent because young\nmen refuse to take any interest in\nthe delightful, If somewhat sllrenuous\nart of bell ringing.\n\"We require six hefty young men\nto pull the ropes,\" said Rev. E. M\nDavysar, vicar of Cromer church, recently. \"Our bells have no!i been rung\nfor nearly a year.\nCinemas, motor omnibus services\nfrom villages to towns and football\nmatches are among the reasons given\nfor the shortage by E. A. Young, sec\nretary of the central council of\nchurch bellrlngers. \"The present\nr-7,o\" 8ayn Mr. Young, \"is a rotten\nage. It is atmosti Impossible to get\nbellrlngers cither In London or the\ncountry.\n\"A't one Ume villagers were proud\ntc do tho worst for nothing. The\nyoung man of today wants to know\nwhat he Is going to get| out nf It.\nNearly all bellrlngers now are either\nmlddleaged men or women.\"\nPrefer Canadian Hay\nThe Increase in popularity of Caia-\ndlan graded hav in the overseas market, coupled with an acute shortage\nin the United States, is the basis for\nthe forecast by the seed branch ot the\nDomonlon department of agriculture\nof an increase in hay exports at advantageous prices this year. Canadian hay has secured for itself a high\nreputation during the past three years,\nand reports indicate that among particular consumers lt is preferred to\nanything grown in Great Britain.\nThis ls another cose where quality\nassured bv government grading means\nmuch to the Canadian farmer.\nA New  \"Idea\nOfficials of the Dominion livestock\nbranch are watching with interest the\nprogress of the new system of marketing meat known as the \"package\nmeat or \"rapid freezing\" mkthod. It\nhas already been successfully Introduced in the larger retail distribution centers in the United States and\nflair to revolutionize meat retailing\nmethods in the Bhitish market. By\nthe new process cuts of beef, mutton,\nlamb, pork and veal are dressed at\nthe packing plant, packed in Individual cellophane wrappers and subjected to rapid freezing at very low\ntemperatures. It is found that by\n\"snap\" freezing ony tiny Ice crystals\nare formed ln the flesh of the meat,\n3)inb sdUHBiiD auu v%i |l\u00ab ftuuuasiMU.\nunimpaired. The new system provides\na serious threat to the future of that\nold familiar institution, the butcher\nshop. . ,,_\nThe Bug Detectives\nNeither Scotland Yard nor the equal\nly famous Burns agency in the United States can boast more able detectives than the entomologists and botanists of the Dominion department of\nagriculture, whose lives and energies,\nnot without risk to personal welfare,\nare devoted to the protection of\nsources of food supply. They are continually on the alert to check the invasions of crop thieves in the form of\ninsects, bugs and germs of countless\nspecies. Their work involves the solution of mysteries quite as thrilling,\nand even more important to the wel-\npolice contemporaries. Instead of\nfare of the nation, its that of their\npolice contemporaries. Instead of\nbullets and guns these \"bug\" detectives deal with larvae, spores and\ngerms, infinitely more intricate and\nharder to deal with. And their work\ntoo, ls never done; there is always\nsome new problem of field or laboratory study just aroud the corner.\nCold storage experts of the Dominion department of agriculture advise\nthat by proper curing most of the\ndamage caused to potatoes held in low\ntemperature storage can be eliminated. It ls found that the more serious\ninjuries come from the placing of tubers in storage temperatures around\n32 degrees F., within two or three\ndays of harvesting. When placed ln\npreliminary storage at temperatures\nbetween 00 degrees F. and 70 degrees\nP., for a period of six days potatoes\nhave an opportunity to properly\n\"cure.\" They may then be placed ln\nstorage at low temperature without\nserious Injury for the balance of the\nstorage season.\nreported for red clover seed with\npractically no carry-over from last\nyear, and 1930 acreage about 50 per\ncent below normal. An increased acreage of alfalfa being saved for seed is\nreported.\nCONSIDER   IMPROVEMENTS\nNow is time to think about lm-\nprovng your home. Is your home new\nor out of date? Is it comfortable and\nconvenient or lacking in some of the\nthings that make life sweeter?\nIf your answer showse that equipment is needed, then you should join\nthe modernizing movement.\nNOT MARKERS FOR MISSILES\nEighteen states in the Union now\nhave laws making it a misdemeanor\nwillfully to damage official road signs\nGeneral  News\nChanges in operating organization on Canadian Pacific wer.tern\nlines are announced as follows:\u2014\nJ. H. Chown, superintendent of\nSaskatchewan southern lines,\ntransferred from Regina to Edmonton; J. M, MaoArthur, superintendent, .Medicine Hat division, transferred to Regina; G. J. Fox, in\ncharge of Edmonton division,\ntransferred to Medicine Hat. These\ntransfers nre made in accordance\nwith the company's policy of cn-\nahllng Its ofricers to broaden their\nexperience In railway mailers.\n11\u2014Drink no water unless certain\nof (jhe safety of its source.\n12\u2014Avoid food that has not been\nproperly refrigerated.\n13\u2014Eat nothing of which there ls\nthe slightest suspicion tfiat ft may\nbe spoiled\n14\u2014Don't get MAD; keep COOL\nSELECT  TREES  CAREFULLY\nTrees once planted become a permanent part of the landscape. In\nmost cases they will outlive the planter.   Whether   they   give   great Joy,\nThe Interpreter\n\"Do ye belave In dhrsmes, Rileyf\"\n\"Ol do.\"\n\"Phwat ls it a sign of if a married\nman dhrames he's a bachelor?'\n\"Its a sign thot he's going to meet\nwld a great disappointment when hs\nwakes up.\"\nLUMBAGO?\nA pain in the lower part of your\nback can torture you. But not for\nJong,- if you know about Aspirin!\nIhese harmless, pleasant tablets tike\n\u2022way the misery of lumbago, rheumatism, neuralgia, headaches, toothaches,\nand systemic pains of women. Relief\ncomes promptly; is complete. Genuine\nAspirin cannot depress the heart\nLook for the Bayer cross, thus;\n^%BR\n...-PROVINCE...\nBEES   RESENTED   INTRUSION\nWhen a truck ran away and hit one\nof the grand old cherry trees atl Cher-\nryvlllc, Pa., the eight men aboard re\nccived more than a bump apiece. The\ncollision, which demolished the tree,\naroused a monster swarm of bees\nthat made their home in thc hollow\ntrunk. Some of the men made surprising records as sprinters, but) all\nwere stung. Two OherryviUe girls,\ntaking a stroll, shrieked that men\nwere aboou;-i to attack them, only to\nfind out what was really doing when\nths bees came along.\nWays of Economy\n\"Are you saving any money since\nyou started your budget system?\n\"Sure. By the time we've balanced\nit up every night it'., too late to go\nti a show or anywhere.'\nFor health give the baby a sunbath\nevery day.\nAmerican golfers beat British\nplayers because they are more interested in the scientific angles of\nthe game and generally speaking\ntry harder, according to Don Moo,\nUniversity of Oregon wizard, Interviewed at Vancouver, travelling\nCanadian Pacific from the western\nOpen at Chicago and the American\nOpen tournament.-- at Minneapolis.\nHe described English golfers as\nthe best sportsmen he had ever encountered.\nSeven hundred Americans, abCnt\ntwo-t'ilrds women, toured Nova\nScoth rece-.lly by Dominion Atlantic Tinilway, after arrival at\nat Halifax aboard S.S. California\non \"A Cruise to Nowhere,\" the\nlarger part of which Is spent at\nsea outside the 12-mile limit.\nThere were three of these cruises\nduring July and August from New\nYork.\nFive more new bridges are to be\nconstructed on New Brunswick\nhighways, tenders having been called for by Hon. D. A. Stewart, Minister of Public Works, for modern\nstructures to bo built with attendant improvement of roadway alignment. One of them will be nn 80-\nfoot Rpan across the Little River\nat Grand Falls.\nSince July 1 Ihe wild rose Is officially the floral emblem of Alberta, tho Act passed hy the Legislature at, the Inst sefslon, going Into effect on Dominion Day.\nWORLD'S GREATEST TRAVEL SYSTEM\nPresents Its\nWINTER CRUISE PROGRAM\n1930-31\nrusse\nAgain tho classic features i Christmas and New Year's\nin the Holy Land end Egypt i trans-India In cool\nJanuary : -world-powered service In 8l key places i\ndream-ship\" luxury, on the EMPRESS OF AUSTRALIA,\nFrom New York Dec. % 137 days, $2000 up.\n3 Mediterranean\nDeluxe \"crulsode,\" omphosizing service and longer\ntime ashore. EvenPalma,Sicily,Vonice,Syria, included\nas low us $900. EMPRESS OF FRANCE, Feb.3,73 days.\n14  fascinating\nCaribbean ports,.\n$300 up.Two sailings of 29 days ecch, January 9 \u2014 February 11,\n20,000-ton modernist \u2014 DUCHESS OF BEDFORD.\nR.-,oH^,fr \"l-ovld b\u00bb sxiuM now in order lo staclcr* on crake\nDOOKiei5 and choow yevr 1\nI West Undies\nprices I: umplolc\nJ\n.       roomi whllo iho laloction at all\nJuil pheari* or write your local agsnl or\nS. CARTER,   D. P.\nNELSON,   B.C.\nFix System ot Value\n.The commercial demand for soybean oil or meal from time to time\nwill fix the value of the various varieties suited to cultivation in Canada Is the observation of the chemist\nof the Dominion department of agriculture. The correlation between \"oil\"\nof fat content and protein he finds lu\nremarkably consistent; the varieties\nibeing high ln \"fat\" .being relatively\nlower in \"protein,\" and vice versa.\nThis becomes a matter of Importance\nln view of the tact that there are\nnow some twenty-four varieties of\nsoybeon which have been proven suitable for cultivation as a commercial\ncrop ln Canada. The commercial\nvalue of the soybean arises from the\noil obtained by expression, and thc\nuse of the resdue of the bean, which\nls rich In protein, in the form of meal\nor cake as a livestock food. Soybean\noil is used in fish conning, pajnt and\nsoap manufacture; and the soybean ts\nalso an Important constituent in many\nof the popular patent foods now appearing on the market\u2014in addition\nas a legume and forage crop it ranks\namong the ibest.\nThe MM Boys the Best\n\"Everything counts with us, wo\nhave room for nothing but the best,\"i\nwas the comment of the purchasing,\nofficer of the big British dirigible, R-\n100, when discussing with the beef;\ngrading officials ol the Dominion d>!\nA quantity of cocoons will be\nbrought to Montreal In their natural stnto for the purpose of do-\nmonslrntlnp* the process of weaving silk nnd converting It Into llic\ntlnlnlicd product nt thn National\nProduced In Canada Exhll Itlon to\nbo held In that city November 3-8\nnext\nCanndlnn entries In Ihe overseas\n\u2022octlnn of the British National\nBKK-Layinir contest nre holding\ntheir own with the world's best\negg producers. Itepnrts received\nby F. C. Elford, Dominion llns-\nbandryman, show tlint .Canadian\npens hold third and fourth positions In the International contest.\nFirst pli.^o ls held by France and\nsecond by Ireland.\nMarket prospects for fruit growers of Nova Scotia are encouraging\nbecause the Tlrltish Isles must look\nto Nora Scotia for the bulk of tbelr\nbarrelled apple supply until November l!i. as a result of the embargo\non barrelled fruit from the United\nSlates.\nLast year a British artist publicly declared Canadian women to\nbe the most beautiful In the Empire\nand now another Britisher \u2014 this\ntime a newspaper man \u2014 claims\nthey are the Empire's greatest travellers. It appears that a check-up\non railway tmvel in. summer reveals that eighty per cent are\nfemales. . .,\u201e..,.._.i_-^-\n(ANMN PACIfIC\nB CARRY CANADIAN PACIFIC EXPRESS TRAVEUERS CHEQUES \u2014\nGOOD THE WORID OVER\nHe I ad closed the deal\nalready by telephone\nThree men were business rivals,\neach of them selling a commodity required by a Arm In another city. The\nlatter was about to place a big order,\nand of course, each of the rivals\nanxious to get the business.\nOne nun wrote a letter, another\ndecided to go in person, but the third\nwisely combining the 'personal touch'\nwith speed, used the long-distance\ntelephone.\nAs a result, the matt who used the\ntelephone had closed tbe deal while\ntbe- rival and the letter were still on\ntbeir way.\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO\n THE GRAND FORKS SUN\nTHE CITY\nFriday evening Mrs. H Brinkman\nenL'ltained ln honor of Miss Elsie\nCadden, prior to her marriage on\nTuesday.- About twenty guests were\ninvited and a very enjoyable evening\nwas,spend in games and contests.\nK.. Scheer motored to Nelson last\nFriday. Mrs. W Tasbat who has been\nvisiting her daughter Helen for a\nweek, accompanied Mr. Ssheer as\nfar as her home in Trail.\nBruc? Brown arrived from the\nCoast on Friday evening. After a\nvisit with his parents, he will go to\nPenticton, where ' he has secured a\nposition on the teaching staff of\nthat city.\nMisses Ruby and Ruth Savage left\nTuesday morning for Vancouver\nwhere they will attend commercial\ncollege. \u00bbThey were accompanied by\nMrs. Savage who will spend about.a\nmonth's holiday at the Coast.\n.1 lird McCallum, who has been\nhome on sick leave has returned to\ntin duties In the Bank of Commerce.\nHe has been transferred from Oliver\nto Princeton.\nconsult a specialist with regards her\ninjured foot.\nTbe anticipation of some speed\nboot races drew a large crowd of people to Christina Lake on Sunday. However the races were forbidden'on account of the day being Sunday. The\nspeed boats gave a good idea of what\nihey could do by the spped at which\nili3y railed around the Lake.\nMiss Clarice Calvert of Vancouver\nwas among the out of tov.'n guests\nto attend the Atwood-Codden wedding\non Tuesday.\nIrene Frankovitch left on Sunday\nmorning' for Kamloops, where she\nteaches.\nMrs.. J Cadden, and children Marie*!:, Leonard and Joan, arrived on\nfjjn-iny morning from Kaslo to attend\nthc wedding of Miss Elsie Cadden to\nEi-ic S Atwood on Tuesday.      *\nMiss Elizabeth Chesney motored up\nfrom Spokane to attend the Atwood-\nCodden wedding on Tuesday. She returned to her duties as secretary of\nthe Edgecliffe Sanitarium the same\nafternoon.\nMrs. S N Dodd left Thursday for\nNelson, where she will spend a few\ndays before going 10 the Molly Crib-\nson Mine for a while.\nMrs. Wenzel left on Sunday for\na visit to her daughter Edna ln Pen-\nicton.\nMrs. Harold V Blocklock and dough\nter Margaret who have been spending\nu holiday as the guest of her mother,\nMrs. S N Dodd, left Thursday afternoon for her home in Edmonton.\nBile will be .acempanied by MImhcs\nJessie and Laura Sweezey, who will\nattend high school  there.\n'Miss Jessie Downey of Vancouver,\nis spending her holidays at her home\nlp this city.\nM rj Wlnnl'rea* Savage of the Post\nOffice staff left Tuesday morning for\na two weeks vacation   to Vancouver.\nMiss Irene Ingless ls the guest of\nMrs. Hadden at their summer home\nat Christina Lake.\nAlfred Downey, and Misses June\nDowney and Edna Stuart, who have\nbeen visiting at the Coast, returned\nlas} Saturday. They were ccompanied\nhome by Miss Jessie Downey.\nThe writing of the supplemental\nexaminations commenced Monday\nand last the entire week.\nMrs. W Bonthron, Chester Bonthron\nMips Helen Simpson and Mrs. B Norrls returned on Monday evening from\na two month motor trip to St. Stephens. New Brunswick. They all report\n.1 most pleasant journey.\nW H Kirkpatrick of Penticton was ;\nIn tho city   during the   first of the,\n-.reek.\nMir,*; Sarah McCallum, who' has\nbcon holi'.!*?.-.*:;)-; at the Coast returned\non Monday to the city.\n'--. Perry Peono of Spokane is\n\".\u2022:\u25a0 gue^t of lier parents, Mr. and\nMrs. A F MiJhcner of this city.\nW VI EmslOy of    Trail    spent the\nweekend at Christina Lake.\nCharlie Pearson was the   guest of\nhs brother,\"W J Pearson this week.\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Mclnnes cf\nTrail moiored t3 the city on Monday\nevening, to a trend the Atwood-Cadden\nwedding. Mr. Mclnnes was groomsman.\nMrs. 1? G M Story has as her\nguests, her brothers, Mesers R Nicholas of River Forest, 111., and H Nicholas of California. They were accompanied by Uhelr families and are on\ntour of Canada.\nMrs. Borrell and two daughters, of\nTacoma, Wash are visiting Mrs. Bor\nrell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J Morrell\nof ;ihis city.\nThe' city fire hydrants have been\npainted a true British red, with nil-\nver-colored  helmlts.\n\u2014     ._\nD:J McDougall and L A McDougall\nmarie a trip tp Kelowna over the\nweek end.\nMrs. Joyce McKenzie of the City\n0.\"3ce staff, returned on Sunday from\na holiday spent In Victoria.\nA number of Great , Northern offl\nrials were In the city on Monday\npresumably on business in connection\n\\. io. the change of location of the\nlcja! station.\nMrs. W Liddicoat and daughters.\nElsie and Dorothy returned the fir.-'t\nat the week from a motor trip to\nsoutfhem California. They report an\neicokeht holiday.\nMr. and Sirs. J T Simmons and\ndaughter Phyllis motored to Spokane\nen Sunday morning and returned to\nthe city Wednesday.\n_____ i\nSchool Starts Tuesday morning and\nuiany of the youngsters do not appear\noverly elated by the fact.\nA G Morrison of Greenwood was a\nvisitor to our city on Monday.\n_t\u2014 ..\nMonday being Labor Day is a Dominion holiday.\nMr. and Mrs. H E Knight and\ndaughter Miss Nellie, ore spending a\nholiday at Norwegian Creek for a\nfew days.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe take this method of extending\nour heartfelt thanks to our friends\nand the citizens generally for the\nmany kind actc and expressions of\nsympathy shown us during the late\nlate Illness and at the death of our\nwife and mother, and for the many\nbeautiful floral offerings at the funeral.\nAndrew Baumgartner,\nFrank Baumgartner,\nt Mrs. W. J. Penrose,\nCUTTING  UP DOESN'T PAY\nTjhere is a good demand for Canadian cheese in the Brit'sh West Indies, \u25a0 ibut development of cheese exports for that market depends direct*-\nly on the packing of a cheese suited\nto the market states J A Ruddick,\ndairy commissioner of the department\nof agriculture.\nDr. Ruddick spent severaal months\nin the West Indies last winter. The\nmarket there wants a small 25 pound\ncheese of -the \"Daisie\" type about 12\nInches in diameter and also the\ncheese should be fairly \"new\", not\nmore \u25a0than one month old when\nshipped.\nSome Canadian exporters to meet\nthe demand have been cutting or\nsplitting the regular size 8045 lb.'\ncheese into three or four sections\ncovering the cut surface with paraffin\nor ironing a cap cloth on. As a result\nwhen exposed to temperatures of\n80' degrees F. or more as they are\noonstlantly in the West Indian climate, these \"split\" cheeses are far\ntfrom satisfactory. They become t>\nand hard to handle\nThe Daisie type made fairly firm\nand covered with a good rind ls\nmuch better suitjed to the market\nand its sale can be substantially increased If proper care is exercised in\npreparing it for a particular market.\nQuality count's ln cheese as lt docs\nin other farm and dairy products.\nDISHES CTHAT\nDIFFERENT\nPINEAPPLE ORANGE SPONGE\n1  package orange gelatin.\n1   cup boiling water\nl   cup pineapple puice and water.\n1 cup shredded pineapple drained\nDissolve gelatin   ln boiling   water.\nAdd Pineapple juice and water. Chill\nWhen slightly thick beat with rotary\negg ibeater until of consistency of\nwhipped cream. Fold in pineapple.\nMould, chill until firm..\nTOMATO RELISH\n2% cups cooked tomatoes\nC'i   cups sugar\n4   bottle pectin\n%   teaspoon   each   allspice   cloves\nand cinnamon\nScald, peel and crush tomatoes\nBoil four cups of the tomatoes 10\nminutes, uncovered. Measurer cooked\nmixture into large kettle. Add sugar,\nmix and bring to full boll. St<r constantly. Boll 2 minutes Remove from\nfire and stir in pectin Skim, pour\nquickly. Cover hot relish with film of\nhot paraffin; when relish is cold, cov-\nci with '. inch of hot paraffin. Roll\nglass to spread paraffin on sides. Sets\nvery slowly. Makes about 9 eight-\nounce glasses.\nPLAIN WAFFLES\n2 cup sifted flour\n3 teaspoons baking powder\nhi   teaspoon salt\n3   egg yolks, well beaten\n3 egg whites, siffly beaten\n1   cup milk\n4 tablespoons melted butter\nSift flour once, measure and add\nbaking powder and salt, and sift\nagain. Combine egg yolks butter and\nmilk. Add to flour, beat until smooth\nFold In egg whites. Bake on hot greased waffle iron. Scrve hot with butter\nand syrup. Makes six 4-sectlon waffles.\nThere is probably no other modern\ndevelopment of astronomy that has\nso revolutionized the science as the\napplication  of  photography.\nRxponents of tlie Royal and An-\ncienl Ouine went clown to defeat\no.i the Ui-iff Springs Hotel golf\nCourse recently when Indian Archery experts played In '\u00bb nine-\nhoi.' foui-sume between two Indian\nchiefs l,one Walker and Lone\nE-gle, and William Thompson,\nprofessional on the course, and\nhis daughter, Peggy Dalgleish,\nformer Alberta lady golf champion. The Indians shot their arrows from the tees while ths golfers played in orthodox fashion.\nThe archers \"holed In\" a four-\ninch disc standing on end en the\ncup. Up to the ninth hole the\ngame was tied, but the Indians\nwon ths latter with one strike.\nMiss Mary 3renizer of Los Angeles\narri.yed ln the city on Wednesday on\na vSlt to her brother and slster-ln\nlawj'Mv. and Mrs. H E* Brenizer,\nMiss Isabel Donovan left on Wed-\nne?*^f>y for Nelson where she will\nvisit for a few days.\nMrc. W M Gowans and Miss Catherine Gowans have returned from\nVancouver,  where Catherine went to planted about the end of September\nPLANTING FALL FLOWERS\nAugust and September are the\nmonths in which to plant and reset'\nIris, peony and similar bulbous flow-'\ners advise horticultural experts of\nthe Dominion department of agriculture, i\nNow is the time to plant the Bearded Iris or to take up and replant\nold crowded specimens. In doing this\nthe young healthy rhizomes should\nbe replanlled and the old central\nportions discarded. In planting the\nIris the rhizomes should not be covered with earth they should be left1\nat the surface of the soil with the\nloots firmly embedded in the ground.\nSeptember ls the month for dividing and replanting peonies. The old\nstools should be dug up, carefully\nwashed, divided and replanted. When\nreplanted each division should have\nthree or four eyes, they should bo\nplaced about three or four feet apart\nand just deep enough tliat the crown\nls covered with two inches of eartn.\nThe soil in which they are planted\nshould be dug deeply and richness\nassured by mixing in some bone meal\nand sheep manure. Too deep planting is one of the causes of the non-\nblooming of peonies.\nOther bulbous plants which may be\nThe Plumbers Opeia, opening\nnumber presented at Banff Springs\nHotel by the Alfred Heather Light\nOpera Company, tbat is running a\nsummer season at tbe well-known\nRockies re3ort, proved an unqualified success, while \"Tom Tug, the\nYoung Waterman,' which foliowrd\nIt, was an even greater bit. The\nseason will run during July and\nAugust and a number of 18th century operas with Gilbert and Sullivan and Canadian works will be\ngiven.\nSunday, July 20, will see nearly\na hundred tourists leave Montreal\nand Toronto on the seventh annual Across Canada tour organized by Dean Sinclair Laird, ol\nMacdonald College, Quebec. They\nwill travel over 6,000 miles In\nvisiting the paciflo Coast, Vancouver Island, Rocky Mountains\nParks, the Prairie Provinces and\nalmost every district of outstanding beauty as well as those of industrial and, historical interest in\nCentral and Western Canada,\nAutomatic heat regulation bas\nnow been Installed for tbs first\ntime ln Canada as regular equipment on railway passenger cars\nwltb tbe Introduction by tbe Canadian Pacific Railway of their new\n\"S\" type standard sleepers, constructed at the Angus Shops,\nMontreal, to the design of the\ncompany's experts. Two of them\nare already in service on th*\n\"Trans-Canada Uuiited.\"\nA bronze memorial tablet marking the bouse In Frederlcton,\nwhere Bliss Carman. Canadian\npoet, spent his boyhood days, baa\nbeen nnvolled in tho New Brunswick capital by the Imperial Order\nDaughters of Ihe Empire, New\nBrunswick section.\nSEE US\nFor Rock-bottom Price on a\nPONTIAC BIG SIX SEDAN\n* W    \u25a0     <\nBr yew want\nTo buy a Used Car, we have it\u00ab$25\nand up.   Wt- pay cash for used ears\nLeader Garage\ner vjarage grand forks, b. &\nROBERT LAWSON, Proprietor\nDOUBLE-LIGHT NO-GLARE\nGliirc and F. \u00a3 Eliminator\nI*c>< F glit Known Wi\nBy umiift Double-Light No-Glare you receive 100 per cent better light\nfrom your headlights than yon hi I previously. Yon will find increase\nin your spread aa well as in forward. Do net forfeit Double-Light\nNo-Glare does not call for adjastin your headlights to the government\nchar. - Double-Light No-Glare absolutely complies with the law.\nKills glare on approaching car anl absolutely No-Glare on your own\ncar. Does not require to dim you.* lights and does sway with the\nspot light. The Double-Light No-glare Is endorsed by City, Municipal\nand Provincial authorities, also Adlomoblle Clubs. Double-Light No-\nGlare Is guaranteed to five latjsfac i - to attomoblle owner* or money\nrefunded.    It can be used on any make   of   car.     It can be installed\nInstantly.\nTHi; JKtDElt GARAGE\nSale-Den!er i in  This District hi Diub c-U\u00b1.ht\nNi-(i litre\n1 SPECIALIZE IN QUALITY\nP-aM GMcsrlet are our main appeal.\nWe feature foods ef freshness and taste\u2014you will always\nfind'that, worth conSdered, prices here are lew.\nCITY GROCERY\n'Service and Quality\"\nPhone 25\ni     i\nHOLY   TBINITY   CHURCH\nREV. W. 3. 8ILVERWOOD\nRector'\nPhone    177\nHoly Communion, 1st, 3rd, 4th and\n5th Sundays at 8 A.M.\nHoly Communion, 2nd Sunday In\nmonth at 11 A.M.\nOther Sundays, Morning liaycr and\n6erm:n at 11 A.M.\nSuntluy School   10.15\nEvonln-j Prayer and S-*rmun 7.80\n(Except the last Sunday lit each\nmonth. On this Sunday Service- is licit,\nin thc parish of Kettle Valley.)\nCuba meet every Saturday aKiiuoj.\nat 2 PM.\nNote\nThroughout July and August, com\nmenclng July 6th, Morning Services\nwill be held at 10 AM. instead of 11\nAM. There will be no evening services\nduring these months. All members of\nthe church are asked to make a special effort to attend the one Sunday\nservice during the Summer months.\nAll is fair ln love and war, and, It\nseems, ln family quarrels.\nFACTS THAT\nTGU MAT\nMQGl KM\nWhen you hear of such and such\n'just happening\" thus and so, tfeke\nit with a grin of salt!, for the law of\ncause and effect is absolute.\u2014Farm\nand Fireside\nF. W. Bishop, president of Ibe\nUntied Fruit I'nmp'inles of Nova\nScotia, Htmi-il recently tbat fruit\ngrowers In the province expected\na bumper crop ol goad quality fruit\nthis year. He was of ths opinion\nthat tho crop would be about 50\nor 60 per cent, high grade.\nPorch Cushions |   At Kimberley,    it   is   planned to\nSave old   blankets and   bed com- bui,d a skating rink of standard sire\nforters. Cut out the ood sections, fold'tllls ftt\"* A slte ln the-lower part of\nand cover with brocade or other mat- jthe town nas heen   selected for the\nerial, and use for porch cushions.       rink*\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPHONE SO\n\u2022s\nEyes\nIf the eyes water In windy weather,\nrelief may ibe had by bathing them\nin a solution of ten grains of borate\nacid to one ounce of hot dMUled\nwater.\nA Substitute for Crackers\nToasted cubes, or crotons, afford\non excellent variation from the customary crackers served with soup.\nChipped Furniture\nif a small bit ot   wood has  been\nchipped off a   piece of furniture, it\ncan be replaced by using the white\nof an egg.\nLettuce\nKeep lettuce in a cloth or paper\nand then place ln a tight palL Set\nthis pail ln a cool place and the lettuce will keep fresh and crisp for a\nweek.\nA Tonic for Plants\nThe water in which beef has been\nwashed is an   excellent   tonic treatment for   plants and   especially for\nroses and geraniums.\nFULL GOSPEL MISSION\n(Gaw Block)\nF. O. M. Story, Pastor       Phone 46R\nSunday j\nAugust 31st\ni\n10 a.m.\u2014Sunday School and Bible\nClass. A class for every age. I\n11 a.m. Morning Worship.\u2014\"Tlie'\nTemptations tliat come to a spirit-\nfilled Life.\"\n(The pastier will be the speaker.)\nS p.m. Christian Volunteers.\n7:30. p.m. \"A CRY THAT RINGS\nACROSS THE SEA.\"\n(Miss Elliott will be the speaker)\nMidweek Services\nTuesday 8 p.m. Public Service.\n(The pastbr will be the speaker.)\nFriday 8 pjn. Evangelistic Service.\n(Miss Elliott will be the speaker)\nSaturday 7:30 p.m. Street Meeting.\nEverybody Welcome.\nCOME!!\n\"The Bible is God's message through\nThe Holy Spirit through men to men.\nThe Bible Is literature but it Is a\nthousand dimes more than literature I\nIt is life, the living word of the Living God. It will stand forever.\"\nTRY OUR SPECIAL TEA\nat\u2014..\u2014 \u00ab5e per lb.\n\u2022HOES, SHIRTS, OVERALLS\nGOOD VALUES FOR YOUR\nMONEY\nCALL AND SEE US BEFORE\nPUROHASINO\nJOHN   DONALDSON\nGENERAL  MERCHANT\nBURNS'  GARAGE\n.Second Street, Grand Forks, B. C.\nDEALERS IN THE\nSUW ESSEX CHALLENGER\nTHE BEST GAR ON THE MARKET FOR THE MONBT\nRare bargains in Used Cars in good condition can always be\nhad at.niy Garaae.\nUnion^iidTrnperidGas M. H. BURNS, PfOp.\nNew Gas Electric Engine\nThe National Dairy Council of\nCanada In a recent report stated\nthat Saskatchewan stood third la\nthe Dnmlnlon in the matter of estimated gross revenue from dairy\nproducts In 11)21. The flgureB aie\ngiven at $21,000,000 as compared\nwith S20.D7U.000 the previous year.\nTotal prodv-*iion of maplo syrup\nIn Canada for 1930-was 2,185,379\ngallons valued at 53,869,107, snd\nof maple sugar 8,208,276 pounds,\nvalued at $1,381,513. Average nw-\nlid price of maple syrup \u00abras $1.77\ns gallon, and of maplo sugar 17\ncents a pound. The Province of\nQuebec was tho largest prodncsr\nand balanco cam\u00bb from Ontario,\nNova Scotia and New Brunswick.  .\n-Sl^tlp\":\nInclude Tulips, Narcissus, Chionodoxa'\nCrocus, Leucog'uni (Snowflakc), and'\nScilla Siberica. '\nWith its eight-cylinder gasoline\nengine and two electric motors purring and humming in\nsoothing but powerful harmony,\nNo. 47, the Canadian Pacific Bail-\nway's now gas-elcctrlc combined\npassenger and baggage car, embodying the latest developments in\nelccti t>-motlve traction, tmvels\nbetween Hamilton and Ooilerich\nand its sister ear No. id, between\nOttawa' and Waltham. These\ncars have a range of 400 miles\nat an average speed of 30 riffles\nan hour, but attain a maximum\nspeed of <35 miles as hour. They\ncomprise a first-class compartment seating $3 passengers, a\nsmoking compartment for 15 people and a 17-foot compartment\nto'\nBRAND FORKS\nTransfer Go.\nDAVIS * HANSEN,- PROPS.\nCITY    BAQGAQE    AND    GENERAL\nTRANSFER\nGOAL, WOOD AND ICE\nPOR SALE\nPHONE M\nMeet Your Friends\nAt Tha i\nImperial Billiard Parloi\nTHS BIGHT PLACE FOR\nTobaccos\nCigars and Cigarettes\nPipes\nConfectionery\nSoft Drinks\nK. ROTTER & CO.\nPalace Barber Shop\nRAZOR HONINO A SPECIALTY\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nFIRST ST.  NEXT P.  BURNS'\nrOofijiM\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nAgent\nDominion Monumental Works\nAsbestos Products Co. Rooting'\nTHE value of well-\nprinted, neat appear\nIn-,- Stationery as a\nmeans of getting anl\nholding desirable bas\nIness has been amply demonstrated. Try\nThe Son for Good\nPrinting.\nWE PBINT\u2014\nWedding Invitations\nDance Programs\nBusiness Cards\nVlsltin Cards\nShipping Tags\nletterheads\nStatements\nNotebeeds\nBillheads\nPamphlets   '\nPrice Lists\nEnvelopes\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nEtc.\nLatest Styles Types\nSwift Presses\nTHE SUN\nColombia  Ave. aad\nLake Street\nTELEPHONE 1M        IRJ\n)0000(\"\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE PRAMINO\nESTIMATES FURNISHED\nmm        MMimu.K\nFurniture Made lo Order,\nAlso Rrepilrlnn ef All Kinds,    >\nUphol taring Neatly Done\nK. G. MoGDTCHEON\nWINNIPCO) AVENUE\ntmkm\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Titled The Evening Sun from 1902-01-02 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-09-20 to 1929-05-10","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Grand_Forks_Sun_1930_08_29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0388754","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.031111","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-118.439167","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Grand Forks, B.C. : G.A. Evans","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Grand Forks Sun","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"}]}}