{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0407168":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"d0265930-eed3-4996-b74c-fd9c4470f34c","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":"2022-03-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1932-04-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0407168\/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":" f\n31st Year=No. 25\nRAND FORK\n\"Tell me what you Know la true,\nI can) guess a* wdl a* you\/'\nFriday, April 29, 1932\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nExperimental\nPlot Tests\nThis Season\n. The following crop tests have been\narranged for the Boundary districts\nby the British Columbia department\nabriculture under the supervision of\nO. L. Landon, district agriculturist\nat Grand  Forks:\nFertilizer Tests\n....Fertilizer tests have been arranged\nusing triple superphosphate 200 and\n300 pounds per acre; ammonium\nphosphate, 200 and 300 pounds, per\nacre; complete fertilizer mixture,\n300 pounds per acre, and a check plot\nBach pilot will be one-quarter acre\nin. size, and each experimenter will\nhave six plots.\n;ltie following farmers are cooperating in conducting the tests:\nA. H. Pennoyer, Grand Forks, test\nwith onions; P. Tjebbes, Grand\nForkB. tests Wsth potatoes; Herb\nHeaven, Grand ForkB, tests with potatoes; R. A. Jackson, Midway, tests\nwith potatoes; L, A. Keir. Greenwood\ntests with potatoes.\nGypsum Tests        '\nTests will be undertaken w.th gypsum on alfalfa plots at the rate of\n500 pounds afnd 750 pounds per acre.\nThe following farmers are cooperating these tests:\nAlfalfa plotjOscar Pennoyer, Grand\nForks; alfalfa plot, E. C. Woodward.\nGrand iForks; alfalfa plot. C. A. S.\nAawood,  Grand  Forks.\nSubterranean Clover Tests\nA test of a variety known as Subterranean  clover  is  being  made  by\n.1. T. R. Lawrence of Grand Forks.\nWild White Clover Tests\nTeBts of a variety known as wil|d\nwhite clover are being made through\nthe cooperation ef the following\nfarmers:\nW. Preit-man, Midway; G..F. Harpur. Rock Creek.\nPasPalum Grass Tests\nA test of Paspalum grass or Golden Crown grass from Australia is\nbeing made by R. A. Ball of Cascade.\nGarden Corn Tests\nTests of garden corn varieties\naire being made by A. C. Lawson and\nC. C. 'Heaven of Grand Forks. The\nvarieties tested are Golden Bantaim,\nGolden Sunshine, uuiil If possible\n60-day Golden.\nTobacco Tests     \"\nTobacco tests are being undertaken with White Burley tobacco by\nthe following farmers:\nB. J. Ralph, Grand Forks; C. A.\nCrawford. Grand Forks; John Benedetto, Grand Forks.\nhighway between the flrst summit\nand Sheep creek, says yesterday's\nRossland Miner.\nfllie snow is over three feet in\nplaces and extends over the road for\na distance of about four miles.\nResidents of the Sheep creek area\ncould use e'thar sleighs or wheeled\nvehicles because of the unusual conditions which developed.\nORE  SHIPMENTS  TO\nSMELTER   AT  TADANAC\nFollowing is a statement of ore\nreceved at the Trail smeltsr for the\nperiod April 15 to 21. 1H32, Inclusive:\nBell, Beaverdell, 50 tons; Knob\nHill, Republic 4 tons; O'Br.'en, Cobalt, 40 tons; Yankee Girl, Ymlr\n2C5 tons; Company mines, 8779 tons;\ntotal, 9178 tons\nWeeklyMai-ket\nLetter\nVICTORIA, April 29\u2014During the\npast week two carloads of seed peas\narrived at Vancouver and Mission\nfrom Ontario. ATey are being distributed to growers ln the 1 ower\nmainland 'by a large cannery company. TAhere is a good market in\nBritish Columbia for seed peas of\ncanning varieties.\nLarge shipments of California or-\nangOg cont.nue to arrive In Van\ncouver, a shipment of 3000 cases\ncoming in last week.\nApples of the early winter i.uss\nare cleaned up on the coast market,\nleaving only late winter varieties in\nstock.\nNew potatoes from Florida are\nselling in Victoria at $6 per 50-lb.\ncrate. California strawberries In 12-\nhallock crates soil at $4.55. Imperial\nValley lettuce is quoted at from\n$5.25  to  $5.75     aerate.\nAhe total number of straight cars\nof apples shipped from Brlt.sh Columbia to prairie points from April 1\nto Deoember 31, 1931, was 1827. In\naddition, 428 cars of mixenl fruit,\nchiefly apples, were, sent to that market. Ahe total number of boxed apples shipped was 853 and of bulk ap\npies 074.\nBritish Columbia leaf lettuce has\njust come on the coast market, and\nIb selling at $1.25 per crate of -doz.\nBritish Columbia field rhubarb has\nalso arrived and is selling at 6c per\npound or 2c less than the foroeiil\nstuff.\n'Florida grapefruit Jumped on the\nVancouver market last week from $1\nper case to $7.\nWinnipeg receipts last week included six cars of British Columbia\napples as against 1 car of barrel ap\npies from Ontario.\nGrand Forks .\nCity Council\nProceedings\nThe regular meeting of the Grand\nForks city council was held in the\ncouncil chamber on Tuesday evening. IHie mayor and all tbe alderman\nwere present.\nThe emergency power plant, to\nfurnish the city with l.ght and power from the time the power Is shut\noff by the Oest Kootenay company\nuntil the new city hydro-electric\nplant is comploted, was the principal matter discus ed, and this ytios-\nt on tock up neorry all the time of\nthe cession. It was anticipated that\nthe emergency plant would bo able\nto gener.te enough io.vor to supply\nthe city with the required power aihd\nlight, with the possible exception of\nthe Ki rr.'s mill in the Ruckle addition.\nThe oth.ar easiness transacted al\nthe ineet ng' was of a routine nature.\nCanadian Farmer\nHints Hell to Governor\nHudson's Bay Company\nLONDON, Apr.l 28.\u2014Presiding\nover today's annual meeting of the\nHudson's Bay company, Governor Sir\nAshley Cooper read a letter to the\ncompany from a Canadian farmer\nwhich the governor described as.\nrepresent.lig, intemaat^'^ttaid tragically, though not withoua humor, the\nposition of many a Canadian farmer\ntoday,\nThe letter said:\n\"1 got your letter about what I\nown. Now be psjchant. I a,n't forgot\nyou Please wait. When 1 have the\nmoney I will pay you. If tills was the\njudgment day and you was no more\nprepared to meet your Maker than I\nam to meet your account, you sure\nwould have to go to hell. Trusting\nyou will do this.\"\nThe meeting adopted the annual\nreport nnd accounts, and the governor expressed confidence that work\nof restoration of the company's fortunes had been well begun.\n$2000 Reward\nFor Conviction\nOf Dynamiters\nVICTORIA, April 89.\u2014Br.llsh Columbia today deduced war on dynar\nmiters who have creating a re.gn of\nterror in the southern Interior section of the province,\nAttorney General II. It. Pooley announced that the prov nee is offering\na reward of $\u00a3000 f.r Information\nleading to the convict on of Individuals, bSvHovad to be members of tlie\nRons of Freed Tin, rebellious faction\nof the Doukhobor common ly, who\nhave perpetrated a long teries of\nschcol burnings and dynaimitlngs anil\na number or attempts to wreck C.P.\nR   tr&'ns.\nAt the'samo t'me it was announced that sixteen i pocial police in addition to the ptov.'noial police now\npested ahroughout the Doukhobor\narea,s have been sworn in to 'lean\nup the situation.\nOn the grounds that the Doukhobors were sent to tills prov lice by\nthe Dominion government as settlers,\nthe Dominion government bus been,\nasked by Pre Her Tolm.e to assist\nthe province financiallp in restoring\norder in the Doukhobor areas.\n! sal Brotherhood, at his place at\ni Krestova, Jim Giichin and sMeck\nI Ponkoff, Sons of Freedom Douklio-\nbora, botli of Krestova, were arrested by the provisiciul police Thursday\nand plated in the provincial j.iji here.\nThe information on which Stipendiary Mag.strate lohn Cartmel issued warrants for the men's arrest\nwas sworn to by Mr. sherbinin.\nForcible eviction majde by the com-\nmun'ty against thc Sons of Freedom\noccupying community property at\nBrilliant \u20148t week was the. occasion\nof the threats made by the iwo men\nlast Friday, therthreats being understood to relate to Mr, Sherbluln's\nhouse at the community's Good creek\nBSaWnaiU.\nThfs men will app ar >n provincial\npolice court to answer the charges\nagainst   them.\nBattls Folloys Eviction Order\nNELSON, A;ril 1 .'.\u2014A pitched battle between member.! of the Community cf Universal l.'votherheod\nand mombars of the Sono of Freedom\nor fanatical faction of the Doukhobors w, . stag3d at Brilliant yester-\ndapt. Convnunitp official?) attempted\nto evict Sons of Freedom families\nfrom   conimunitp   houses.\nSome months ago Peter Veregin,\nk ng cf the Doukhobors, and com-\nmunitp officials set aside a settlement at Krestova. in the Nelson\narea, for the rebellious facton and\nordered  them  to  remove  there.      f\nThe Sons of Freedom refused and\nattempts t. remove several families\nwere fought so vigorously that the\nmovement  was  abandoned.\nTlhe community has noy decided to\naga.h trp to oust the rebels.\nIn pesterdap's \"battle\" clubs were\nwielded and at least one casualty was\nslhciently serious to result in a hospital case, Bill Wainoff, an \"independent\" frem\u2014Graftd Forks being laid\nout with a club.\nThe crew of a freight train saw a\nman lying on the grounid by the side\nof the track with throngs of Doukhobors surrounding him.\nB.C. Apples Shipped   |\nTo New York City\nVBRNON.\u2014Strange to say, De\nlicioiis and Mcintosh apples are being moved both out ol thoOkanagan\nvalley and from eastern storages to\nthe New York market. The difference In the rate of exchange is Just\nabut sufficient to pay the duty and\nalthough tlie Un.ted Statas apple\ngrowers had a tremendous crop\nwhich was sold at low prices, Canadian apples are getting a play.\nOnion prices, which have been\nspectacular, are st.H high, but the\nrange of fluctuations is less marked.\nA car was recently moved to Minneapolis at a price which pleased the\nsales agency.\nWere are now about sufficient\nan ons in Canada to supply the Canadian market, and the movement is\nslow and probably will be still si-vwer j\nas the last cars go out. A frost\nin Texas helped Canadians to sell\ndomestic stocks.\nMarket gardeners are bus\" ou all\ntlie bonch lands, and considering the\nbackwaiidness of the spring, there is\na faid acreuge, with mo;\\> going in\nevery day.\nThere Is feverish activity among\nthe growers of vegetable.; and although the price offered for tomatoes by the canners Is little more\nthan half what was paid three years\nago, the acreage will be large, judging by the activity now evident on j\nthe lands.\n o\t\nDoukhobors Are\nHeld at Nelson on\nAlleged Threat\nNELSON.\u2014For allegedly threatening to 'burn out\" John Sherbinin, a\nmember of the supreme council of\nthe Christian Community of Univer-\nFive-foot Section of\nIrrigation  Pipe at\nRobson Bombed\nNELSON.\u2014Reports current .over\nthe week-nnil that the Hobson Irrigation district's flume had been dynamited in the vicinity of the dam,\nwere confirmed from Hobson Sunday\nnight. |\nThe outrage Is assure\"! to have occurred some time during Friday\nnight, the drying up a now noutthn-\nbor settlement's Hume from the s-ame\ndam . Saturday, leading to an lnves-\ntlgatlori, which disclosed what had\nhappened;.\nFrom the joint dam an upper pipe-\nPile conveys irrlgat On water to the\nnew doukhobor settlement, which is\nabove Robson, while a lower pipeline foeids the Robson ranches with\nirrigation water. A valve in the Rob-\nson flume limits the i,ater passing\nthrough  ,t.\nThe dynamiter or dynamiters blew |\nup a live-foot section of the Robson\nwood-stave pipe, which is a foot In\ndiameter, also destroying the valve\nso that the water flowed freely into\nthe hole caused by the explosion, filling it and as freely flowed Into tiie\nunobstructed Robson pipe, thus lowering the water in the reservoir to\nbelow tbe intake of the upper pipe.\nSteps to repair the Robson pipe-\nl.no was taken 'Monday.\nAll that was left intact of the flve-\nfoct section deBtroyqd was the wire\nbinding around the pipe. i\nA piece of burned fuse found at\nthe site of tho outrage ident.fieii the\ndestruction as accomplished with dynamite or blasting powder.\nThis makes five in areas contiguous to Doukhobor settlements in\nseven days, four of them involving\nbombs, tha fifth belni a tampering\nwith the Canadian Pacific track at\nFisherman.\n o \u25a0\u2014\nWashing Gloves\nWhen laundering gloves, wash\nlitem in warm soap water and rinse\nIn tepid soapsuds, adding to the last\nrinsing water one tablespoon of glycerine. This method will make the\ngloves look like new.\nAttempt to\nWreck Kettle\nValley Train\nNELSON; Apr.! 29.\u2014By high explosive destruction of the >e,t switch\non the C.P.R. at Thrums, an attempt\nwas made Wednesday night to wreck\nthe  Incoming  Kettle  Valley train.\nFai\u00bbengc|rs heard the explosion\nJust after the train had passed the\nswitch, which \u00ab at a point where\nwi tbutind and eastbound trains nor\nmolly   meet\nWh liter the attempt ras to wreck\ntl i ir miiiK train or to cause a col-\nf.sion between east and westbound\ntrains Is n i dear.\nFor some time since the Kettle Vul-\nle) train.-, hove been operating by\nvay of Spence's Bridge Instead of via\n' 0 [U I: illi I B (rains have been\nmeetln ; at f'astlegur or a.i Labarth,\nwesi of tlim  point.\nExamination of tlie switch showed\nthe force of the explosion to have\nbeen enormous. Heavy t rulers upon\nwhich the switch rested wore rent In\n,i '\u2022 ;tnd tho heavy iron switch was\nsnapped I ke a twlp.\n<!.!U!s until rities are taking active me mures tc put a stop to the\noutrages. Twice, rails have been disrupted at Fisherman Once a dyna-\nmitebomb was found under the Slocan river bridge. Flood!.ghts are be-\nIng in ailled t-j assist in the guard-\ntiy of bridges in this tenitory.\nWatchmen have been placed on\nguard ut bridges and other danger\npoints. Lines ure being patrolled by\nguards On speeders running ahead of\ntrains.\nmen be realized.\n\"The lar.ff changes in'Great Britain have unsettled, temporarily, the\nmetal situat'on. particularly as to\nlead and zinc.\" Mr. Warren stated.\n\"Quite larg; stocks of these metals\nwere exported to Eirglaud by foreigners In anticipation of the application\nof a tari f. Tbis will have to be absorbed before the full benefit of the\ntariff will ]ie e-lt by empire pro\nducers.\n\"A   very   slight   increase     in     the\nprice  per   pound  affects  the     profits\nImagination\nStaggered by\nGreat Bear\nLake Finds\nAmazing    possibilities\nof mineral\ni.s.i.s     sue |,iuiis.-i        . . \u2014        \u2014     \"\u2022\u25a0sasaa\u00bb\u00ab\nvary   materially,    it \u201eoes   not  seem :,     elopmeut at Great B~r lake ware\nposs;Me  that there can  be any fur-;      ,ue-be\u2122 of the Oil and Osag aao-\ntlii5r decline In metal prices.\" J' a tion of Alberta at te annual meet-\nThe five retiring directors were re-' '\"* \"'  the  association   by Dr. A.  _\n< ameron. MAC. D.S.C.,\nelected  and   business at Ute  meeting\n>vas  largely   routine.\nThe production figures for the first\nquarter, compared ,-vith the first\nquarter t' 1981, follows: Lead. tons.\n111,870. 98,778; bin, tons, 17.1:12. 27.-\n919: copper, tons, 217.1.\",\"; gold, ozs.,\n7,486;  silver, ozs., 1,.,0I,488. 1.980,575.\nJames J, Warren\nSays Change in\nConditions Overdue\nM-O.V.IREAI..\u2014\"Whde metal prices\nh?.ve not rppreclated and general\nconditions are uot much better, tbe\ndirectors feol that a change ,s overdue and may sot in at any time,\"\nPresident .lames .!. Warren stated at\ntlis annual meeting of the Consolidated Smelters L.mlted, here.\nProduction figures for the first\nquarter o 1932 were reviewed, showing lead and zinc, substantially below the corresponding per.oft of 1861.\ncopper higher, silver lower and gold\nslightly  lower.\n..linsold bad increased somewhat\nduring Iho past quarter, but unsold\nzinc, decreascid. Mr. Warren reported.\nFertilizer pordticlion was well maintained,   and   sales  were   satisfactory.\nThe exploration and development\nof the Great Boar lake properties\nhave begun. In addition to the locations referred to n Hi\" annual report, approximately Vino acres of\ncoal bind have been staked, which\nshould prove ver..' valuable if the expected  results   rom  mineral develop-\nImmortalizing Pioneer Priest\nOne of the most colorful figures -\nof the development of the\nCanadian West is immortalized\ntoday, at the scene of his labors,\nSt. Albert, on the Sturgeon River,\njust outside Kdmonton, by the\npreservation in the Mission Park\nof the Oblate Fathers of the\noriginal \"cathedral\" and mission\nwhich he founded In 1860, under\norders from His\nLordship\nBishop Tache,\nof St. Boniface,\nand tn which\nhe carried on\nhis work until\nhis death in\n1916. ThiB celebrity is no\nless renowned\na personage\nthan Bev.\nFather Albert,\nLacombe,\nnamed\n<-\u00ab.. a,\nSNOWPLOW   AEMOVING\nSNOW   ON   SHEEP  CREEK\nSECTION OF HIGHWAY\nRoad Foreman Edgar Jamieson\nntarted work this morning w.th thc\nmonster snowplow which was\nbrought from Rock Creek to Koss-\nilanri fitted i with snow-removing\ntrack- for the purpose of removing\n\u00ab_ow    sIRgn   t-\u00bb   _o\u00bbsUa\u20141-Oa-cade\nStockings   will    not    be    snagged\nwhich results in runners, if the offlce\ngirl will place adhesive tape around\nthe    corners   of the desk-chair and j\nthe  de3k.\n: -0\t\nDust a little flour or cornstarch on ,\nthe cake before icing lt, and the ic- j\nlng w.ll not run oft\". If one finds that |\nthe boiled frosting is too thin, place ,\nit on the flre again and heat constantly until thiokened.\n.,   after   whom   Lacombe,   Alta.   is\n , and who played such an Important\npart in the pacifying of the warring Indian\nTribes of the WeBt and the building of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway. His untiring efforts\nin the latter connection won him Bpecial\nrecognition from Sir William Van Home, its\npresident, who not only gave him a permanent\npass on the line.'bufc made him its head for\none day. From tho day of his arrival in\nthe West in 1849, from Quebec, where be \u2022\nwa8 born in 1827, this brave and energetic Oblate had Btaunch friends among\nthe Indians and continued to establish himself, both among them and the\nwhite population, as one of the best-known and jnost-lored characters of the\nmost Btirring xiayB of the Prairies. Apart from his religious activities, Father\nr Lacombe is known as one of the real Westerners of Canada. The country was\nin a very undeveloped state when he first established himself in it and Mission\nPark, today, standB for a great deal more than just a mission station,\nor the scene of a devoted missionary's labours. It is a milestone ln the progress of the Canadian West and, hence,\nin the progress of the Dominion. The pictures show:\n(1) tho approach to Mission Park. (2) the interior of\nthe old ''cathedral.\" (8) its exterior, with the brick\nbuilding which now encases the old log church, and,\nQnist, M-atato. ot Rev. Father Lacomb-\nTwo Provinces\nSeek Commoe Policy\nAgainst Extremists\n, VANCOUVER. Apr.l 29.\u2014A com-\nm.n policy and concerted action\nagainst tbe extremisms tumong the\nDoukhobor populations of Saskatchewan and Britsli! Columbia may result after Premier .1. T. M. Anderson\n:f Saskatchewan confers with Premier Tolmie  next week.\nPremier Anflerson mtimated today\nthat some such plan was in bis mind.\nsle will go to Victoria n-ixt Tuesdey.\nPremier Anderson indicated that\nhe viewed with, gravity the depredation in both prov.nces, geno\"jll,v\ncredited to extremist members of the\nDoukhobor colonies. While he vouVl\nnot say wlipt line of action he favored be made it clear that he thinks\naction should be firm and dellnlle\nand that the two provinces should cooperate.\n'Our attitude .s this.\" Premier Anderson said. ' Our province includes\nabout 50 per cent foreign born residents; among them\u2014yes, and among\nsome of the Doukhobors -there ure\nvne young  Caniyl.'an  citizens.\n\"But we are not going to toleraae\nany extremist leader who tries to\ntrample the . principles of Canadian\ncitizenship.\"\nMineral Survey\nDistricts Nos. 3\nAnd 4 Merged\nVICTORIA.\u2014The ministor 0 mines\nannounces that it has been decided\nthat Nos. ,'! and -1 mineral survep id.s-\ntricts shall be merged for purposes\nof administration. This Involves the\nreirement of H. G. Nichols, res.dent\ninning engineer, Kamloops, since\nll)2ij, which took place on the flrst of\nthe moath..\nP, 13, Frcelt'.hd. occupant of the\noffice as to No. 4 mineral survey district since 1927, whoso headquarters\nare al Grand Forks, is to take over\nahe greater part of No. :i m.neral\nsurvey district and will be moved ti\nronticton.\nSalada Company\nReduces Tea Prices\nAn announcement of a price reduction has just been niado by Salada Tea Lonipany of Canada, Limited,\namounting to Hie a pound. Mr. A, M.\nWilson, manager of the company,\nwhp has been ,n Winnipeg for the\npast few days conferring with Mr. R.\nM. Gibson of Messrs. Gibson. I'ater-\nson, Limited, the Companj's western\nrepresentatives, hus this comment to\nmake on the new prices announced\nby  his coinpuny:\n\"Teas are cheaper In tho primary\nmarkets in London, Colombo, and\nCalcutta, although best quality teus\nhalve not decl.ned In price to nearly\nthe same extent us the lower grades.\n(Nevertheless',, the Saluda Company,\nwhile rigidly maintaining the duality of its product, bus reduced prices\ntwice within the last two years, so\ntltat today the consumer is puying\n% Icbs for this well-known product\nthan he d,d In 10.10.. Thc price reduction hurl been contemplated for several weeks, but was postponed until\nafter thc announcement of the Dominion budget proposals in the house\nof commons. Tea merchants expect\ned a further tax on tea, but, as there\nwas no addit.bnul Impost announced,\nthey were able to make a downward\nrevision of 10C on tho pound, or iic\non the half pouud.\"\nprofessor et\nmining engineer.ng at the Unlvwrt-\n\u00bb    f Albrta.\nRadium, gold, silver, base mettle\n\u00bb\"d even oil are all to be found -\nIhe vicinity of Great Bear lake, T)r\nCameron told his audience.\nfilhe speaker revealed Ihat preliminary exploration had revealed 8000\ntens f pltchblendo at Oreat Boar\nlake containing probably 200 grams\nof radium.\n\"The entire output of radium Is\nthe world, up to the present, hag only\nbeen GOO grams, s0 that the Oreat\nHear lake dep ists may considerably\nIncrease the world's supply of this\nvaluable metal,'' Dr. Cameron saW.\nAs the process of producing rad-\nhuge quail ities of chemicals derived\nfrom salt. Dr. Cameron forecast that\nthe great salt deposits at Fort Mc-\nMurray might be put to a very useful purpose by virtue of the estalv\nI'shment of u radium plant at that\ncommunity.\nf Silver values recovered at Oreat\nBear lake were staggering to the\nImagination, Dr. Cameron deefcred.\nThe famous silver depos.ta which\ncreated the activity at Cobalt, Ontario, only covere\/1 four square miles\nThe silver deposits at Groat Bear\nlake covers 70 square, m.les\u2014enough\nto make many Cobalts.\nGold values had been revealed st\nGreat Hear Lake assaying |2'a!.50 to\nthe ton, Dr, Cameron said. This, he\nsaid, was a remarkable showing\nwhen it was taken into consideration\n'hat. the silver ore from the famous\nt'Hollinger mine only assayed 810 to\nthe ton.\nCopper was also to be found ul\nGGreat Bear lake in large quunll-\nt-es, Dr. Cameron said, but in view\nof the low price obtainable for this\nbsae metal he did not believe cop-\n,per mining woul^ be profitable at\nless thun a price of 18 t 20 cents a\npound at Great Bear lake.\n'\"lfiiere Is little doubt that ln tbe\nnear future one of Canada's greatest\nmetallic mineral fleldrs will come\nInto active productiom. and this in\nspite or the very great handicaps f\npractically no transportation to the\nmarkets for these minerals,\" Dr.\nCameron  declared.\nAsserting that o.l would play a\nlarge part In this mineral development, Dr. Dr. Camer n declared that\nthere were excellent chances of obtaining In certa.n sections near\nGreat Bear lake.\n\"Taken as a whole the large areas\nlying east of the MacKeozio rlvajr\nvalley are so situated w.th respect tu\nthe crustural disturbances further\nwest that there should be suitable\noil structures at a number of places,\"\nhe said. \"Drilling depths sh uld not\nbe great, perhaps a maximum of\n8000 feet Mining development at\nGreat Bear lake will undoubtedly pro\nduco a renewed interest in the petroleum posesibilltles and the two\nBhould g together in the economic\nlevelopment of those hitherto undeveloped portions    f Canada.\"\nDr. Cameron said that further\ndrilling ,n tho Fort Norman area, already tested by Imperial Oil Limited, would pr bably result ,n the\nlocating of the oil pools. The discovery awell, lie said, started as a\nreal gusher cf high grade paraffin\nbase oil, but cav.ng at the bottom\nshut off the supply.\nThe discovery well was deepened\nto 861 feet and a 60 or 70 barrel\nwell developed, A second well yielded similar results. Three or four\nother WSllj drilled m the vicinity\nwere dry or yielded only suit water.\nSAFEBLOWERS   ROB\nPRINCETON   STORE.\nl'IKINOKTON.\u2014Thu safe of the\nPrinceton Drug t\u201e Hook store was\nblown open dur.ui; the week-end, and\n$200 in gold notes and silver and a\nquantity o narcotics were stolen.\nTho  work  is  lielieved   to   be  tbat  \"f\nBKpertS utry   was   ga nod   through\nthe back do. r, this being the thld\ntime in recent months the promises\nhave Imen entered.\nC.P.R Water Tank\nDestroyed by Bombers\nNBLSON.\u2014The $r,n00 water tank\nf the Canadl\u2014a Pacific Railway company al Perry's Siding on the Slocan\nbrunch was destroyed by unknown\nbombers lute Friday night. Word of\nthe   outrage   w;is   received   hero   b>\nstuff Snrg mil A. 11. Stephenson of\nthe provincial police. This is the\ntotirib bombing episode in this die-\ntrict with n the past few weens and\nIs considered the work of the Doukhobor rebell ous  faction.\nBaking Soda\nTry using a p nch of baking soda\non  the  toothbrush   Instead  of  ordinary   toothpaste. It    will    aid in    preventing decay of the teeth.\n o\t\nThe next world has very little to do\nwith the reol religious life. That is to\nbe lived hin.\n The grand ferfe\u00ab fr-\"\nm? Qkani. .Storks Sun\nG. A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER\nSubscription   Rates,   Payable   in   Adv\u00bbne\u00ab\n\u2022as Tear, la Canada and Great Britain _..\n''it* tear, in the United States _ \t\nAddress ail communications to\nThe Grand Forks Sun,\nPHONE  101 Grand  Forks,  B,\nOffice:    Columbia  Avenue   and   Lake  Street\n_ 1.50\nc.\nP'RIDAY. APRIL 29  11,82\nTho day before tiie institution closed, George Grakos\ndrew $CO0u from his account U) a Chicago tank. And he\nho was fond of bragging about his cleverness. So he explained to ne.ghbcrs he Bad put the $U0U0 in bills right\nin lis trouser pocket, where it would stay. Then two men\ntarrying r^volv rs came .nto his room. \"Give us those\n$6n0\" bills you've got in your pocket.\" ti.ey said. Grakos\nobeyed.\nAt an auotisn of antiques iu London a United States\ngold dollar pieco bearing the date of lh',2 was sold for\nnoven sh'llings, which is about $1.7,\", at par 'Oil, no!\"\nraid the auctioneer when somobiyly bid live shillings for\nthe coin. \"The sovereign is up seven shillings. Surely\nthe alinlghiy dollar is worth more than lhan.\"\nWe should not like t;. be a barrister if we bad to prosecute honorable people of the Mass.o class,\nClnidagh, ihe picturesque fishing village ,n Gulwuy,\nmay not he abandoned after ail. For generations the interesting people, w.th their traditions of Spain uud Gael,\nhavo Iiviol there, and the present generation likes the\nplace. Kocently the Free State government offered to build\na new village lor them, and tlie Ciaddagh.tcs at first were\nenthusiastic, but after estimating the extra taxes and\nrentj, tiioy refuse^ to desert their old thatched cottages\nfor comfortable homes  w.th slate roofs.\nA bull lighter at eighty-three. Juan Saucedq wus tiie\nhero of Iniriingu. Saucedo, a picador, \"stole the show\"\nIrom the papular mataidor, David\u2014iceaga, who was severely trampled. 'Itlie aged picador, mounted on a horse, prodded and pushed the bull with a long, heavy pole, and wore\nb.m down.\n\"Ye Olde Gr.filn hotel, at March, Cambridgeshire.\nl'jigiaui'i. one ol the best known hotels in the eastern\ncomities, dating back to 1100, has been sold. It was a\nnoted bouse in old coaching days, and the coaches at\nt.mes drove through] the space where the front doors are\niww into the courtyard at the back. An offer of $5000 has\nbeen made and refused tor the remarkable paneling iu\nthe comniorc.iil room, luie walls of the hall are of Indian\ncsss .ul teak, and all the celling are supported biy the\norigi.ml massive oak licams, wh.lo the ancient card room\nic slil! .ii existence. The bath is of real Italian marble,\nhewn out ol the solid stone, and was originally used by\ntlie Hal.tin monks, and subsequently brought to England.\nThe lictel lias been the subject of articles by Charles\nDickens, G. K. Chesterton, Hilaire Ilelloc, and others,\nand is v.sited by many distinguished people duriiig the\nseason. ..*_._!\nGetting rich consists in merely laying aside a comfortable residue every year from twentieth birthday until\nyour fiftieth.\ncounted    fairy stories.    Germans have made cabbage in\npickled form the most  famous dish    in    their    cuisine. '\nAmericans have linked cabbage with corned beef as fare |\nmost suited to the man of action. Even Russians and Poles j\nhave  contrived to agree over cabbage;  it hibernates efficiently and goes equally well wsth black bread or game\nand wine, whichever the times offer.\nEscaping from her cage in Earl shiltou. England,\nZenita. a seven-year-oltd lioness, quietly followed a crowd\nof well-fed girls just returning from dinner to a hosiery\nfactory. The girls scattered, but Zenita raided a vegetable garden and was captured later in the factory yard.\nThe clergy of the Catholic church in French Canada\nvhae keeping, careful registers of baptisms, marriages\nund burials since colonization began three centuries ago.\n,\\'o other countrp in the world can oger such a continuous series of birth records, according to a report of the\nstudy of Canada's vital statistics.\nOf the men who set out from Boston, Gloucester nad\nPortland to catch swordfish, perhaps six during thc entire season are fortunate enough to land billflsbes. The\nb.lliisli is ruled moro belligerent than the swordfish and\ncan be landed only at great risk, yet swordflshermen thins,\nit all kinds of good Inch to catch one. The billflsb is one\nof the foremost of the round-sworded spearflshes. Ordinarily li ls an Inhabitant of southern waters, but occasionally ,t accompanies a school of swordfish as far north\nns Georges bank. It varies from (I to 20 feet iu length\nand from lull tu 1000 pounds iu weight. In New England\nIt -s culled thc \"skillagelee.\" When harpooned, it will\nmake  spectuculur charges at  Its  attackers.\nTail\nwe\n31 Kill', are no more useful members ln a common-\neulth than merchants. They knit mankind together\nin a nun uui Intercourse of good offices, distribute the\ngilts of nature, find work for the poor, add wealth to the\nrich, and magnificence to the great.\u2014Joseph Addison in\nHit) Spectator.\nffectlfhi 5avice\nOF TIIE\ntaatttut ffltUtai Ananriattmt\nShow Them A Mountain And They'll Do The Rest\nGRANT  FLEMING.   M.D.\nASSOCIATE SECRETARY\nMIDDLE  AGE\nHITCHING up friend husband to u\na mule, Mrs. T. Humphries carried on the work of the\nfarm so successfully tha paid oil the taxes she owed.\nA field agent of the department of agriculture is authority for the assertion that \"this is not fiction but happened at Juniper. Georgia, in 1931.\"\nThere are certain bodily changes\nwhich come with age. Just as it is\ntrue that thee child is not a little\nman, so it is equally true that, at\nmiddle age, the body is not the same\nas it was during tlie period of youth.\nIt comes as an unpleasant surprise\nto many persons when they realize\nthat the years are passing and that\nthat they are growing olid. That truth\nIs driven home to them, however,\nwhen they flrst appreciate that their\nbody Is no longer able to do with\nease those things which lt used to do\nreadily and w.thout effort.\nThe Infant has to adjust himself to\na new environment; the child re-\n\u25a0|ulruH adjustment to school, nnd the\nin',4dle-aged, ,f they are to keep well,\nmust adjust their lives to their\nchanged bodies. IJiere ls no definite\nb.rtllday which ushers us Into middle age. It ls not the number of years\nwe have lived, but rather the actual\ncondition of our bodies which Is the\nindex to our real age. It has been\ntruly said that a man is as old as Ills\nplow   for want 0f'arteries,  and  when  heart and\nOCCASIONS WHEN TIME IS HANDY\nTime sS un excuse for such things as clocks and\nwatches. It also serves as a useful means of distinguishing winter from summer when the weather falls down\non the job, and one day from another when outstanding\nevents are absent, such as the birth of a child or having\none's hair washed or waffles for breakfast.\nTime .s either correct or incorrect Correct time is\nfound in railway stations. It is very important to railways, says the Baltimore Evening Sun, for otherwise the\nrailway people would not be able to tell passengers how\nlate the trains are. Incorrect time, is the sort indicated\nby the clock on the mantel that ought to be given a thoroughly overhauled, but it Is so much trouble to lug it to\nthe repair shop.\nTime is also very valuable in determining when thjngs\nhappen und therby indicating the uature of the occur-\nance. Thus, for example, if a friend is smashed up iu a\nmotor car accident at 2 o'clock in the afternoon the causo\nmay be laid to one of those irresponsible truck drivere\nBut :f it happens \"early today,\" then the first question Is,\nwhat sort of a party he has been to. And if it were not for\ntime it would be impossible for the office manager to\nwarn Miss Smith that she has been a little careless recently about when she comes into the office, and to remember that  there are plenty of capable young women\n  arter\nies have undergone the changes associated w,th middle age, then that person is mtddle-uged, no matter\nwhat hiB next birthday may be num\nerically speaking.\nTo meet these bodily changes and\nto contineul a useful, happy life, lt is\nnecessary that life, in all its aspects,\nbe moderated. Moderation n all\ntilings should be the guiding principle.    The    middle-aged   require  less\nfood and they should eat less. Their\nexercise should be regular and moderate. There should not be any sudden physical strains, such as a dash\nfor a tram-car. Exercise should always stop short of fatigue. The siul-\nrlen strain and the continued over-\nHlruiu lead to disaster. The older\nbody Is not able to meet the sudden\nor excessive demand, and the penally paid when this Is forgotten Is\noften a  severe one.\nThroughout life, rest Is the healing rehabilitating power of nuture. A\n(night's rest is required at nil agio.\nand as we become older, rest becomes even more essentia! to health.\nThe   mrldle-iiged   should   make   sure\nI of long hours of sleep each nlght^sn\nthat the morning will find them refreshed.\nThc mental life must also be moTi\nerated, Life should not ho continued\nat high pressure, but taken in a moderate, easy way. It is sullicient tu do\nevery day what time permits; the\ntask   can    be done deliberately, and\nI tomorrow's   work  and  worries  allows\nI eid to takes care of themselves.\nIf each Individual] would live within his limitations und not demand of\nhls body services which it cannot\ngive readily because of its altered\ncondition,, life would be happier and\nmore useful.\nQuestions     concerning   health,   ad-J\ndressed to the Canadian Medical As\nsoclation, 184 College Streot, Toronto,\nwill be answerel personally by letter.\nI&t    -'\/:\n>s\u00a3-aM_.\nEdward Feuz (left) holds that \"the climbing urge\" ls a heritage of all\nwhite races, be the objective high furniture for an Infant; a tree-top\nfor a jsilioolboy, W the ninnacle of success or the summit of \u2022 mountain\nfor an adult, lie ought to know, for he makes his living as a mountain\nguide in tiie heart of the famous Canadian Rocky Mountains, with\nheadquarters at (fie Canadian Pacific Railway's hotels at Banff and\nLake Louise, and has more \"first ascents\" to his credit than any other\nrr.nn in the country, His brother Ernst (right) is also an experienced\nI'tiide and mo mlaineer. Both are natives of Interlaken, Switzerland, and\nhave winter-homes in the little Swiss guide village of Edelweiss, in tiie\nColumbia Valley. They are shown scanning the peaks adjoining the\nBanff (Springs Hotel.\n'IHow long has your husband been\nout of work?\" Mrs. Wiggins.\n\"Well, mum, I bean't sure of the\nexact yen- we was married.\"\nLieut Apollo Soucek, the airman who won an altitude\nreceor. said in Los Angeles the other day; \"The cold, i!0,-\n000 feet up, ia so extraodsliary that when you tell people\naqbut you feel as if you were a liar  Yes, you feel like the\nfarmhand. 'The coldest day I ever seen.' the farmhand ,onlj;.to\u00b0 glad to \u00abnd employment.\nsaid, 'was back home wunst in p.g killin' time in the Vermont mountings. Why, it was so dum cold that day that\nwe had a kettle of b'ilin' water a-sett.n' on the stove, and\nvhen we took it out in the yard it friz so dum quick that\nthe was hot.'\"\nCities, after all, are not alien growths, only little bits\nof the country that have increased much faster than tlie\nrest\nJ. P. .Morgan, like his famous lather, learned that time\nis money and refused to waste much of it on interviews.\nOn one occasion, however, after an important trip to Europe, he consented to g.ve a reporter a private interview\nIn his cabin before the ship docked. The reporter was on\nhand, but unfortunately so were two or three dozen more\nand the financier fled to his cab.n and locked the door\nbehind him. But the reporter was persistent He wrote\nout a list of quest.oiia and shoved them under the door.\nThen he sat down and waited, ln due course, the list of\nquestions was shoved oul a,,a t0 tllu reporter's gratified\namazement, all the questions wore carefully answered\nand Mr. Morgan had added certain news whloh was of\neven more vital interest to the financial world. But the\nreal kick of the interview was the lme across the bottom\n\"Don't tell anyone how you got this; I don't want to get\na backache picking up letters from the Hour.\"\nin casual conversation about people's faults, every  gun\nis likely 1o be loaded. Be careful.\nOther important classes of time are good times and\nbal times. Good times are when prices are high and everybody gets liberal salaries, running as high as $50 a week,\nwhich they spend because it costs so much to live;\nwhile bad times are when prices are low and people have\nto be contnt wsth $30 a week, which buys what $60 did,\nbefore.\nThen time is valuble to people who are entertaining,\nfor if they invite guests for 7 pjm. the can usually count\nupon the guests arriving at least before 8 p.m. Time also\nis valuable in bringing thugs to a close. If there were\nno time it would be possible to go on writing like\nthis forever, ,nsteud of calling a halt and rushing home\nfor dinner.\nANCIENT HISTORY\nLIFE IN GRAND FOBK8\nTWENT.   YEARS   AGO\nHubert Scott's new  store building opposite the C.P.R.\nstat.on has be n completed.\nAirs. A. Birnie of Vernon is visiting at the home ot her\ndaughter, Mrs. B. Al. Kerby.\nMr. Flood of Greenwood has r nte|d the store in the\nrear of the Dav.n block and will open a meat market\nalhtout the 1st of June.\nFor many years white men have been puzzled by the\nUncanny way in which the Australian abor.gines can communicate with one another over long distances w.tlioul\nany apparent means, 'liliis lias .Lioen known as bush telegraph.' An explanation has just been given by David\nUnaipon, an educated Australian aborigine. Uusli telegraphy, he expla.ned, was developed by an intense form ol\ndiscipline started in youth, by which the young aborig.nc\nloams to detach h.mself from bis surroundings. First lie\nis taught to eat only when Ills body needs nourishment,\nand then to fust. Tlie supreme test of lusting for a body\nis that he should walk for three days without food, and\nthen on the fourth day cut. ono day's rut.ons. When it is\ndesired to communicate with another aborigine at a distance n smoke s glial is made hy a man who concentrate-\nm the message lie wishes to send. The recipient of the\nmessage also frees bis mind from all outside Influences to\nreceive the telegraphic message. \"Ono morning,\" e;s-\nUna.pon, \"I was silling in Sydney and trying'lo write,\nwhen a message came io me Unit my wife in Soutii Australia was dead. Next ,'lny a telegram came to tell me\nwhat I already knew. I learned ufterwurds that my wife's\nmother bad sent the original message to me by the bush\ntele Traph.'c method.\"\nfjlie Moth r Lode mine was the scene of another great\nblast on .Monday. There were 2200 holes loaded with ten\ntons cf dynamite and discharged by an lectrlc wife. The\nexplosion was a complete success. This mine is estbllsbr-\ning a great reputation for blasting. Last Octob r eleven\ntons of powder were used in one blast, which gives Greenwood th   world's record In that department of mining.\nMistress\u2014The last maid I had was\ntoo fond of policemen, Mary. I shall\nexpect you to avoid them.\nNew Maid\u2014Don't worry about\nthat, ma\/am. I 'ates the sight of 'em.\nMy father's a burglar.\n\u2022     *     as\nNeighborly\n\"I think perhaps I'd better ask the\npeople next door to have dinner with\nus tonight,\" said the young suburban\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nhosewife thoughtfully.\nHer husband looked up from his\nnewspaper rather sharply.\n\"Good gracious,\" he exclaimed,\n\"Whatever for?\"\n\"Well, the butcher left their meat\nhere by mistake, aud I think it's only\nfair,\" she replied.\n\u2022 *     ar\nJudge\u2014iGuilty  or not guilty?\nSam\u2014Not guilty, suh.\nJudge\u2014Vver been arrested before?\niSam\u2014No,   suh.   Ah   never  speeded\nbefo'.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThe girl walked into the store and\ndropped her bag on the counter.\n\"Give me a chicken,\" she said.\n\"Do you want a pullet?\" the storekeeper asked.\n\"No\/'  the  girt replied.  \"I  wanna\ncarry it.\n#\" V  \u2022\nUncle Eben\n\"A good-natured man,\" said Uncle\nEben, \"ain' entitled to much credit If\nhe's good-natured only jes' because\nhe kin take life easy an' not care\nwhat  happens,\"\n\u2022 \u2022      9\nGoing Down\n\"He's on the stock market.\"\n\"On the curb?\"\n''He was on the curb, but now he's\nin the gutter.\"\n\u2022 \u2666 ..\u00bb\nQuery\n\"So this is your new building?\"\n\"Yes;  setback.\"\n\"How much (did lt set you back?\"\nCheap Genneroslty\nBut  if  Mrs.   Binks  is  vulgar,  you\nmust admit she is generous.\"\n\"Well, yes, she's always giving her\nself away.\"\n*     9     9\nBe   Patient\n\"Tey say broadcasting bas passed\nthe  infant stage.\"\n\"I wish the infant next door had\npassed the broadcasting stage.\"\n9*9\nMale Chatter\n\"My brother gave me $50 to buy\na new overc at.\"\n\"But you're still wearing your old\none!\"\n\"I kuow it\u2014there isn't room in our\ncloset f r another coat.\"\n o\t\nFACTS THAT YOU\nMAY NOT KNOW\nBreakfast\nTlhe main breakfast flish und the\nbeverage are usually brought to the\ntable after the fruit and the cereal\nare eaten.\nVarnished Floors\nRub varnished floors about once a\nweek with a woollen cloth, wet in a\nsolution of one part linseed oil and\none part turpentine. ThiB is also excellent for linoleums. Burn the rags\nto prevent fires.\n\u2014o\u2014\nWashing Electric Bulbs\nCare should be taken to wet only\nthe glass part when washing electric\nlight bulbs. Water left in the metal\nsection is liable to cause a short circuit.\n\u2014o\u2014\nSewing\n. When basting sewing material, try\nplacing the knots of the thread on\nthe right side. They will be easier\nto pull out when the garment is finished.\nCITY REAL ESTATE FOR SALE\nApplications fer immediate purchase ot Lots and\nAcreage owned by the City, within the Municipality, are\ninvited.\nPrices:\u2014From $25.0* per lot upwards.\nTerms:\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lota and prices may be seen at the City Offlce.\nJOHN A. HUTTON,\nCity Clerk.\nf=\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MINING & SMELTING\nCOMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\n:^\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nojj\\I;\u00abnuiias-Iurers of  , . . _, ,\nAmmonium Phosphate\nbl\/_.J_\/Pirl AN I      Sulphate oi' Ammonia\n\"\u00ab\u2022*\"\"\u25a0>   t Triple Superphosphate\nChem.cal Fertilizers\nSold by Grand Forks Growers' Association\nI'roihii'i'rs Se ituuuters of\nTADANAC\niiiuyu\nElectrolytic\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nPeople who have not enough money to Indulge in globe\ntrotting, feel more cont nted to remain at home since\nthe Titanic disaster.\n\u25a0 W, <!. Chalmers, who recently disposed of his coafec-\nttin ry ami cigar anrl tobacco stock to K. P. Petrle and\nAllen & Bugbee, expects to leave tomorrow for Vancou-\nrer, where b   intends to locate permanently.\n1 e remains of one of the lake dwellings of the Gaelic\nper' .d. fortified against invaders, was d.scovered on Ole\nbe ' of a Scottish loch which was partly dried up.\n0. Henry and Lewis Carroll have done their best to\nsrtt.'.e us think of cabbages and kings in the same breath.\n\u00a3: it thc fact remains tlie cabbage Is a thorough com\nr ncr, out of place in such company. Not that it would\nf.'.oy the narrow circle of royalty anyway, considering\nI it it hos always enjoyed wide popularity in the true\n: nse of the word As proof of this popularity hardly a\n. aoplo but has paid the cabbage a tribute in the fashion\nlearest its heart. Frenchmen have included \"my little\ncabbage\" among their most pr.zed terms of endearment.\nBritons have dignified the cabbage as the very source of\nthe Conquering race in one of their most frequently rc-\nliuii club scores, out of a possible 50i: \u00a3. B. Gibbon, 45;\nE. Miller, II; P. W. KusboII, 40; Dr. Acres. 36: L. Skinner, 36; II. N, N.les, 36; W. \u201e. Cochran , 33: Ti A Mclntyre. 31); C  .Mink, Dom. Ammunition Co., 4*.\nNavigation has opened on Christina lake. W. T. Brown\n\u2022f this city was the first man to propel his boat across\nthe lake Wstout   ucountering any icebergs.\nWhat Started It All\nWifey\u2014See  my  new  shoes.\nHow do you like them?\nHubby\u2014They are immeise!\ndear'\n^=\nPOEMS FROM THE NEAR EAST\nARABIA\nADVER8ITY\nHall, chastening friend Adversity! 'Tis thine\nThe mental ore to temp r and refine,\nTo cast hi virtue's mould the yielding heart,\nAnd honor's polish to the mind Impart.\nWithout thy wakenng touch, thy plastic aid,\nI';<1 lain th   shapeless mass that nature made;\nDut form\/d. great artist, by thy magic hand,\n1 gleam a sword to conquer aid command.\n\u2014Abou Membaa. Cat-awash.\nReward of Merit\nWing Commander Kingsford-Smlth\ntold a story at a dinner in New\nYork:\n\"A flying officer in Halifax Bald\none day tb a bunch of new recruits:\n\" 'Any of you chaps understand\nthe principles of aeronautics?'\n\"A handsome young recruit salu-\ntejd smartly,\n'I studied aeronautics two years\nat the'varslty, sir,' he said, 'and besides 1\u2014'\n\u2022\"That'll do,' said the officer.\n'Step round back and clean the colonel's    wife's  electric  refrigerator.' \"\nSI     \u2022     \u2022\nGetting an  Earful\nBriggs\u2014WJiat do you do when your\nwife starts an argument? -\nGriggs\u2014Listen.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nA Journeyman Already\n'Householder\u2014Even If you are begging you might be polite when asking.\nBegger\u2014What! Trying to teach me\nChina Dishes\nEarthenware dishes are porous,\nabsorb odors, and are opaque when\nheld in front of a light. Porcelain\ndishes are not porous, nlo not absorb\nodors, and' are translucent when held\nin front of a light. Porcelain china\nia the best quality.\n\u2014o\u2014\nFurniture Polish\nTo make an inexpensive furniture\npolish, use equal parts of raw Unseed oil and turpentine. Pour into\na bottle and shake. Put a little of the\noil on cheesecloth, rub over the entire surface, and polish with a clean\ncloth.\nmy trade?\nWhat the Rural Weekly\nPress of B. C. Can\nOffer\nIi HERE are fifty-five regular weekly newspapers in Brit-\n' ish Colombia. They are published in a widely scattered\nfield in communities with populations of from 300 to 400 to\none of 10,000. Sixteen are published In communities of less\nthan 1000 population; fifteen In 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 of British Colombia's population. Tne news in these\nnewspapers is mostly all local, because that Is what interests the readers, and the advertisements for the most part\ntell what local merchants are doing. Tbe country editor\nknows the people be serves; they are farmers, lumbermen, miners, fishermen, prospectors, laborers, all. It is estimated tbat tbe average farm family spends $2000 every\nyear for things which are not necessary to raise crops. Tbe\ntotal sum tbat Is spent by farmers in the United States for\nthose things with which to live well ls the appallng sum of\nthirteen billion dollars. Seventy-two per cent, of all automobiles sold go lo people living in towns and comunities of\nless than 5000 population. Using the same proportionate\nfigures to estimate the buying power of tbe rural population of British Colombia served by tbe weekly newspaper!\nof the province, and we have something like 70,000 automobiles purchased by residents of the province In towns and\ncommunities of less than 5000 population, and 56,000,000\nspent every year by these rural families for things which\nare not necessary to raise t.ops. If one is inclined to think\nthat only a few people, and an Insignificant few at that,\nlive in country communities served by tbe weekly newspapers let him study these figures or consult the last census statistics.\nCloser Cooperation   Between Rura and\nIndustrial British GoumSia\n >h\nThe Grand Forks Sun\n-to\n\u25a0SALAM\nTEA\nDOWN\nYELLOW LABEL NOW 25c i\/2 lb.\nBROWN LABEL NOW 30c V_ lb.\nHe missed\nthe\njob\u2014\nno telephone\nOpportun'ty used to knock; now It uses the telephone.\nThis fsct has iust b en brouoht home to Dill Jones, who\nhasn't a telephone. Bill has been o it of work for some\ntime. The otber day an opening developed that he might\nhave filled, but he couldn't tie reached by telephone so\nle didn't qc> the job. It vs.-, given to sjnie one who had\ne telephone.\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO\nPlacr Goled\nI Mining Holds\nOpprtunities\nVICTORIA, April 14.\u2014Place mining in British Columbia affords an\nopportunity to the unemployed to\nagain get into the ranks of produc-\nt ve workers, declared C. P. Hill, re-\nl red prospector, at a meating of tbe\nManufacturers'  associalisju   here.\nMr. Hill that that to \"stake\" an\nunempio; ed man at placer mining\nn the rich go'd-bear n- areas of this\nprevia.e might ps.ult in a young\ni.lan atta nlng s tsllar fame aa Mi.\nHollinger, who discovered the famous\nmine that bean Us name.\npanada and south Africa* stated\nMr. II II, were the only two countries\nthut Could ray (lie r I'lchts out of tlio\ngold i-r ilnced from their own mine-.\nIf tho prices of tbe various metals\nreturned Lo normal, Cunadu toti'd\nsoon pay olf its debts frjm Its in n-\neral production.\nIn 1911 Canada bad prer'ueed $55,\n7ir,,oou iii gold. The normal output\nof the mines of the country, including coal, represented 'n that ytsai'\n? 0 per capita of it., popul t ,-n.\nWhen tlae report, upon Which Pr.\nCiinisell was now engage 1 for the\nDominion, as to the mnernl resource:; of this OOUntry w\"\u00bbs made\npublic, lt would astonish the world.\nMr. Hill forecast.\nMr. 11.11 expressed himself as impatient to see the mineral asset\" of\nthe Dominion utilized for the manufacture of the finished products w.th-\nin the country rather than continue\nthe shipping of the raw material out\nat a comparatively low pr.ee am!\nthen import the finished article from\nthe United States and other countries.\no\nJudge and Jury\nVote Sentence\npos;rl the new system to the chamber without success. He subm.iled\na similar measure to tho senate In\n1925, and again in l'J2C, when the\nmeasure was adopted.\nUnder the bill new passed the\ncourt, aud jury n the iass of a verdict of guilty will tal'e part in a\nsecret ballot They will first vote\nfor or against the maximum penalty.\nIn the event of fa lure to agree, voting will proceed on various shorter\nsentences until the punishment thus\nwhitt'ed down s vol j! by u clear\nmajor ty of court and jury combined.\nOne result predicted is tin* tbera\nwi'l be fewer acquitta's and a more\n\u2022\/lit table distribution of punishment.\nC A N ADA\nThe Worlds Greatest Playgrounq\nWide Variety of Recreational Attractions\nCanadians Fortunate in Holiday Advantages Their Country Offers\ni\nPABTS, April 14.\u2014A reform which\nw.ll have an important egect upon\nthe result of criminal trials in France\nhas been adopted by the chamber.\nThe measure provides that before a\nverdict Is pronounced the jury shall\nconsult with the court concerning\nthe punishment to be inflicted. It is\ngenerally admitted that some change\nof the kind was necessary tn prevent\nthe jury system from being reduced\nto sheer absurdity.\nJuries have acquitted people Who,\non their own confession, were guilty\nof most serious cr.mes, simply because the jurymen feared that a verdict of guilty might result ln a heavier punisliment than the were prepared to inflict.\nlute light for this reform has been\nproceeding since 1921. when M. Bon-\nnevay, then minister of Justice, pro-\nWe Are Sales olgents for\nFirst\nin\nQuality\nFirst\nin\nService\n_7Wanufactured by*\nConsolidated\nSales Books C& Wax Paper (B.C.) Limited\nVancouver, Canada\nGet the best\u2122\nThey cost no more\nGrand Forks Sun Job Department\nNudists' Paradise\n:'!iW YUKK. April 14.\u2014The prac\u00abl\nt ce af go..ing naked for health, sun-\n-\u2022bine end mental freedom Is be.; n-\nnlng to spread in the United States,\nfollow iu; Ihe lead of the mid'st cults\ni,] Germany wv! Russ!;, according l<.\nII. 11 Knickerbocker in tha Apr.l\nOutlook.\nMr. Kn'okerbocket, Pulitzer pr'zo\nWinner for 1980' tir the best new.-pa-\nper report'ng of the year, writes of\n\"The Russian Nudists\" and contrasts\nIho highly orean'zed Nscht Kultur of\nOormany with the some movement m\nrr.iss a.\nIu Germany the nudist disciples attack their task of spreading the goo-\npel of nudity w th evangelical but\nsell larly fervor while many nudist\nmagazines are on the newsstands. In\nRussia there is no organisation,\npreaching or eaching, the whole matter of nudity being taken as a \"matter of course,\" declares the wrter.\nHe describes a gathering of 2500\nintent spectators in a Ilerlln hall,\nInvtej guests with the police outside to guard the assembly; a stage\non which a nude ballet of 20 men\nand 20 women, aged 18 to 50, bow\nand march in mass evolutions; a\nlecturer in a frock coat, extolling\nthe emancipation of the human\nbody.\nIn contrast to the peduntic attitude\nof the Ijeuton is the \"take-;t-for-\ngranted\" atOtwle of the Russian. On.\nthe sandy flats of the Moscow rivor,\nacross from the cllffside summer\nhouses, cafes and - open-air restaurants, the nudists carry on \"a combined track meet, mass picnic and\ncircus.\"\nA timrd young man appears from\nbehind some bushes in a bathing\nsuit. He Imnied.ately becomes the focus of jeering children unl elders\nand he ducks back again behind the\nshrubbery. When he reappears stark\nnaked he attracts no attention whatever and goes down for bis swim.\nThe original \"Down With Shame\nSociety\" used to cause traffic trouble\nw.th their nude parades on Moscow\nstrenets. The Council of Peoples'\nCommissars referred the matter to\nthe Commissariat of Health, which\nthankeid Down With Shame society\nfor their initiative in calling the attention cf the populace to the value\nof light air and sunshine; but proclaimed that owing to dust and bacteria in the city streets it would be\nbetter\u2014In fact, imperative\u2014to seek\nsunshine on the outskirts of the city\nand along the river banks.\no\t\nNew Found Neutron\nTaxes Imagination\nTORONTO.\u2014If you have a good\nimagination try to imagine what the\nnewly discovered neutron, a part of\nan atom and of great great importance to science, looks like.\nProf Lachrian Gil Christ of the\nphysics department of the University\nof Toronto told the Royal Astronmi-\ncal society here its weigth is represented by the 540th part of a million-\nmillion-millionth part of a gramme,\nand a gramme is about 2600th part\nof an ounce.\nProfessor Gilchrist described the\nneutron, discovered in Oermany six\nmonths ago and idiscovered at Cambridge, England, a few weeks back,\nas a combination of the electron and\nproton of the atom\u2014or negative and\npositive parts, aeutrallzing each\nother, but being able to produce the\nphenomena of a wave of light, although attributed to a particle, not\na wave.\n o\t\nRaisin  Vinegar\nAfte r making raisin wine, raisin\nvinegar can be made by laying tho\npressed raisins in a heap and heat;\nthen to eoch 66 pounds add five gallons of water and a little yeast.\n o\t\nA traveling man's coat and trunk\nalike when checked.\n!\n-,\u2022111'. majority of Canadians\n;j probably do not realise\ni i Sh what u wonderful choice\n\u00a3*-_! of vacation opportunities\n'\u25a0'.; \u2022' this country oners. How\n'j' ; many of us in any one\n.\u2022'..\u2022J province have first-hand\nknowledge of the wide range of attractions of our neighbouring provinces? Many no doubt have gone\nabroad lo seek a holiday, forgetting\nthai our own Dominion is unequalled in the exceptional variety\nund range of its recreational resources. Surely a country which\nattracts visitors from other countries by the tens of millions must\nhave recreational features of interest to it\u00ab own citizens\nRecreational Areas\nEasily Accessible\nIt is so easy to travel in Canada\ntli.it an interprovineial tour is a recreation which every Canadian\nvacationist may well and profitably\nundertake. Ail tlie developed and\nmuch of the undeveloped part of\nthe Dominion is easily accessible by\ntrain, boat, or automobile. Canada\nis served by two of thc world's\ngreatest railway systems and a\nnumber of smaller lines. The\nequipment and service are of the\nhighest standard. Steamers built\nspecially for pleasure cruising afford\nmany pleasant trips along'lhe coast\nand on the extensive inland water\nsystem of lakes, rivers and canals.\nA erui.se from the head of the Great\nLakes to the Maritime Provinces is\nnearly equal, in distance, to an\nocean voyage. Good roads lead to\npractically all scenic and sporting\nterritories. Canada's road system\nincludes many thousands of miles\noi surfaced highways, well equipped\nwith direction signs and danger\nsignals. Tourist accommodation,\nfrom campsite to hotel, is available\nalmost everywhere.\nNational Parks Cover\n.,    Large Area\nNational and provincial parks ill\nCanada cover nearly 25,000 square\nmiles. They are areas which have\nbeen withdrawn from exploitation\nand arc being preserved in their virgin beauty and wildness, for purposes of pleasure and recreation.\nTlie largest national parks arc in\nthc Rocky Mountains section of\nAlberta, a region of unsurpassed\nscenic splendour admirably equipped\nby nature for all forms of sport and\nrecreation. There are also important parks in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and\nQuebec. Accommodation ranees all\nthe way from large modern hotels,\ntc log cabins and tents.   Fishing is\none of liie chief attractions in tlie\nparks, bill game auiiu.il.s and birds\nare rigidly protected and their foar-\nlessnesfl never fails to interest\nvisitors.\nSummer Resorts\nNumerous and Varied\nThroughout the Dominion there\nare many summer resort districts\nwhicli oner a wide range of attraction and variety of accommodation.\nOn the Atlantic coast, in the provinces of New Brunswick, Nova\nScotia and Prince Edward Island,\nare typical sea-shore resorts, where\nsalt-water bathing, sailing and deep\nsea fishing are the principal attractions. The rugged beauty of this\ncoast and the picturesque charm of\nthe fislduji villages, at the head of\nevery inlet, cannot fail In enchant\ntlie summer visitor.\nQuebec's summer playgrounds are\nof the most varied nature including\nas they do, scfi-shore, mountain,\nlake and forest resorts, Along thc\nlower St. Lawrence, summer colonies have been established at\nmany points. North of the St.\nLawrence and Ottawa rivers the\nLaurentian mountains, clot-hod with\npine forest and dotted with lakes\nconstitute a vast summer and\nwinter playground. Tlie Eastern\nTownships, which adjoin the international boundary, also have a\nnumber of well-established resonts,\non picturesque lakes and rivers.\nOntario has perhaps the largest\nnumber and greatest variety of developed summer resorts of any of\nthe provinces. The Thousand\nIslands, Lake ol Bays, Muskoka\nlakes, and Georgian bay arc known\nthroughout America,\" but there are\nin addition equally attractive, only\nslightly less known, districts. Ao-\ncommodation includes everything\nfrom campsite to palatial hotel,\nand cottages may be related, in say\ndistrict.\nIn the provinces of Manitoba,\nSaskatchewan and Alberta many\nattractive resorts are located aloag\nthe shores of the lakes anil rivers.\nThc Canadian Rockies are world\nfamous for scenic beauty and eon-\ntain some of the most highly At-\nveloped tourist resorts on the\ncontinent.\nBritish Columbia, with varied and\nsplendid scenic attractions, is a taDur-\nist wonderland. The province has\nmajestic mountain ranges, and extensive lake area, stately forests, aa\nimposing coast lino, and many attractive resorts in settings of exceptional natural beauty.\nGovernment Bureau\nFree Information Service\nFor a number of years the Department of the Interior at Ottawa\nhas been engaged in the promotion\nof the Canadian tourist industry,\nmore especially the development of\ntourist travel from the Unitrcl\nStates to Canada. It is also endeavouring to influence Canadian!\nto spend their vacation in th\u00ab\nDominion. The National Development Bureau of that Department\nwill gladly furnish interprovineial\nroad maps and other information\nfor thc use of those planning a\nCanadian tour, and where necessary will refer enquiries to provincial and local tourist organizations.\nApplicants should lap as specific at\npossible as to tbe section of Cauasli\nin which they are interested, in\norder that available information\n1 may be supplied.\nPAINS\nNo matter how severe,\nyou can always have\nimmediate relief:\nAspirin always stops pain quickly. It\ndoes it without any ill effects. Harmless\nto the heart; harmless to anybody. But\nIt always brings relief.  Why suffer?\nASPIRIN\nTRADE NARK REG.\nMADE  IN  CANADA\nDID YOU EVER\nSTOP TO THINK\nThat advertising through the printed page has the necessary attractiveness and eflicienop of performance\nthat  brings  profitable  results.\nHistory has shown that continuous\nadvertisers have found success, while\nnon-advertisers have always been\nlagging behind.\nLack of advertisii,', is killing nia.uy\na business tbat sho'ild show incrais-\ning business instead of decreasing\nbusiness, x\nPeple huve been educated to tbe\n{act that well,advertised products a.e\nthe quality kind and thop won't buy\nany other.\nContinuous advertising of quality\ncreates a buying demand which assures the advertiser quicker turnover.\nAnp business in this day and time\ncannot stand still. Progress and aim-\npetition demand thut It move abend\nor go out of business.\nContinuous udverlisuig uf Quality\nand service builds and keeps the pti-\ntidence of the public. Without tho coll\nlldence of tho public, no business can\nmove abend,\nContinuous advertising Is tho ii idem way of building better business.\nIt proves to the public that tbe advertisers are proud of what they havo\nfor sale.\nAnything wodth selling Is worth\nadvertising.\nAdvertising Is the most egective\nselling help that can be found, because continuous advertising paves\nthe wap to bigger sales.\n-very business having something to\nae>> should advertise continuously so\nhe ouel'c may know who they are,\nA'he-r tneo are, and what they nave\nfar sale\n o\t\nDo not us i a Iinon cloth in cleaning mirrors or window glass, as it\nsheds linen and causes streaks.\nPower \u00a7f The Rural\nWeekly Press\nListen to what John H. Perry, President et\nthe r American Press ^Association, has to\nsay on the influence of the  country   weekly:\n\"The force that controls this country of ours, In the long\nrun, Is the rural editor, in hls capacity as spokesman for\nhundreds of thousands who live and cam their living on\nthe farms and In the villages and towns.\n\"It is not necessary to take the writer's word for It Ask\nany politician whom you know. He will tell you the truth.\nAsk any representative cf thc interests\u2014big city bankers,\nfer instance, or presidents of great railroad or Industrial\ncorporation. ,\n\"The politician, if he is above peanut size, will tell you\nthat he worries little about what thc city papers say; but\nlet even half a dozen country weeklies in his home state\nor district open on him, and he pulls down the lid of his\ndesk at the state capital and takes the next train lume te\nsec what it is he has done to make the farmer sore.\n\"The Big Businessman, If he is big enough to be entitled to the designation, will tell you that his business\nIs gold or bad depending on how the country people like\nthe way it Is run. and that what those country people are\nthinking he finds out by read ug of having others read for\nhim, what the country papers are saying.\"\n&e Home-Town Newspaper is always\nready to Cooperate in giving Servifcj,\n THE GRAND fiQjRKS gJN\nNervous Haste\n\"Speed, of course, like everything\nelse. iK comparative, and no dougt\nUU present tempo of the world's\ndance :S faster than ,t used to be,\"\nsaid Mr. Cato sN'inetails' \"but 1 infer\nform casual references 1 coine across\nin my reading that there bas always\nbeen more or yiess c ompla,ut b\nsome people about the hurry and\nflurry cf others, 'limit is all probable\n. nougli, for some temperaments in\nui! times have been hasty and Impatient. Tbey wanted to i;et things\ndone, and something else started,\nvery mucii ,n tlie manner that so\nman; people ido nowabays. Farther-\nmore, then as now, there were a good\nmany things that had to be done In\na hurry, and somebody had to do\nthem, just as there are now. In spite\nol such warnings us 'tlie more baste,\nUie less speed.' Nevertheless I must\nagree that there is now, as there\ndoubtless always has been, uot only\ntoo much-hurry, but that a good deal\nof It is the wrong kliipl, and is consequently extremely trying on the\nnerves.\n\"Back In the old borse-and-bugffy\ndays\u2014a phrase that ls now seldom\nused ejeept for ihe purpose of scornful comparison\u2014there was an expression 'pushing on tho re.ns' that was\nften used in criticizing nervous)\nbaste. It couldn't be termed backseat dr-Ving, though It probably applied mot frequently to the back\nscat, because even til3 driver might\nbe so affected. It implied, of course,\ne:i oagerness to leuch the end of the\ndrive, und u de.sire 11 increase the\ni'peed of the veil cle. 'Pushing on the\nreins' accomplished nothing, to be\nsure; .t was not even a relief to the\nor. otions of the pusher; and had only\nthe effect if still further wrecking\nsuch tranqu.lity as woul have made\nthe journey easier.\n\"Now, it seems to me that the\ntrouble with a good many of us is\nthat wo are still 'pushing on the\nreins'; that is, we are hurry,ng with\nour nerves, which in the nature of\nthings can achieve no good, instearf\nof hurrying w.th our muscles, which\nir; bound to take u.s somewhere,\nthough what is accomplishes is a\nquestion of direction. Hurry,ng witit\nour muscles will make us muscularly\ntired, which seldom does any harm,\nand may do some good by inducing\nthe relaxat on of sound sleep; but\nhurrying with our nerves seldom\ndoes anything other than harm, and\ninstead of sound sleep is likely to\ncause insomnia, than wli.ch nothing\nls a greater bore.\n\"If any worthwhile deduction is to\nbe reached from personal experience\nwith both kinds ol hurry, It most\nundoubtedly is that we should do all\nour hurrying with our muscles; but\nI'll have to admitt that lt will take\nquite a b'.t of doing for everybody\nexcept those tranquil\u2014and enviable\n\u2014souls to whom It comes natural.\nMost of us are incited to hurry merely by our nerves, and it is pretty d.f-\nflcult to install a new and improved\nset of nerves.\n\"What makes the case all the\nworse is that after doing something\nor getting some place in a nervous\nhurry and Hurry, we nearly always\n( have a nervous wait for the arrival\nof the persons who are fortunate\nenough not to do things or get places\nin a nervous hurry and durry.\"- Indianapolis News.\no\nNEW RADIO LICENSES MUST\nBE   TAKEN   OUT   BY\nJUNE 1, IT IS ANNOUNCED\nOflfrAWA,    April    21.\u2014Owners    of\nradio   recelv.ng   s\u00ab)tB   will   be   gjievn\nuulil June 1 to obtain    the    new    $2\nlicenses, it was announced from the\ndepartment   of   marine     today.     The\nuew    Licenses    will   be  available  at\nmost centers thiB week.\nCon   in j.. >ironor\nRailroad Veteran\nW. G. Chester Serves Order\nRailway Conductors fer\nQuarter Century\nW. G. CHESTER\nWhen W. G. (Billy) Chester, of\nWinnipeg, retired after twenty-\nfive years service as general chairman of the Canadian Pacific section\nof the Order of Railway Conductors,\nsomething of the character that had\nwon him the esteem of not only the\nmen for whom he acted as chief\nspokesman, but of the company\nwith which he negotiated was revealed by Grant Hall, senior vice-\npresident of the Canadian Pacific\nRailway, when he said:\n\"I have been\nassociated with\nMr. Chester for\nmany yearB.\nNever once has\nhe broken his\nword. Wc often\ndiffered in our\nviewB, but I always knew that\nwhen he told me\nsomething, he at\nleast was sincerely convinced\nthat it was\nright.\"\nSpeak to the conductors whom\nhe represented so well for a quarter\nof a century and one learns that\n\"Billy\" Chester was \"a square\nshooter,\" than which in the ranks\nof his kind there is no prouder title.\nChester is sparing ol words and\nalways has been. Throughout his\ncareer as head of his order he has\nmaintained the balance of a keen\nloyalty both to his men and to tbe\nCanadian Pacific Railway, with a\nrealization that discipline was as\nimportant for the protection of the\nformer as the latter. He knew how\nto be firm when what he thought\nwere the rights of his men were at\nstake, without creating ill-feeling in\nthe minds of company officials with\nwhom he might be negotiating.\nThis is what Chester himself has\nto say of these relationships: \"My\nrelations with the members of the\norganization and with the general\nofficers of the company have been\nmost friendly and satisfactory and\nthe boys on the road have always\ngiven me a fair break. I have had\nthe same treatment irom the company's officials. I have tried to\nreciprocate.\"\nMr. Chester began railroading\naway back in. 1881, and had 25 years\nwith the Company before entering\nthe service of his Order.\n-o-\nHad to Know\nMother   was   growing   tired   of   answering Junior's  numerous questions.\n\"Now   be. quiet   and  don't   ask   so\nmany questions.\"\n\"Well.  I  wouldn'e,    mother,    if    I\nknowed.\"\n\u2014o\u2014\nOnly    place    where    a torn shirt\ndoesn't matter is ln camping out.\nTown Topics\nThe tame deer at the Matthews\nservice station, which has been the\nobject of much petting from the public for months past, made its escape\nuu uj iBq, qijAa Bppja, aqj u\\ eni Suj\n-Jti.liuoa .won s| ptn\u00bb iqaju icpuoK uo\nelectric-ally-lighted city.\nMr. an,| .Mrs. .1. P. C. Wright, former residents of Grand Forks, arrived\nm the city on Sunday from Vancouver. Mrs. Wright will again take up\nher residence here, while Mr. Wright\nw.ll make occasional visits to the\nCity   rom the coast.\nJack Ryan of Trail, C.P.R. brake-\nman, was found guilty of a charge of\ncontributing to the delinquency of a\nminor in police court on Saturday\nbefore Magistrate A. F. Crowe.'' He\nwas sentenced on Monday to serve\nsix months in Ja.l and to pay a fine\nul $IOU. He pleaded not guilty.\n\u2014o\u2014\nIf  Apr.1   showers   bring   .May   How-\nera,  ihuv  will  be un  overproduction\nof flowers  in  the Kettle valley next\nmonth,\n. \u2014o\u2014\nMr. Topp 0 the Triangular gur-\ndens is nursing a very sore r.glit\nband, basing iu some manner contracted poison In it-\nJean Olanvllle will be the seventh\nMay queen. Doris Mattocks and Joan\nPearson have been chosen maids of\nhonor. The new queen will be clowned on Friday, May 20, which will be\nthe occasion for a track meet and\nschool  sports.\n\u2014o\u2014\nGeorge Pound died m Vancouver\nlast Thursday following a prolonged\nillness. He was 77 years of age. He\ncame from tbe east in 1900, and resided in this city aim in Rossland\nin Rossland for a number of years\nbefore going ao the coast. Tlie funeral was held on Saturday.\n\u2014o\u2014\nE. S. Reynolds returned home on\nSaturday from a lengthy visit to\neastern Canada. He will enter the\ncustoms service en the first of ..May\nua the port of Jaiiurler.\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe C.P.R. will have a new timetable schedule, effective Sunday,\nMay 1. Westbound traih No. 11 will\nlepve Grand Forks at 24:56. Bast-\nbound train No. 12 leaves Grand\nFcrks at 15:50. As a matter of fact,\neastbound      train    is    running    via\nBURNS'  GARAGE\nSecond Street, Grand Forks, B. C.\nDEALERS IN THE\nNEW ESSEX CHALLENGER\nTUB BEST GAR ON TBE MARKET FOR TBE MONET\nRare bargains in Used Cars in good condition can always be\nhad at my Garage.\nEfficient Repair Work\nUnion and Imperial Gas\nM. H. BURNS, Prop.\n.-'\u25a0ponces Bridge at present, making it\nlittle later arriving al Grand Forks,\n11:02 p.m. It is expected that thc\ntrain w-II soon be running via tho\nshort line through Caquihalla. Co .-\nnocuous are the same as heretofore.\nThere are no changes on the North\nFork branch.\nSome writesr are really powerful.\nThe author of a Nelson d.spatch has\nsucceeded, ail by his lonesome, in\nmoving Krestova from the Kootenay\nto the Boundary.\nMrs.  S. Owen of Cascade is visit\ning in Ura'l tbis week at the home of\nher    brother-in-law    and   sister,   Mr.\nand .Mrs. S. R. Walley\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe news that we are all looking\nfor\u2014the    return    of the    Lindbergh\nbaby\u2014does not seem to materialize.\n\u2014o\u2014\nIGeorge Cllark returned home on\nSunday from \u00bb trip to the oeast\ncities. *\nP. B. Freeland, resident m.hing\nengineer, anrl family are moving to\nPenticton.\n o\u2014\u2014\nSTOCK   BREEDERS'   MEETING\nA meeting of the Grand Forks\nStock Breeders' Association will be\nheld at the Grand ForkB Court House\non the 7th day of May, 1932, at 2 p.\nm. .Business very important. All\nowners of cattle should attend.\nW. A. GLOVER,\nSecretary.\nHOLY TRINITY CHURCH\nREV. W. .!. 8ILVERWOOD\nRector\nPhone\nVI\nHoly Communion\u2014\n1st. 3rd. 4i.i:  and BID    Sundays    at\nS a.u>\n2nd Suudavs In month at 11 a.m.\nMorning Praver and sermon\u2014\n1st, 3rd. 4th and Bth   Sundays at\n11 a.m\nSunday Sohoo'- -\nat 10 a.m. until further notice.\nEvening Praver and Herman\u2014\nat 7:30 excent. tne lest, nunday in\neach month   when Kvenine service\nis held iu the Parish or Kettle Valley.\nGold Pound Under City\nIn the heart of Johannesburg, South\nAfrica, a reef of rich with gold has\nbeen found, but cannot be worked because the laws prohibit mining under\ncities and towns. Workmen excavating for a neew post o ce ln Von\nBrandis square struck the reef below\nthe surface. Efforts are being made\nto trace the reef beyond the city limits so that mining may begin.\n\u2014\u2014\u2014o\t\nBefore placing fried bacon on the\nplatter, dran it on a piece ot brow-\npaper. It will take away that fatty\nappearance.\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe annual convenUon of the Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern\nBritish Columbia will be held in Fernle May 31.\n*'\nPhc\nCITY GROCERY\nFor Staple and Fancy Groceries.\nPrices Right.\nTry our Bulk Teas and Coffees.\n'Service and Quality\"\nPEN POINTS\nCleopatra ls said to have had red\nhair. That was as near to .being a\nblond as was possible in Egypt.\nImaginary troubles All the world\u2014\nand no .way to exercise them.\nThe average man's ambition is to\nlower his  record.\n\u2014o\u2014\nf   Of the many human buds but few\never   bloom  successfully.\nMarriage may be a failure, but ao'a\ndivorce.\nA VOLTAGE\nREGULATOR\nWill keep your Receiver operating at the correct voltage aud\nstive you several times its cost\nin tubes, if your receiver is out of\ndate 1 can put you In a uew nine-\ntube   screen grid Superlietrodyne\n- iu your own cabinet. This Ib the\nla Radio and fully guaranteed.\nFRANK  MOORE\n- Registered Radk Service Engineer\nP. O. Box 393 Phone 181R\nE.C. Henniger Go.\n-RAIN,  MAY\nFLOUR  AND PHD\nLIME AND SALT\nCEMENT AND PLASTER\nPOUuTRY  SUPPLIM\nDONALDSON\nGltOCEBY\n\u20228\nPHONE M\n(HHHE.\nIZE CONTEST\n1st prize $1,000.00 cash\n2nd prize $500.00 cash\n3rd prize $200.00 cash\n4th prize $100.00 cash\n5 prizes each $50.00 cash\n95 prizes each $10.00 cash\n104 prizes totalling $3,000.00\nEvery adult, male or female, who\nhas an income of whatever amount,\nwhether working the whole year or\nonly part of it, must file a provincial\nincome tax this year.\n_ o\t\nBRYN MAWR GIRL8\nPREFER   MARRIAGE\nTO   CAREERS\ni HlLAD-LPllIA.\u2014Most girls at\nBiyu Mawr college- prefer marriage\nto a career.\nHixty-two per cent of them have\nanswered a questionalre duly recorded in the College News, the student\nweekly, and some of the repl.es .vlll j\ngive pleasure to father and mother\nI uck home, und some of them won't. I\nOlarrlagee over a career won \u2022!!' a '\nlarge majority 88 per cent, while 74\nper cent  thought marriage and n en- ]\nrcer compatible.  Hut In ciiHe of con-'\ndiet, the curei.'r wus left fur behind,\nfor in per cent snlfi marriage would\ncoine flrst.\nCompanionate    marriage    was  ap-\nproved by .',r, per cent, but only 9 per j\ncent  favored   trial   marriage.\nWith the marriage question set- j\nlied, tbe ipiestionuire showed the i\nsutt'hematical average of 3.9 children |\ndesired by each girl. They preferred\nrays. 2.1 to 1.9, and one girl answer-,\ned that she would like \"32 children\n\u201420 boys and 10 girls\"\nTo the question. \"Would you marry a man who did not possess a collage education!\" S2 per cent said\n\"Yes,\" w.th the QualiflcatiOB that\nthey must have \"equivalent, intellectual power.\"\nIN CASH PRIZES\nHow  many  Supertwist   Cords\nin the average Goodyear Tire?\nA cool THOUSa*aND DOLLARS\nfor merely estimating the number of\ncords in the average Goodyear Tire I\nThink of what you could do with that\n$1,000.00. New car? . . . Cottage at\nthe lake? ... Trip abroad? ... Education for the youngsters? . . . Oh,\nthere are plenty of wonderful things\none can do with real money and lots\nof it. And there is no catch in this\ncontest. Someone is going to win the\n$1,000 first prize for the nearest correct estimate. And others will get\nthe 103 other cash prizes which vary\nfrom $500.00 down to $10.00.\nYou don't have to spend a cent of\nmoney to enter. Read the simple contest conditions, get an entry blank\nfrom any dealer selling Goodyear\nTires, and send in your estimate today.\nAnyone from a household in Canada\nwhere a car is owned may enter.\nThere is no entry fee, nothing to buy,\nno special requirement. All tire\ndealers, all employees of rubber companies and the families of both are\ndebarred.\nSee the six Goodyear Tires of various sizes, types and ply-thicknesses\nat any Goodyear tire dealer's, then\nestimate the number of cords in each,\nadd the six individual tire estimates\ntogether, and divide by six to strike\nthe average. Submit the number you\nestimate on a standard entry blank\nwhich may be obtained free of charge\nat any Goodyear tire dealer's.\nA section of tire fabric showing the\nSupertwist cords, is on display in\nevery Goodyear tire dealer's store.\nThis will help you make your estimate.\nThe closing date is June 5th, 1932.\nNo entry bearing a later postmark\ndate will be considered. Address:\n\"The Goodyear Supertwist Cord Contest,\" New Toronto, Toronto 14, Ontario.\nTRY OUR SPECIAL TEA\nat-.. _.. ........(So  per  Ib.\nSHOES, SHIRTS, OVERALLS\nGOOD VALUES FOR YOWt\nMONEY\nCALL AND SEE US BEFORE\nPURCHASING\nJOHN   DONALDSON\nGENERAL  MERCHANT\nORAND PORKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS * HANSEN, PROPS.\nCITY BAQQAOE AND GENERAL\nTRANSFER\nCOAL, WOOD AND ICE\nFOR SALE\nPHONE M\nPalace Barber Shop\nRAZOR HONING A SPECIALTY\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nFIRST ST, NEXT P. BURNS'\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nMcPherson GarageCo., Ltd\nGrand Forks, B. C\nA precaution against water bugs\n;\u00bb a little kerosene poured nlown the\nkilehrn sink at night.\nijy^attcpge^^ Con test;'. directions.\nFurniture Made te Order,\nAlto Rrepalrlni ef All Kin*,\nUphol terlns Neatly Done\nR. C. MoCOTCUEON\nWINNIPEG AVENUE\nRestless Persons\nTo induce sleep in restless persons\ntake a small dose of soda in a glass\nof warm water before retiring.\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe Grand Forks Sun Ig known In\nevery country In the world.\nA. E. MCDOUGALL\nl^lTHOTOa AN. BUILQER\nAgent\nDominion Monumental Works\nAtbeetoe Products Co. Roofing\nESTIMATES FURNISHED\nB0Xf\/33 IM.IFms,IG\nTHE value of well-     L\nprinted, neat appear     |nH\n1\nlng  Stationery as a     (MX\nmeans of letting and     HI\nholding desirable bu     IfiS\nineu has been amp-     Km\nly demonstrated. Try     IB\nThe Son for flood     9M\nPrinting.                         M\nWE PBINT\u2014                    M\nWedding Invitations      M\nDance Programs             HH\nBusiness Cards              Am\nVision Cards                   W\\\nShipping Tags                 Bi\nLetterheads                     Hj\nstatements                      El\nNoteheads                         ||d\nBUlheswU                           _\u25a0\nPamphlets                     M\nPrice Lists                       ftl\n-nvelones                        B'\nuircuiau-f                           _TJ\nDodcen                           \u25a0_\nPosters\nMenus\nEtc\nLatest  Styles  Types\nSwift Presses\nTHE SUN\nColombia   Are.   and\nLake Street\nTELEPHONE 101\nWhipped Cream\nWhipped    cream    will,   be  much\nsweeter it a small pinch ot salt Is\nadded to the cream before whipping.\nVengeance is something: you see\nrepeated again and again tn history.\nIt is  reasonably certain.\n.Because you know the real facts-\nis not always a reason why you\nshould butt In and spoil th* talk.\n___\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 1929-05-77","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_1932_04_29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0407168","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"}]}}