{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0407222":{"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":"1932-08-12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0407222\/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":" *o\nAND FORKS SUN\n31st Year=No. 40\n\"Tell me what you Know is true,\nI can guess as well as you.\"\nFriday, August 12, 1932\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nMotor Car\nAccident\nAt Lake\nOne young man was lnstantlv\nkilled anrl live others more or less\nseriously Injured ln a motor truck\naccident on the Silver Birch road at\nChristina lake at 11:30 on Saturday\nnight.\nThe truck was driven by Everett\nBlddleconie, who was slightly bruised. The car missed a broad curve,\naiifl 51 feet from where it left tlio\nread It struck a mump and catn\nputted.\nRoy Cooper, ngcil 2n years, was\nthrown against a log and instantly\nkilled. He suffered a fractured skull\nand broken back. Marvin Bailey, a\ncompanion!, who was also riding in\nthe box of tbe truck, sustained head\nInjuries, causing concussion, and is\nin In the Orand Forks hospital In a\nstate. His condition turned serious\nlate Sunday afternoon after lie had\nentered the hospital early In the\nmorning. He is suffering from cuts\nasd scratches and an injury to his\nhead\nFollowing the crash, Bailey became confused and wandered from\nthe scene. Despite- an all-night manhunt he was not located until about\n6:30 o'clock Sunday morning, when\nhe \"came to\" and made his way\nfrom, the woihIb onto the road. Ho\nwas conveyeyed to the hospital in\napparently good shape, but late ln\nthe afternoon took a bad turn.\nThree other companions, Lewellyn\nPrice, Parker Freeborne and Arthur\nMorrlson( suffered minor inint'ias!.\nand all but Morrison were taken to\nthe Grand Forks hospital.\nEverett TUddlecome.. driver of the\ntruck, who was bruised and cut\nabout the head, ls held ln the Grand\nForks Jail on, a charge of manslaughter.\nWith Blddleoome In the front seat\nwere Price and Freeborn 9. Young\nCooper. Bailey and Morrison were\nriding In the small truck box behind\nthe driver. The car was going down\nwhat ls known as the Silver Birch\nroad, when .^suddenly left the highway on a curve. Indications are that\nthe car skidded arid the driver ln\nrighting the skid caused thp car to\nJack-knife and Jump Into the air. to\nland upside down among a pile of\nheavy stumps and falle* logs. The\nmachine was badly wrecked and\nrested with all four wheels straight\nln the air.\nThere were no eye witnesses of the\norash, and when the less injure)!\nboys picked .themselves, up they\nfound their chum, Cooper, dead beside a large log. Bailey was dazed,\nbut informed his Pals he was all\nright. The party then sought help,\nand upon their return Bailey had\ndisappeared. H> had been seen to\nwalk Into the woods.\n\u2022Roy Cooper, the idead lad. was the\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Henry F.\nCooper of thiB city, and was popularly known In the district as a mein\nber of the Grand Forks bell team.\nWhen thrown from the truck he apparently hit head first agalnBt a\nlarge logj, and died instantly- He\nand Bailey had gone to Christina\nlake Saturday night to attend one of\nehe dances. At about 11 o'clock they\nleft the hall and Joined BUddlecome\nand his companions for a ride in the\ntruck.\nCoroner's Jury  Charges  Gross\nNegligence\nIn the opinion of a coroner's Jury\ncomposed of George Clark, foreman,\nB. C. Henniger, T. H. Chapman, Alfred Downey, Donald McCallum and\nGeorge Mattocks, sitting here Tne*\nday, the \"\"to accident at Christina\nlake   Saturday   night    was due to\ngross negligence on the part of the\ndriver, Everett Blddlecome,\nnow held In the   local   Jail\ncharge of manslaughter.  Police  a*\n, thoritles are awaiting word from At-\n> torney  General  Pooley before  pro\nMedina, with a preliminary trial.\nThe text of the Jpry's finding was.\n\u2022\u2022We. the Jury Impanelled to enquire\ntoto the death of Roy Wallace Cooper, find that the deceased cam* tp Ma\n'death by being thrown from a light\nJ5 while being driven by Everett\nBlddlecome. We are o fthe opinion\ntbat the driver of the truck was under the influence of liquor and used\n-Kross carelessness by upsetting the\nSuCK at the point where the acci-\ndent happened.\"     \t\nNew Forest Fires\nIn Nelson District\nby this fire. This morning 30 men\nleft Nelson for Salmo. to Join the\ntimber up Sheep Creek is threatened\nReno men In fight.'ng it. It ls figured\nit can be put out of business In a\ncouple ef days.\nUp to Sunday night the Thrums\nflre, which 'originated between Big\nand Utile McPhee Creeks, was fought\nb> a large force ot Doukhobors, who\nwere protecting their timber and a\nsmall sawmill.\nWin11 it burned its way down to\nthe River Flat and threatened adjoining property the Forest branch\ntook a hand.   \u2022\nIs Russia Reverting\nTo Capitalism?\nLONDON, Aug. 11.\u2014So development in Russia ln years has caused\nmore comment than the Soviet's apparent departure from the strtotily\ncommunist level.\nRussia's decis'on to pay workers\naccording to ability Is acclaimed tn\nsome quarters here as a return to the\nright of production and sale of goods\non the \"old-fashioned capitalist ba-\nssls.\"\nThe decree, described as Herniation-\nal, wan Issued Jointly by the Sovnar\nkom (council of people's commissars) and the Tzlk (central executive committee of the Soviet Union).\nIt Is designed to overcome the\nproblem of the scarcity of certain\nmalnufaetured articles by reviving\nthe stimulus of private profit and Is\nlinked wl;th the Intense campaign;\nfor a bumper harvest, being Intended to provide goods which wil: encourage the peasants to do their ut\u00ab\nmost to produce food.\nHitherto tlie so-called cooperative\nartisan \"artels\" worked exclusively\nfor the government on a basin of\nfixed prices and the strlctesttofflclal\nsupervision.\nTiie new decree removes thesc restrictions, reducing the taxes upon\nartisans and allowing them to buy\ntheir own raw products ln the open\nmarket en the most profitable terms\nobtainable.\nThe Soviet government also promises not to Interfere In the disposal\nof the capital thus acquired by the\n\"artels\" and Communist party 'file*\nials throughout the nation have been\nordered to obey the idecree and encourage artisans to lhfrease their\nproductivity.\nThe largest share of Russia's needs\nbefore the Communist revolution was\nsupplied by Individual tailors, she-\nmakers and other artisans. This decree evidently alms to restore such\nproduction because of the critical\nshortage of such goods as .clothes\nand shoes.\n0\nDoukhobors\nWill Not Go\nTo Mexico\nGrand Forks\nCity Council\nProceedings\nThe regular meeting of the Grand\nForks city council was held ln the\ncouncil chamber on Monday evening.\nThe mayor and all the aldermen\nwere pesent.\nThe city clerk was Instructed to\nnotify all dog owners tbat dog\nlicenses are now payable at the city\noffice.\nThe water and light committee re\nported that H. L. Taylor and an inspector had inspected the new power\nplant and power line and had approved the same.\nThe city electrician was instruct'\ned to transfer the C.P.R. meter frcm\nIts present location to a place ln\nWest Grand Forks.\nwill not throw the. Liberal party\ndown.\n\"I am no traitor.\"\nMuch Interest ls beinb shown in\ntbe provincial Liberal conven'Ion to\nbe held on October 3, tbe leader said.\nAlready nearly 300 resolutions and\nletters of suggestion had been sent\nin from all parts of the province.\nLiberal Leader\nHits Coalition\nAgitation\nSome Fishermen at\nCoast Enjoying a\nWave of Prosperity\nNEW WE8TMINST05R, Aug. 11.\u2014\nA harvest of silvery fish Is being\nreaped by 400 Fraser river fishermen who are paid an average of 40\ncents and a high of 50 cents for\nsockeye salmon, which are being\nkeenly bid for by canners.\nThd price Is consjidereH .exceedingly good, as only 30 cents a fish\nwas paid at this time last year.\nA marked improvement in the run\nof sockeye was noted Monday and\nTuesday,    but    today    they fell  off\nInteresting\nTo District\nFarmers\nJUNIOR CLUBS\nThe Judging of the calves In  the\nclaf    olub    and  pigs  in  the  swine\nclubs   will   (lake   place  early  in  Sep-\ni tember  aivl   members  are  urged   to\nihare their animals  ln  the beet possible condition  at that    time.    The\ncalves must be halter broke So that\n; they can  be shown  properly In  the\nshow ring, and each boy or girl mem\nber are requested to see that this is\ndone as soon as possible.\nThe. poultry In the poultry clubs\nwill also be Judged In the near future, ana club members are requested to have their record sheets rear'y\nto band In at the time of the judging. Tibe record forms for calf club\nand swine club members must also\nslightly.   The  run  of  coho  esalmon I be hasded in at the time of Judging,\nhas started and springs are fair.\nOwing to the gocul price for sock- j\neye, which Is attributed to optimism j\nof canners In view of the imperial !\neconomic conference, fishermen are '\nusing a 5%-inch mesh, in place of an |\nIS'if-inch mesh, which permiits the j\nsprings to escape to spawning j\ngrounds.\nPeak   catches  approximate  98  or\n100\nmen $50.\nAccording to latest reports of authorities to the end of the first week\nin August, the salmon pack ln District. No. 1, including the Fraser\nriver,  approximated  35,000  cases.\nVICTORIA, Aug. 8.\u2014T. D. T'lltill\nlo, prov'nclal Liberal leader, scored\ntalk of coali'tion at a feeting of Victoria Liberals Friday night.\n\"If this Tolmie governmrjnt had\ngiven good administration so as to\nreceive approval of the people, do\nyou Imugisie there would be any agl-\nation for coalition today?\" he asked.\nRecalling that the Province newspaper, which is now oalUng for coalition, hgil In 1928 urged the people to\nvote for the Tolmie government, Mr.\nPattullo declarer! that the newspaper.\nis   today  more  concerned  about  its | vance guard of the Brat contingent\nown   position  than   about  anything ] to  Pier  Island,  newly  created  Dou-\nFirst Contingent Goes\nTo Doukhobor Island\nVANCOUVER,  Aug.   11.\u2014Tihe    ad-\nThe Jud lng ls being arranged by H.\nS. McLeod, in charge of certified\n>d potato production tn British\nColumbia.\nelse.\n\"Talk of coalition is as seed sown\non fertile ground because people are\ndisgusted with the sinister influences of the present administration,\"\nhe said .\n\"The position of the Liberal party\nIs that we will not allow Toryism to\nreceive tribute from the people while-\nIt remains in control,\" Mr. Pattullo\nwent on.\n\"The Ttolmie government has had\na,|t|hreel-tolone maJorlHy, but! they\nhave not had the courage or the\nbrains to do what they should do in\nInterests of the people of British\nColumbia,\n\"And now I am asked to Join with\nthese people who have neither Mirage or brains to |do the things they\nshould know must be done for t< e\ngood government of this province,\nit would be possible for the Lib\nJUNIOR   POULTRY  JUDGING\nTEAM\nTbe coaching of the competitors\nfor the Junior poultry Judging team\nis under way in the distrilcti. The\nfollowing club members liave tried\nout for team membership, but owing\nto tihe fact that some were under or\nfish a\"da7.~ which net .the fisher-1 ove>- the team  age limits, they had\nto  withdraw:\nWalter Madge, Rock Creek; Christine Brew. Kettle Vajlley; Gor'onj\nRoberts), Midway; James Forshaw,\nGreenwood; Crystal Mason, George\nRoper, Grand Forks.\nThe team will be composed of two\nmembers and will compete in, the\nelimination contest at Armstron fair\non September 22, the winning team\nto go to the Toronto Royal fair competition in November. Poultry team\nmembers will be required to Judge\none class of single-comb White Leghorns and one class of Barred Plymouth Rocks according to utility\nstandard; also to ono class of each\nof the above breeds according to the\nAmerican Standard of Perfection.\nIn addition, questions will be asked,\n(1) on the value of club activities,\n(2) on care, feeding and management\nof poultry, (3) on the_ value of records of production costs, (4) pn poultry sanitation, anjd (5) on faotors\naffecting financial returns from poultry  raising.\nA total of 600 points will be allot-\ned, as follows: Placing four classes\nof birds, 200 poinlts; oral reasons\non four classes, 200 points; questions as above, 200 points.\nPremier Tolmie\nMaking Slow\nTrip to'Victoria\nVICTORIA, Aug. 8-Premier Tol-\nmle left Ottawa Sunday for Victoria-\nHe Is expected back In the city towards the end of next week.\nThe return of Premier Ttymlf, will\nexpedite whatever actlkin the government may deride upon as a result of the presentation of the report\nof Ihe Kidd committee on provincial\naffairs.\nUnder the arrangement In which\nthe report was received by tho government, six weeks were sejt as the\ntime required by the province to consider the matter aad print the report\nThis time will expire on or about\nAugust 22, after which the Kidd committee would be at liberty to publish\nthe report Itself.\nThe government, however, has a I\nready announced its Intention of\npublishing the report, alter Premier\nTolmie and all members of the cabinet have had an opportunity to peruse its contents.\nRussian Leader\nAnalyzed\ncolony,   left   Saturday\nthe C.P. SS  Princess\nkhobor penal\nmorning on\nMary.\nIt consisted of eight British Colum\nbla penitentiary guards, headed by\nKeepie B. McDonald, -who has seen\n(ighiteen years service at the\npenttentlarf.\n\u2022 AU the eight are World war veterans.\nMattresses, provisions and equipment went along with the guards.\nThe buildings on Pier island,\nwhich is half a mile north of Saanieh\npeninsula, are almost completed.\nThe first shipment of Doukhobors\nwill be effected soon.\n 0\t\nWhen cream is not strictly fresh\nlt sometimes will; curdle sfllghtly\nwhen poured into the coffee. This\ncan be avoided by adding a pinch of\nbaking  soda  to  the  cream    before\neral party to throw me down, but I serving.\n8TANDING   FIELD   CROP\nCOMPETITION\nThe acre plots of potatoes In the\nGrand Forks standing field crop\ncompetition  will   be  Judged  shortly.\nJohn Leslie Retires\nwho\non\nNelson,     Aug.     11.-A   new   flre\n(threatening the Mother Lode mill of\n'.the Reno Gold Mines on Sheep Creek\nte   mile of progress made by the flre\non   the   south   side of the Kootenay\nJtiver opposite Thrums and a lightning\nflre   in the Kokanee area constitute\ntt,   new forest flre developments of\nthe past 24 hours In this district.\nBesides U\u00bb -iU' a Btond of cr0Wn\nPRINCE ALBERT. Sas., Aug. \u00bb.\u2014\nCanadian Doukhobors will not migrate to Mexico, lt waa stated definitely yesterday. Peter Veregln, leader of the Christian Community of\nUniversal Brotherhood, as the Doukhobor sect is officially known, has\nnegatived the proposal from his Jail\ncell here. Veregln is serving an 18\nmonths sentence following co^virl-\ntion on a charge of perjuiry.\nThis'information was made public\nby Peter G. Markaroff of Saskatoon,\nsolicitor of the Doukhobor chieftain,\nand was confirmed by J. P. Shukin.\nvice-president of the Doukhobor organization.\nThe wholesale migration of Canadian Doukhobors to Mexico has been\nsuggested recently following dlssat>\nlsfactlon in the Doukhobor ranks\nwith the conviction of Veregln and\nthe wholesale sentences Imposed in\nBritish Columbia on members of tho\n\"outlaw\" Eons of Freedom sect for\nparafllng In the nude. J. M| Hackney,\nInternational colonisation agent\nfrom St. Paul, visited here recently\nand was reported arranging for the\npurchase of a tract of land ln Mexico on which the Doukhobors could\nsettle ln the hope of securing greater\nfreedom from gpvernmetalfal InteiV\nference than they enjoy ln Canada.\nA few days ago Mr. Veregln had\nhis flrst meeting with Hon. J. T. M.\nAnderson, premier of Saskatchewan,\nIt was learned. At the Prince Albert\nJail Veregin has charge of a gang of\nprisoners whose duty is to keep the\nplace clea* While supfwinitendjngj\nthis work he ran Into the premier\nby accident. Dr. Anderson was Inspecting the Jail, and chatted for a\nfew minutes,with Veregin. The pre\nmier later said there waa no significance In the visit or the meeting.\n\"I would be willing to entrust my\nchildren to him.\"\nThat is the tribute Emll Ludwlg\npays to Josef Stalin, Russian dictator, ln the September Cosmopolitan.\nStalin is a lonely man, not tempted by gold, pleasures or fame and\neven flattered by power, says Litd-\nwig. Two traits that govern his character\u2014patience,   mistrust\nHere are some of the things he\nfinds about the most powerful dictator on earth, who rules the destiny\nof 160,000,000 people.\n1. He lives like a humble citizen,\nwith his 28-year-old wife and two\nchildren in a little house outside the\ncity of Moscoy.\n2. He is sensative and melancholy\nby nature, cold and determined by\nvocation.\n'. He has - devoted his life to improve the lot of the working man.\n4. Everything about him is heavy,\nhis  gait,  glance,  will.\n5. Under the czar, he was Imprisoned six times in 12 years.\n6. Of the Russian leaders. Lenine,\nTrotzky, and Stalin, Lenine was\nmountain high, fiery and sensible;\n'TlrotzkyJ,   quick  and   brilliant.\nTrotzky has Lenine's vigor, Stalin\nhis patience. \\\nTrotzky works from above through\nsentiment; Stalin from below\nthrough developing the indlvld'ial.\nTrotzky is the strategist; Stalin\nthe   tactician.\nTlrotzky inspires the masses; Stalin organizes them.\nTrotzky has a biting wit; Stalin a\ndangerous sense  of humor.\nTrotzky is a prophet; Stalin a\nfather.\n\/fn history,\" sa>S Ludwlg, \"the\nStallns always follow the Trotzkys.\"\nStatin   hlinsaHf  explains   the  new\nRussian  policy   that  has  abandoned\nequality.   \"The   dead   level   Is   not\nMarxian    teachings,\" he says.\n'\"Each according to his ability;\nto each according to his accomplishments,' so reads the Marrian formula\nfor the first stage at Socialism.\"\nCharges Bad\nFaith Over\nKidd Report\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 11\u2014That the\ngovernment and the members ot the\nKidd commission explain why copies\nof the commission's report were\nplaced In other hands Oian their\nown, although refused to the official\nleader of the opposition, was voiced\nIn a statement today by Hon. T. D.\nI'ajtullq.   provincial   Liberal   leader.\n\"The flrst fundamental of a real\ncoalition Ib good faiHi,' he said, ylth\nregard to press dispatches that the\nreport  denounced   party  pollutes.\nMr. Pattullo arrived ln Vancouver\nthis morning for a two days' visit.\n\"I notice that recommendations of\nthe Kidd committee are being com\nmented upon in extenso In the\npress,\" he said, \"and definite statements have been made as to what\nthe Kidd report contains. 'No copy of\nthe report was furnished to me\neither by the Kldd committee or tha\ngovent.\n\"In response to requests from me\nthat the government furnish me with\na copy of the report, our sagacious\nattorney general said that I had my\nnerve, while the head of the Kldd\ncommittee told me the committee\nhad disbanded and he was unable to\nsupply me with 0 copy.\n\"\/lihe Province newspaper stated\nthat the report contains a severe Indictment of party politics.\n\"For weeks now a determined effort has been put forth tp compel\nme to make a pronouncement in fe\u00bb\nvor of a coalition government. I\nthing it will be generally admitted\nthat a first fundamental of real coalition  is  good  faith.\n\"lt is up to the government.and to\nthe Kldd committee, to explain why\nreports of the committee were places\nin hands other than their own,whlls\nrefused to me, the leader of Ms majesty's loyal opposition.\"\nJohn McDonald [of\nUnion Mine Died\nSaturday Night\nJohn McDonald, aged S8 years, died\nin the Grand Forks hospital last Satur\nday evening at about 8 o'clock, after\nsuffering for some time with heart trouble. The funeral was help on Tuesday\nmorning from the Catholic church. U\nvery largely attended by the citizens.\nInterment was made In Evergreen cemetery.\nThe late Mr. McDonald was an\nolrl-timer of Phoenix and Orand\nForks. He was one of the original\nlocators of the Union mine, and\nduring the paBt ten or fifteen years\nhe has made his home in Franklin\ncamp. He was a single man. strictly\nhonest and honorable, and was well\nliked by everybody with whom he\ncame in contact.\n'His brother James, of Seattle, arrived In the cjty four hours before\nJJohn passed away. Mr. James McDonald will probably remain tn the\ncity for a short time.\nSurround yourself with lots of good\ncompay If you are a worrier. Then\nyou'll forget to worry.\nAll should be taught to speak\ncalmly and senafbl\/ in public, but\nnot necessarily to be orators.\nlohn Leslie, Vice President of\nJ Finance and Treasurer of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway, after\nmore than 68 years of service with\nthat Company and its subsidiaries\nwill retire from office under pension\nrules, on July 1st, according to an\nannouncement made by K. W.\nBeatty, Chairman and President.\nMr. Leslie will be succeeded by\nMr. E. E. Lloyd, presently Comptroller of the Company. L. B. Un\nwin, Assistant Comptroller, will be\nappointed Comptroller and E. A.\nLeslie, Assistant Comptroller, will\nbe appointed Deputy Comptroller.\n\"The Directors and myself\ndesire to record our appreciation\nof Mr. Leslie's long, loyal and\nefficient Bervice\", Mr. Beatty said\nin announcing Mr. Leslie's retirement. Mr. Leslie has given a lifetime to railway work in this country. He became a railroader as a\nboy of 16, when in March, 1877 he\nentered the service of the Toronto\nGrey ft Bruce Railway, aa a junior\nclerk in their Toronto offlce. He\nbecame Vice President and Comptroller, Montreal in January 1926,\nand Vice President in charge of\nFinance, and Treasurer on February 10th, 1928. ,   .,\nMr. Lloyd, who succeeds Mr.\nLeslie as Vice President and Treasurer commenced his railroad\ncareer with the Canadian Pacific at\nWinnipegin December, 1887, wlien\nhe became a clerk in the Storea\nDepartment. He became Auditor,\nof Stores & Mechanical Accounte\nat Montreal, in December, 1904;\nand after holding different po3ts in\nthat depart r.ent, became Auditor\nof Disbureeir.enti in March 1918;\nAw'slant Comptroller in February\n1921, and Comptroller in February\n1928.\nMr. Unwin, who succeeds Mr.\nLloyd, was first a clerk in tho\noffice of the Assiatr.nt Superintendent at Chaplcau, Ontario, in 1908\nand served at Chapleau, White    .... ,\nRiver and Sciwiber until the out- [ Comptroller in February, 1928.\na. E. E. Lloyd.\n4. E. A. Lawlte.\nbreak of the world war. He early\nanswered the call to arms by enlisting in the first Contingent.\nMr. Unwin was awarded the\nMilitary Cross, earned his majority, being demobilized with that\nrank in April, 1919. On July 2,1926.\nhe was made Assistant Auditor of\nMiscellaneous Accounts, and on\nFebruary 10th, 1928, he was appointed Assistant Comptroller.\nE. A. Leslie, who becomes\nDeputy Comptroller is a son of\nJohn Leslie, and followed his distinguished father into the service\nof the Canadian Pacific Railway\nCompany. Inl912hesucceededin\nwinning a Canadian Pacific scholarship at McGill University, and\nbecame a student of transportation. He graduated in 1916 with a\nbachelor of science decree. Mr.\nfctslie immediately enlisted with\ntbe Canadian Artillery, _ and after\nserving in England and in France,\nwas demobilized in May 1919 with\nthe rank of Lieutenant. July of the\nsame year found him back in\nharness with the Canadian Pacific\nas clerk in the General Managers'\noffice in Montreal. Mr. Leslie was\npromoted to the post of Assistant\nLiberals of\nProvince to\nMeet Oct* 3\nGovernment Will\nDistribute Liquor\nProfits Next Week\nVICTORIA, Aug. 11.\u2014Municipalities will receive their shore of liquor\nprofits and motor liteeljses towanl\nthe end of next week, officials of the\nprovincial department of flnfuice\nhave announced.\nThe distribution has been held up\nby omission of a number of school\nboards to supply statistics as to attendance at their schools, on which\nthe distribution Is based.\nThe last of tbe overdue figures\nhavo now been tiled, and are being\ntabulated and analyzed by the a<:\ncountants of the financo department\nVANCOUV_R,Aug. 11.\u2014A conven-\nvention of the Liberal party ln British Columbia will be held on Mon-\nday, Ictober 3, it was announcec\nWednesday morning by Hon. T. D.\nPattullo, provincial leader, who was\nspending  the day ln Vancouver.\nPlace of meeting has not been selected definitely. It ls Inferred from\nthe fact that tt was not mentioned in\nMr.  Pattullo's  announcement.\nFollowing a resolution of the provincial executive, which met rccent-\n,iy, the various associations throughout the province were asked for\nrecommendations ln respect to public policy.\nA large number of replies have\n|been   receiver,   Mr.   Pattullo   states.\nRecommendations Include the van\nous matters which tt has been publicly intimated have been considered\nby the Kidd committee, and many\nothers not so mentioned.\n\"In a multitude of counsels there\nIs   wisdom.\n\"The tenor of responses from all\nparts of Uie province Indicate keen\nappreciation    of    our   various   prob\nOkanagan Growers\nMake Apple Pact\nVBRNON. Aug. 11.\u2014Shippers hare\nroached an agreement for the marketing of Mcintosh and later varieties of apples.\nlihe agreement embraces 20 shipping houses moving an estimated 38\nper cent of the crop. An effort ls lo\nbc made to get the other 10 per cent\nln.\nThere will be no price agreement,\nbut those assenting promise to move\nonlf 40 per cent of the tonnage to the\ndomestic market anil to store or export 60 per cent.\nStorage stocks are to be released\nfrom time to time, but the percentage of interest of each subscribing\nBhipper to the storage or export portion is to remain constant.\nThe plan Is to bc under the management of  an  Independent shipper.\nMan has his troubles the same as\nwoman, but he has less to sat:  about\nthem.\n The Orand Forkg Sun\njjiig (grattii jfarfaj torn\na. A. EVANS, EDITOR ANO PUBLISHER\nSubscription   Rates,  Payable  In Advance\nOne Vear, in Canada aud Oreat Britain \t\nOne Tear, la ths United States\t\nAddress all communications to\nTh* Grand Forks Sun,\nPHONE 101 Orand Forks, B.\nOffice:    Columbia  Avenue  and  Lake  Street\ni:x\nI.S0\nc.\ni-KIDAY, AUGUST 12. t\u00bb32\nAccording to the North Short! Press, the election machinery in this province is being thoroughly overhauled\nIn anticipation of a coll for action ln the not far distant\nfuture. The paper continues: Premier S. F. Tolmie. it\nis reported, will Ieavt Ottawa for homti over the coming\nweek-end and when he arrives at the Capital city,, It is\nexpected that ihe pollticol situation will be among the\nfirst issues placed before him for consideration. However, there Is very little likelihood of an appeal to the\nelectors of the province being made before a brief\nsession of lihe legislature is held to put through a redistribution bill and tbe general opinion ls that there ls but\nliitle possibility of the octual vote taking place besure\ntbe mi\/idle of October next,. Indications are that a majority of the members ot the cabinet and also a majority\nof the Conservative members of the house are in favor\nof tbe appi al being made to tbe electors. If\nthe government decides to face another session without complete i< organization and no election is held next\nfall, lt will be because Premier Tolmie has managed to\noverrule a majority of his cabinet and membership in\nthe house. Although the majority opinion appears tu favor a coalition, a redistribution and an early election,\nthere ls, of course, no definite decision that such a course\nwill he followed. It ls pointed outi that Premier Tolmie\nmay bc opposed to the Wea, but it is also known that If\nhe ls, he will likely have to face tbe prospectl of sei\nvere cabinet resignations. In the meantime, tbe Liberal\nparty lu preparing its election campaign on uhe assumption tbat the afcpeal will be made during the fall. One\ncandidate has teen nominated and preparations are being made to proceed with the placing of other candidates\ntn the field. I; is almost a certainty that there will be a\nrhange ln sonic election boundaries before the\nelection ls held, so some of tbe nominations may as a ro\nsuit be iliaairanged.\nbearing il.e title \"Tbe Trout and Other Game .pishes\nof British Csilumlwa.\" a book written by Dr. J. R. Dy-\nmoud, on tho sporti Ssh of Canada's 1 aciflc coast haB\nously disappointed, Morse turned his back on a career\nthat did noti promise to redeem Itself after so many years\nof honorable effort and recognition, rolled up his sleeves\nand perfected the telegraph. Twelve years after the Idea\ncame to him in 1832 on the packet Sully and eight years\nafu.r his disappointment, he sent his famous message,\nWhat hath God wrought!\" Morse's achievement supports the recent remarks of his present successor as\npresident of uhe National Academy of Design, Cass Gilbert, who, apropos the successful investing of academy\nfunds at a time (yes, 1920) when the run of Investors\nwere not so successful, said: \"Artists are not quite the\nfools people think tbieni, not half the Idealists they are\nsupposed to bc, and only one-third the complete asses\nlu practical matters tradition has made them.\" Robert\nFulton, 8. F. B. Morse, American portrait painters, and\n\u2014here lake a high leap\u2014Leonardo da Vinci did pretty\nwell when they too a turn at engineering. Artists can\neven be emirt about money when they put their minds\nto it (they seldom do) as Cass Gilbert, member of the\nclub as Fulton and Morse, has pointed out, with a touch\nof malice, perhaps.\nbeen published by tbe Dominion department of fisheries\nand is obtainable from the king's printer, Ottawa. It ls\nbuuiid in si'stn cloth and is illustrated by color plates,\nShowing istiious fish in their natural colorings, and by\nseveral blu'.k and white drawings. The illustrations were\nmade from paintings and drawings by li. B. S. Logier,\nof the Royal Ontario museum of zoology, Toronto, ill\nwriter of the book is a member o fthe faculty of the University of Toronto and also holds thy position of assiai-\nant director and secretary of tbe Royal Ontario mu-\nseuni of zoology. In tbe foreword Dr. Dyinonid points out\nthat tbe text ls based on studies carried out under tbe\nauspices of the biological board of Canada, a research\nbody which operates under tbe control of the Dominion\nminister of fisheries. Two summers were spent by the'\nauthor fn British Columbia! The book ls a valuable addition to Cauadin fisheries publications, and HI has the added merit of attractive appearance.\nAn ancient dungeon In which prisoners of early Dela\nware incarceiatad and ln which many were left to dlo,\nhas been unearthed under the Kent county building on\nDover Green. Between moulding brick walls, broken\nonly by email slits; to admit air, but constructed in such\na manner to exclude light, workmen discovered a number of skeletons. Jt is believed they are the bones\nef prisoners of the early governors of Delaware\u2014men\nwho were \"forgotten\" after the cell doors clanged behind them. The discovery was made by excavators making ready fur a new state building program. Early records of Kent county reveal that on this site the first jail\nwas built in 1740. Old maps show the cells designed as\n\"offices,\" laid out under the old county building. Later,\nbetween 175H and 1763, James Hamilton, then governor\nof Delaware, and a number of citizens were designated\nas trustees and ordered to sell the jail awl purchase another lot for u new prison! The building now moved was\nbuilt   on tho brick walls of tbe old dungeon.\nfiezlth 5eivice\nOF THB\n(Sattabtan Mthmi &*&ot\\ aium\nMltosPt\u2014\nCHANT FLEMING. fat. P.   ~   ASSOCIATE IstCMTAHY\nShow Them A Mountain And They'll Do Tbe Rest\nIt is tlhe feeble and ill-nourished mind that shrink*\nfrom knowledge of what has been and suffers from pessimistic ilread of what is yet to be. It is only the mentally\nand spiii'Jually hampered\u2014prophesying of evil to come\u2014\nwho believe that a\" change in our day must be for the\nworse, a:, ! who long for the good old days.\u2014Albert Shaw\nin Kevic    ot sleviews.\nGirl Heroines of the Bard of Avon\nWhen we arc girls we |do not think much about what\nhappy times we are having. But when we have become\ngirls grown tell, since \"hearts don't change mucb after\nall,\" wo look back with all the enchantment which distance lends, aud see the joy and gladness that we did\nnot quite appreciate.\nI remember an unusual girl friend whose name was\nCora. She was a very practical girl and not much given\nto romance; but when lt came friendship she was loyalty personified. She was what some eminent divine\ncalled an advocate of the absent. She could not listen\nto any idispai aging criticism of any one without fltfding\nsome good trait to mention until you felt the foolishness\nof your fault finding. She reminded me of Riley's \"Let\nsomething good be said.\" So, lest we two forget tbe Importance of our friendship for ealh other, she carefully\nwrote \u00b0ut In pen and Ink an Oath of Friendship Eternal. I\nI have forgotten the words o fthe document, but I remember signing It with great solemnity.\nPerhaps you remember that \"Anne of Green Gabies'\nand her friend Diana had a similar Inspiration, except\nthat their vow of eternal friendship was made over running water, which Anne's imaginative mind christened\nthe Dryad's Bubble, a title accepted by her kindred\nspirit, Diana.\nIt is curious what an insight into the hearts of girls\nwas possessed by Shakespeare. It speaks well for his\nsweetheart and wife Anne Hathaway, of whom so little\nis known that she has not been appreciated by the world.\nWith her Ue of sacrifice and waiting she seems to me\nlike Imogen, \"from every one the best she hath, and\nshe of all compounded outsells them all.\" It ls significant\nthat he bought the home at New Place, aad had lt fully\nrepaired, though he did not live in it until he had aban\ndoned the mage as a means of livelihood when he was\n47 years of age. Anne Hathaway was his inspiration.\nWhatever hls inspiration, Shakespeare has given us\nmany delightful portraits of girls. In \"As You Like It,\"\nwe find a clear-cut cameo of the friendship of Rosalind\nand Celia, who though cousins were more like sisters,\nhaving been reared by the same mother. Rosalind's\nmother haling died when she was only four years old\nSo, they h.sd \"slept together, rose at an Instant, aud\nlearned, played, ate together, and wheresoe'er they\nweut, like Juno's swans been coupled and inseparable.\"\nPortia and Nerissa were the best of friends, Nerissa\nfurnishing ihe humor for one inclined to be serious. Ne-\nrissa was not, only a waiting woman to tbe Lady Portia,\nbut a close companion and warm friend. Together the\/\ndiscussed the various suitors who came for Portia's\nhand, and Nerissa unconsciously absorbed some of the\nwisdom and ch'orm of her mistress.\nHelena and Dermis sitting on one cushion, creating\none flower op a sampler, singing one song, \"growing together, like a double cherry. . . . two lovely berries\non one stent\/ were the best of friends until the mlsH\nchlevous Punk tangled up the instructions of King Ober-\non and a lover's quarrel ensuetl. They descended to\nharsh words, calling each other painted maypoles,\ndwarfs, v!xcnt> and what not, language unbecoming to\nsuch friends. But \"sleep that sometimes shuts up sorrow's eye\" with the help of Puck restored their friendship.\nImogen, l'erdita and Miranda seem to have had na\nparticular girl friends; as is the case with some girls of\ntoday, they were alone in all their beauty. Beatrice with\nall her wit asd sparkle was a true frle\u00abd to Hero, her\namiable and fascinating cousin. Shakespeare's girls are\nso human 'hat we could duplicate some of them in our\nown girlhood friendships.\nBLOOD  PRESSURE\nThe number of question coicerning\nbliod pressure which come to the\nhealth service is evidence tjialt a\nlarge of people are worried about\nhigh or low  pressure.\nFor a number of years, In making\nan examination, hoctors have taken\nthe blood pressure of their patients.\nThe ido tor ls interested In the blood\npressure becahse it is by putting together all his findings that he is able\nto determine the nature of any abnormal condition whlsh may be present In hls patlennt.\nThe blood Is always under pressure; Noeherwlse it would not rircu-\nlate. In the same person blood pressure varies as Ihe result of BUchi\nthings as worry, excitement, position of the body and the use of stimulants. It also varies with age, sex,\nwtiight and general health.\nHigh blood pressure is not a disease. It is tbe result of some caus.j\nwhich map be emotional, such as\nworry or excitement, but may be associated with some abnormal ondl-\ntllon of other parts, such as the heart\nor kidney. There is no use in guessing as to the cause; that is for the\ndoctor to And out. Worry about\nblood pressure may be the one thing\nwhich is keeping it above the aver-\n;e.\nIt Is a mistake to try to Interpret\nyour Own symptoms or the results\nof some examination. If, for some\nreason, you havt an X^ray examination, you are not able to interpret\nthe picture; very likely you have no\nidea that you can do so, and yiu are\nquite right, for lt requires experience to enable the doctor to know\nthe meaning of the lights and shad\nows whl h the picture shows.\n.Blood pressure readings appear so\nsimple\u2014much like reading thermometer\u2014that many people seem to believe that they should be able tn\nknow the meannlng of a blood pressure of 160 or some other figure. It\nls not with any idea of suggesting\nthat there ls something mysterious\nabout the subject that we say quite\nfrankly that the Interpretation of\nblood pressure readings Is not simple. It ls not, simple because the significance of the blood pressure is,\nnot found in the blood pressure Itself. It Is obvious that, if the average blood pressure for a man of 50\nyears of age is 130, a man ef 50 who\nhas a pressure of 160 ls above normal. Such a condition should receive\nattention, but need not cause alarm.\nThe condition Itself means nothing;\nIt may be only temporary, but, In\nany case, until -the cause is known\nthe signiflcan e of the condition ls\nobscure.\nA few years ago people worried\nabout uric acid; now lt ls Wood\npressure. Secure the 'advice of your\ndoctor, follow bis Instructions, and\nleave blood pressure to take care of\nitself.\nQuestions concerning health, addressed to the Canadian Medical Association. 184 College Street, Toronto., will be answered personally by\nletter.\nEdward Feuz (left) holds that \"the climbing urge\" la a heritage of all\nwhite races, lie the objective high furniture for an Infant; a tree-top\nfor a jchoolboy: :-Ve -'innncle of success or the summit of a mountain\nfor an adult. He oughr to know, for he makes his living as a mountain\nEulde in the heart of the famous Canadian Rocky Mountains, with\neadquarters at the Canadian Pacific Railway's hotels at Banff and\nLake Louise, and has more \"first ascents\" to his credit than any other\nman in tlie country. His brother Ernst fright) is also an experienced,\nguide and mountaineer. Roth are natives of 1 nterlaken, Switzerland, aad\nhave winter-homes in the little Swiss guide village of Edelweiss, ln the\nColumbia Valley. They are shown scanning the peaks adjoining the\nBanff Springs Hotel.\nFACTS THAT YOU\nMAY NOT KNOW\nDangeri..!.: aud invisible rays of ultraviolet light produced bj arc welding are absorbed by a special painv\ndeveloped I'ui the covering of walls in rooms where such\nwork is done. It is an oil-type paint, gray in color, and\ndries in Hi-out two hours after applicaton.\nTons of hair at one time were used for packing be\ntween the piates of certain parts of English war vessels. Hair, being very elastic, alorded a good backing to\nmetal. ,. ifjufc.\nAn altar btuue, used as early as 1675 in France, is in\nthe crypt of St. Francis Xovior's church in St. Louis.\nThe stone, brought to St. Louis by Father Marquette\nwhen he was tracing the course of the Mississippi river,\nis believed to le the oldest in America,\nANCIENT HISTORY\nufein -band roan\nTWENTY   Y-ABS  AGO\nCooper Ili-os.' henhouse was destroyed by fire this\nweek. The only cause assigned for t|ie onflagratlon is,\nthat the hens have been laying so rapidly; lately that the\npremises became overheated.\nJohn Kavanagh has purchased an interest in R. C. Mc-\nlOutcheou's  cabinet manufaot^iring  es^bjUisbimientj.\nListeners do.'.'t expect) to hear any   good\nselves; it's tbe bad of others they are after.\nof     thOsE\nThere      a<e      nettles      everywhere^\ngreen grasses are more common still.\no\nbut    cmooth\nDisappointment That Led to\nImmortality\nThe walls of the new post office building are now\nslightly visible above the high board fence tbat surround them.\nAngus J. MacDonald, of the Bamet Steel & St\u00bbructural\nIron Works, was in the city on Monday, being en route\nto his home In Vancouver from Halcyon.\nC Mien, manager of the Bank ot Commerce, and\nMrs. Niles, returned Monday from a week's visit to Vancouver.\nEyebrows\nThe growth of eyebrows will be\nstimulated by mixing 2 ounces red\nvaseline, % ounce tin ture of can-\ntharldes, 15 drops oil of laveqieit,\n16 drops oil of rosemary. Mix thoroughly and apply with a small brush\nevery night until the growth la stimulated;   then,  not so  often.\nSalad\nA delicious salad can bt made by\ncutting a top slice from small ripe\ntomatoes, scraping out| the centers,\nand filling with chopped celery,\nchopped olives and cubes of veal\nloaf, mixed with a favorite salad\ndressing. Serve on hearts of lettuce.\n\u2014o\u2014\nWashing Dishes\nDishes that are to be washed\nshould be placed on the right side of\nthe sink. When washing itihem, hold\nthe dish cloth in the right! band, the\ndish one is washing in the left hand.\nThe dishes should then be placed to\ndrain on the drain board at the left!\nof the sink. Try this system to save\ntime.\nFurniture Polish\nA good furniture polish can be\nmade with tlwo parts of vinegar to\none part of olive oil. Pour a small\namount of this solution on a soft\ncloth and rub into the wood. The\nresult will be a fresh, bright! polish.\nDried Beef\nBoiling water may be Poured on\ndried beef to extract some 'of the\nsalt. Let it soak in tbe water for\nabout two minutes, then drain away\nthe water. If the heef is. very dry\nUht water will not only remove\nsome of the salt, but soften the meat\nFloors\nSpot scan be cleaned from oiled\nfloors by sponging tfioroughly with\nturpentine. If this does not remove\nthem, dip a damp loth ln powdered\nrottenstone. Then renew the oil on\nthe spoils treated.\nHankerchlefs\nFew handk'erohlefs will be lost fn\nschool if the   hild's name is written\nIn indelible ink ln the center ot each\nhandkerchief.\nPat Burns has had his\nreduced nearly a million.\n$3,284,120.\nCalgary property assessment\nTbe original assessment was\nA son ef Quaker parents, born in Penn's Wood, who\npainted historical canvases by the square rod for George\nIII; on* of the founders and second presidentl (succeeding Sir Joshua Reynolds) of the Royal Academy, Benjamin West had two American pupils about a generation\napart whose talens came to a head in invention\u2014iRobe.t\nFr'ton as S. F. ft. Morse. Morse had atudled painting\nabroad about seven years and was a founder and piesi-\ndent of the National Academy of Design when he applied\nto a congressional committee for a commission to paint\n(by tbe square rod, as West had for King George) n\nhistorical grcup for one of ihe four empty panels in\nthe capita rotunda. John Qulncy Adams, ex-president\nof th eDnltcd States, on this committee, expressed his opinion that no American artist had talont'\nenough for the Job. and prtlsented a resolution opening\nthe competition to foreigners. A letter In the\nNew York Evening Post scolded Adams harshly for his\ndiffidence, it was attributed to Morse (the letter was\nwritten by James Fenlmore Cooper), and Morse's name |\nwas removed from the list of eligible painters.  Oriev-\nJ. R. Jackson of Midway, member fer Greenwood, was\na visitor in the city on Tuesday.\nPOEMS FROM THE FAR EAST\nJAPAN\nTHE OWfN\nYes! 'tiwss the hour when all my hopes\nSeemed idle as tbe dews that shake\nAnd tremble in their lotus-cups\nBy deep Tsurugl's lake\u2014 y\n'Twas then the omen said:\u2014\n\"Fear not   he'll come 'his own dear love to wed.\"\nWhat thoug my mother bids me flee\nThy fond embrace? No heed I ta e;\nAs pure, as deep my love for t|hae\nAs Klyosuml's lake.\nOne thought fills all my heart:\u2014\nWhen wilt thou come no more again to part?\n-Anon.\nKerosene  is\nfor   tinware,\npolish.\nTin\nan excellent cleanes\nIt   leaves a brilliant\nerosene is tied around each table\nleg. This method also applies to the\nrefrigeration, beds ami other furniture;. .' j;     .\nIroning\nTo obtain  smoothness and glossll\nness   when   Ironing  stairUShed   articles, stir the starch with a paraffin\nandle three or four times while boiling, and justi before removing.\nBed 8heeti\nWhen the middle of the bed sheet\nbecomes worn, cut it in half, sew tbe\ntwo salvages together, and hem the\ncut edges. The sheet will stand many\nmore months of wear.\nFiles\nTo  kill  flits,    place    around    the\nroom    several    dishes  containing  a\nmixture of cream, ground black pepper and sugar.\nVtssels\nH\u00bb brighten copper and brass ves\nsels,  try using vinegar and salt in\nthe water when washing them.\nObservant\nUncle was testing his sdall nephew's  knowledge..\n\"Jack,\" he asked, 'what doei A B\nC hpelir\n\"Nothing,\" was the reply.\n\"What does L M N spell?\" was\nuncle's next question.\n\"Nothing,\" was Jack's answer.\nJack's smaller sister, wh i had been\nan Interested listener,  then spoke.\n\"It seems to me that there are lots\nof ways of spelling nothing,\" she said.\n\u2022 \u2022     as\nPa Deserlaa Him\n\"Pa,\" said Johnny, \"what is a practical Joker?\"\n\"He's a sap, son,\" replied his dad,\nwho has a bum sense of humor apd\nno sense at all.\"\nV       \u2022       \u2022\nOuch I Pass the Lard\nBill\u2014Did your wife have you on\nthe carpet for getting ln so late ia\u00bbt\nnight?\nJack\u2014Well, It may have been the\ncarpet she had me on, but it seemed\nmore like a red-hot stove to me!\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nProtection\ntHlsh\u2014How does your next door\nneighbor manage to have such a nice\ngarden?\niTlBh\u2014He buys my chickens from\nme oa fast as I get them.\nCITY REAL MS TATE FOR SALE\nAppUeaflona    for Immediate    purchase    of    Lots and\nAcreace owned by the City, within the Municipality, are\nInvite-\nPrices:\u2014From 125.00 per lot upwards.\nTerms:\u2014Cash and approved payments.\nUst of Lots and prices may be seen at the City Office.\nJOHN A. BUTTON,\nCity Clerk.\nf\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MIMING & SMELTING\nCOMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\nTII .tils, I5KITISII '<),UMBIA\n\/^\u25a0Manufacturers of\nELEPHANT\nHltAND\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nTriple Superphosphate\nSold by Grand Forks Growers' Association\nProducers & ito liners of\nTADANAC\nnnxso\nI> ectrolytic\nj Lead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nV\nWhat tbe Rural Weekly\nPress of B. C. Can\nOffer\n-THE\n-Ish\nCoffee Syrup\nCoffee syrup can be made by adding one-half pound of roasted coffee\nto one gallon of boiling water. Reduce by Altering or percolating to\none-half gallon; then add seven\npounds of granulated sugar.\nCake\nWhen baking cake, do not look at\nthe cake more than Is necessary\nwhile it ls in tbe oven. Every time\nthe door is opened the oven cools.\nstains\nIf the lingers are stained by fruit,\ntry rubbing with   a   piece    of   cut\nlemon. ,\nSo She Kept Still\nVera\u2014iDld he threaten you when\nhe kissed you?\nWlnnifred\u2014Tee; he said if I\nscreamed, ha would Use me aqaln,\"\nAs Usual\nOne of the spectators st a football\nmatch had had his pocket picked. As\nthe thief was bolting he collared him\nand escorted him to a policeman.\n\"You say this man stole your\nwatch,\" said the policeman. 'What\ndistinguishing feature was there\nabout the watch?\"\n\"It MttUined my sweetheart's photograph,\" replied the man.\"\n\"Ah,\u2022'!'see   A woman in the ca:\n\u2022   \u2022   e\nPraise?\nMudd\u2014Dauber does very realistic\n___._ Iwork, Doesn't he?\nA\u201et, Muck\u2014Yes; those apples he nalut-\nAttts   will   not climb the legs of |ed two months ago are.nonw said by\ntables If a piece of string dlppea to erlUcto be rotten.\nI are fifty-five regular weekly i\ni Colombia. They are published in a widely scattered\nfield in communities with populations of from 3(0 te 400 to\none of MANO. Sixteen are published In communities of less\nthan 1000 population; fifteen in communities of 1000 to 2000\npopulation; seven In communlUes of 4000 to 5000; four In\ncommunities over 5000 to 10,000. These weeklies appeal to\n145,000 of British Columbia's population. The 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. 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 12000 every\nyear for things which are not necessary to raise crops. The\ntotal sum tbat is spent by farmers In the United States for\nthose things with which to live well Is the appallog sua of\nthirteen billion dollars. Seventy-two per cent, of all automobiles sold go to people living In towns and com\u2014aIties ol\nless than 5000 population. Using the same proportionate\nfigures to estimate the baying power ef the ml popela-\ntion of British Colombia served by the weekly newspapers\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 16,000,000\nspent every year by these rural families for things which\nare not necessary to raise uops. If one Is inclined to think\nthat only a few people, and an Insignificant few at that,\nlive In country communities served by the weekly newspapers let him study these figures or consult  the last een-\n1\nCloser Cooperation  Between Rural and\ni Industrial British Coumbia\n The -JO*1 Anniversary\n\"SALAMTEA\nMl\nFor 40 years SALADA hat\ngiven the finest quality in\ntea.  Present prices are the\nlowest in 15 years.\nSouthern California\nA Travelogue\nThe Grand Forks Sun\nar REAS  of southern   California\nOsJI which    are    normally     arid,\n\u2014    ^\"have   recently  burst forth  in\na riot of colorful wild bowers due to\nthe unusual heavy rains.\nCalifornia has many showcases\nfor the display of her diversified\nfloral wares. In the high Sierras are\nthe snow plaints, peeping inqu rlngly\nand a bit nervously through the\nsnowcaps when the first warmth of\nspring moves the solid pack to\nmushy activity. Farther down t|he\nslope, lichens, mosses, sundry family\ngroups of ferns, and many varieties\nof wild flowers merge Into the wooded lowlands, where, especially north\nof   the   T.-hachapl   mounAaltoja,    the\nlive   oak  spreads   Its shapely   limbs\nand   ol'hn  affords   protection   while\n,-ifliling   beauty  to   the pasture  land,\nwhere herds cf fat herefords browse.\nIn  th0  northern part of the state\nroses grow wlflh little cultlvatlon.but\nwith  the  profusion  of goldenrod   in\nPennsylvania.  No  mere  bushes  suffice for the wealth of blossoms. They\ngrow on trees, often to a height of 12\nfeet or more, and curious results of\nintergraftted  varieties  are sometimes\nfound in  freakish  but delightful  array on a single tree. In Santa Cruz\narbors cover tbe sidewalks of some\nof the streets, and over these roses.\n7 he job came\nby\ntelephone\n. \"Hapty days are here again!\" shouted Blllas ha\nwaltzed merrily about the kitchen. He had just received\na telethone call telling him to come back to work on\nMonday. .\n\"Good old telephone, \"he said. \"Gee, I'm glad We didn't\nit taken out. There are three or four other fellow who\nmight have been given the job Instead of me. but the\nboss said I waa the only one who could be reached by\ntelephone.\"\nThe man with a telephone has the best chance of getting a job.\nC. TELEPHONE CO\nIntertwined  with  geraniums,     climb\nand rest in clusters.\nThough tbe cultivated flowers\nwhich abound are beautiful and varied, all the way from the sand\ndune3, Scotch broom, and rhododendrons, of Crescent City, which ls al\nmost the last outpost in California\nbefore the Redwood hlghwap reaches\nthe Oregon l'ne. to Ramona's garden\nIn San Diego, only a few miles\nfrom the Mexican border, it ls to the\n'wide open spaces,\" the desert and\nmountain sides of the southern part\noff tbe state, which we turn in chief\nappreciations\nOne may see and study the snow\nplant under tlie dome of Shasta, dip\ninto the wonderland of \u25a0 plant and\nflower life at the experimental farm\nof the late Luther Burbank, near\nSanta Rosa, or wander through San\nFrancisco's Golden Gate park, where\nhe finds practically every variety of\nflower and planti tbat will grow under a kindly sun.\nlihe outstanding pride of tbis park\nls Its thousands of rhododendrons.\nHimalayan varieties are in prepon-r\nderance. followed closely bp natives\nof California, Oregon), Washington\nand the Carolinas. Especially conspicuous are the frabrantlsslmum,\nwhich attains a height of 7 to 101\nfeet, with flowers 4 Inches ln diameter and so fragrant that the odor can\nbe detected from a modest group\nnearly a city block away.\nOne of tbe National Geographic\nsociety's exqeditions to Yunnan province, China, resulted ln the addition of many hundreds of species of\nrhododendrons to the Golden Gote\npark collection.\nDons Party Dress In Spring\nIn the early spring California dons\nher party dress and looks her best.\nThe winter rains have tinted hillside\nand pasture land o verdanti green. In\nthe citrus areas the delicate orange\nblossom fills the air with perfume\nand miles of trees stretch like milky\nways as far as the eye maty follow.\nIn other sections cherry blossoms\nstage an exhibition. The almond\ntrees are Indescribably lovely. The\nlandscape is filled with color, while\nsnowcapped peaks are seen through\nthe tree tops.\nThis is cultivated loveliness; but\none day, after a searching rain followed by warm sunchlno, a mountain aide suddenly burstls Into flame\n\u2014a veritable spontaneous com,bui|i\ntlon. Literally, all outdoors become\none vast garden of flowers until it\nsetlms there is no end to tho colorful\npanorama.\nThe \"cup of gold,\" as the Spaiv\nlards called the California poppy, is\nthe queen of wild flowers.\nAnd the idesert 'Who can look upon the desert; in tlhe spring and talk\nof a barren waste? Even Death valley, for ages California's bogy spot,\nplace to be spoken of I n awed\nwhisper, a death tirap, now hae tourist hotels and tent camps.\nDesert vegetation Jt(xhiblts| Its\ngreatest growth and beauty bet|ween\nFebruary and Ma;'. It Includes the\nyucca and juniper, the creosot|e and\nmosquito,   many   varieties   of  shrub\nand herbage, an occasional Joshua\ntree, mixed with inliaa paintbrush\n(a member of tbe yucca family),\nLmojnkeiyi-ssowers, luplmjf, prlcklkr\nphlox, wild buckwheat, blazing-star,\nsunflower, barrel cactus bloom, oco-\ntillo, and many others, giving for a\nseason tbe impression of a flower-\ncarpeteri world. In this lush pe.-iod\nthe desero literally blossoms as tbe\nrose, although tbe rose does not ordinarily  blossom  ln  the desert\nIhe term \"wild flowers\" does notl\ndescribe some of this desert flora.\nOccasionally they are savage flowers, capable of protecting themselves better than any man-made\nlaws could possibly protect them. In\n.   . - ~-~.~. ... a     ssssj   lUEtemiie  national park,\nmagnificent color, ln delicacy of tex-1 embraces 1100 square miles of\ntUTA   nf   nssasal     *\u00bb\u00bb..    \u00abo\u00abs.._    as-- '-\n[groups of conifers in the world.    It\nserves to give the park an Interest\nand   charm   which   gratifies  the\nthetlc   sense   and   stirs   deeply    the\nimagination.\nA View of Contrasts\nFrom Artist Point there ls a fine\nview of the valley and Kb contrasts\nin height and depth, in verdurt; and\nflora,. Near the foot of Yosemite\nfalls, tbe largest and mosti spectacular ln the valley, the blueblossom,\ncommonly called \"blue lilac,\" grows\nln profusion, tbe soft coloring blending with tbe rainbow effects of the\ntorrent, broken ln ita descent to tbe\nfloor of tbe valley.\nThe Yosemite National park.which\nture of petal, tjhe cactus flowers are\nperhaps tbe most wonderful of the\nCalifornia desert blossoms. But no\none ever came home from the desert\nwith a handful of cholla flowers or\na bouquet cf prickly pears. \"Look\nand leave 'em\" ls the safest motto,\nfor tbe cactus has a flenrllsh refense\nagainst all  comers.\nCalifornia motehrs no scenic symphony more marvelous than tbe Yosemite National park, with Its\nmighty peaks, rugged canyons, goant\ntrees, waterfalls tumultously spreading a protecting veil over the rocky\noutlines of naked clefts rising from\ntlhe floor of the valley sheer a thousand feet or more.\nIn the giant sequoia, the sugar\npine, the western yellow pine, the\nred and whitle firs, and the Intense-\ncedar, we have In this Yosemite region   one   of   the   most remarkable\nGeneral News\nI .on) Nigel Douglas-Hamilton,\nli <!uiy;e nf a party of thirty\nI'\/iMjinisi Public School boys, who\nwill arrive in Montreal August 5,\nunder his supervision, claims that\nlliero ls no better \"finishing\nschool\" than a tour of this na-\ntuie.\n \u2014 \"valley incomparable\" and scenic mountains, offers a rich field for tbe botanist. So great .'( the range of natural conditions between Aqthills.\nand mountain glaciers that one authority estimates that 1200 species\nand varieties of flowers, plants, and\nferns are native to this area. Though\nmost of these are typi al of the entire Sierra Nevada, many are exceedingly rare.\nThe fragrance of the western azalea ls enhanced by abundant bloom.\nThe delicate canchalagua, with Its\nsnowy clusters of bright, thick flowers; the taller collomia, with its\ndense heads of funnel-formed blossoms, almost salmon in color; the\ngolden mlmulus, or monkeyflower;\nountless blue flowers, such as the\nlight-blue pentstenwn, with Its\nwhorls in tall stems; tall blue for-\ngaU-meAiots; tiny dark-blue cjpllin-\/\nsla; the red Indian paintbrush; the\nbrilliant scarlet pentstemon, with\nlanlcei shaped leaves and funnel*\nformed corolla, about one inch long;\ngolden buttercups\u2014all go to Ijbrm\nthe brilliant mosaic of large sheets\nFinest anti-knock Fuel\nEver Offered - no extra Cost\nUsloe OH Company \u00abl Cauda, Lianitid, Vancown, B.C\n(Continued on Page 4)\nTake things as they come\u2014but remember there are lots of things tbat\nIt will pay you to go after.\nTihere can be individuals who do\nwant so much of success as to make\nlife a treadmill.\nGermany is making its forests\npractically fireproof by careful planting of different kinds of trees.\nSpeak but little and well If yeu\nwould be esteemed o man of merit.\u2014\nTrench.\nFirst wheat harvesting reports\nIn I lie Canadian West were re-\nIio:ioil by the agricultural depart-\niwul of the Canadian Pacific Railway froin Winnipeg, July 23, with\nbarley and rye going under the\nknifp in the Allda and Bstevan\nsubdivisions of the railway. The\nwheat was harvested ln southern\nManitoba.\nWhere To SpenDsAnEnjo\\mle\\Acation\nfsammisijass: \u25a0'^N.ss.Lasjw^.-.,,,.^ \u25a0<\u25a0 aass ..-~\t\nAugust will seo the season In\nthe Canadian Rockies at Its peak\nwith the Prince of Wales Trophy,\nalready bringing ln golf entries\nfrom far and near, scheduled for\nAugust 15-20 and coinciding with\nthis event the Indian Days' celebration, August 19-21, which will\nbe attended by Stoneys, Crees and\nKootenays.\nWe Are Sales oigents for\nConducting five Trench and\nfive Swiss professional men from\nParis, France, to this continent,\nNicolas Racz, of the Paris office of the Canadian Pacific Railway, Is visiting Toronto, Niagara\nFalls, Detroit, Chicago, Washington, New York, Albany, Montreal,\nQuebec, and returning to Europe\non the Empress of Britain, August (.\n$\/aMada-lhisY(H>\nMystery cruises, so popular out\nof New York, Southampton and\nother great ports, were ushered ln\non the British Columbia coast\nwith tbe sailing of the coastal\nliner Princess Patricia, of the\nCanadian Pacific coastal sendee,\nto an unknown destination under\nsealed orders, recently. Close to\n200 passengers were attracted by\nthe trip.\nFirst\nin\nQuality*\nFirst\nin\nService\n(Manufactured by*\nConsolidated\nSales Books -& Wax Paper (B.C.) Limited\nVancouver, Canada\nGet the best\u2014\nThey cost no more\nGrand Forks Sun Job Department\nJuicy, red, succulent buffalo\nsteaks grilled to a nicety, greeted\nthe Australian and New Zealand\ndelegates to tbe Ottawa Imperial\nConference as they entered the\ndining car of their special train\nover the Canadian Pacific Railway out of Vancouver recently.\nThe Anzacs were particularly impressed by this menu and pronounced it better than any beef\nthey had ever eaten.\nGovernor Franklin Delano Roosevelt of New York, Democratic\nNominee for the Presidency, has\nfor years been one of New Brunswick's most distinguished nonresident visitors, members of his\nfamily annually spending several\nweeks at the Roosevelt summer\nhome at Campobello, one of tbe\nGrand Manan Island Group In\nPassamaquoddy Bay. He first\ncame there as a mere lad back In\n1895.\nAnswering the call of Mt. Assl-\nnibolne, Matterborn of the Canadian Rockies, old and new members of the Trail Riders' Association, gathered at Banff July 29th\nwith the objective of climbing the\nIon? ascent to the roof of the\nworld and the Alpine country of\nthe Great Divide in the vicinity\nof the Mountain. The ride required five day3 in all. Twenty\nAmerican girls, summering at the\nlaakc Windermere ranch, were\namong these taking part.\n8AVE THIS ADVERTISEMENT\nFREE PIPE\nAGENTS AGENTS\nWANTED WANTED\nIThls advertisement with $1.80 entitles you to ONE SAMPLE PACKAGE containing 10 LBS. GOOD MILD\nor STRONG LEAF TOBACCO with\nReal Briar Pipe. Shipped Anywhere\non Receipt of\n$2.00\n2* lbs. for.....S3_.   60 lbs. for....\u00bb8.00\n100 lbs. for....$14.00\nSPECIAL PRICE FOR  1000 LBS.\nOR     MORE\nGOOD FOR ONE REAL BRIAR PIPE\nSAVE  THI8  ADVERTISEMENT\nTOBACCO SEEDS FOR SALE\nINCE the annual vacation\nhas become a definite pai*\nof modern life, tbe decision\nas to where it will be spent\nis of considerable importance. Canada has a par-\n| ticular appeal to the vacationist, for it has an\nunusual variety of attractions, which\nmay be enjoyed at reasonable cost.\nRecreation Areas Easily\nReached\nFor most people, the summer\nvacation is limited to a few weeks\nand is really shortened by the time\nused in travelling to and from tbe\nlocality selected. Canada has an\nextensive system of good roads and\nexcellent railway services which\ngreatly facilitate travel between\nprovinces. I\ntr\nAttractions Cover Wide\nRange\nCanada presents a striking diversity of natural features\u2014the nigged\nand picturesque Atlantic coast; tbe\nSt. Lawrence river and Great Lakes,\nfte world's greatest inland waterway; the Laurcntsian mountains,\nland of forest and stream; the\nprairies; the majestic Rockies; and\nthe beautiful Pacific coast. Each\nof these areas has its own attractions of scenic beauty and opportunities for enjoyable recreation.\nFishing, hunting, camping, canoeing, and mountain-dumbing may\nall be enjoyed under ideal conditions, while golf and tennis may be   .         \u25a0\u25a0\u2014  a\u2014  -~sai,  w\nplayed practically everywhere. Ac- any of our readers ph\u2014rang a vaea*\ncommoilation includes everything tion. Air\/plicante should state the\nfrom camp site to luxurious hotel,   areas in which they arc interested.\nThose to whom economy is a\nmatter of concern may spend a\npleasant vacation close to nature,\nat surprisingly small ont.\n*\nTravel  Information\nGladly Furnished\nThe National Development Bureau,\nDepartment of thc Interior at\nOttawa, has prepared a scries of\nautomobile road maips, showing\nthe main routes from one province\nto another, also a number of interesting booklets, includirag \"Vacations in Canada\", which describe\nthe tourist attractions of each\nprovince.    These   will  be   sent  te\nDID YOU EVER\nSTOP TO THINK\nG. DUBOIS\n24 Henderson Ave. OTTAWA,\nBuy Your Tbbacco by Mall.\nGet Quality and Save Money.\nONT.\nThat advertising through the printed page haa the necessary attractive-\nneas and eUlclenap 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 advertising ls killing many\na business that should show increasing business Instead of decreasing\nbusiness.\nPeple have been educated to the\nfact that well advertised products ast>\nthe Quality kind and thep won't buy\nany other.\nContinuous advertising of quality\ncreates a buying demand which us-\nsures the advertiser quicker turnover.\nAnn business in this day and time\ncannot stand still. Progress and competition demand that It move ahead\nor go out of business.\nContinuous advertising of quality\nand service builds and keeps the on-\nhdence ot the puulic. Without the con\nfldence of the public, no business can\nmove aheLid.\nContinuous advertising is the modern way of building better business.\nIt proves to the public that the advertisers are proud of what they have\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 aales.\nEvery business having something to\neat- should advertise continuously so\n\u25a0he puol'e may know who they sir,\nwhere enep are, and what they nave\nDo not us a linen cloth in cleaning mirrors or window glass, ae lt\nsheda Hats and causes streaks.\nPower if The Rural\nWeekly Press\nListen to what John H. Perry, President ot\nthe r American Press (^Association, has to\nsay on the influence ot the country  weekly:\n'The force that controls this country of oars, la tbe long\nran, Is the raral editor. In bis capacity as spokesman for\nhundreds of thousands who live and earn 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 yon know. He will tell you the truth.\nAsk any representative of the Interests\u2014big city bankers,\nfor instance, or presidents of great railroad or Industrial\ncorporation. AS.\"\"\n\"The politician. If he Is above peanut sise, will tell you\nthat he worries little about what tbe city papers say; but\nlet even half a dosen country weeklies in hls home state\nor district open on hlm, and he pulls down the lid of hla\ndesk at the state capital and takes the next train hlroe to\nsee 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 yon 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 an\nthinking he finds out by read ng or having others read for\nhim, what the country papers are saying.'\nWe Home-Town Newspaper is always\nReady to Cooperate in giving Service\n THE GRAND FORKS SUN\nUsed Cars at Low Prices\ni\nWe have on hand   some very good secondhand cars a nd trucks in different prices.\nCome in and let us show them to\nyou, if inteiested.\nWe are selling those cars and   trucks   at\na very low price in order to clear them out.\nGRAND FORKS GARAGE\nSouthern California\nTown Topics\nThe funeral of tbe late Roy Wallace Cooper, who was killed in an\nautomobile accident at Christina\nlake on Saturday night, was held on\nWednesday afternoon. The attendance of citizens was very large. In.\nment was made in Evergreen cemetery. Much sympathy ls expsresjsed\nfor the parents of tbe deceased\nyoung man,, who have been very un-\nfortunatg in losing members of their\nfamily duing the past few years.\nMarvin Bailey, who was badly injured In a motor car accident at\nChristina lake Saturday night, ha*l\nreosvered sufficiietfljy yesterday to\nleave the hospital for his home.\nMr.  and  Mrs.  F.   H.  Cunningham,\nMrs.   Geo.   McAffee   and   her  (laugh\n- ter,  Miss  Jessie  Alexander,  accoml-\n....oanied    by    Dr.  R.  McAffee, of Mc-\n,1,-eod, Alta.,  motored    to    town    on\nWednesday,  and   will  be  the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. R. Campbell during\n..their two weeks' stay in the city.\nt bas been authoritatively an-\nnouncqd that the price of liquor in\nthe government ljiquor stores wil),\nbe reduced next week.\nOn Thursday night the district\nwas visited by a good sweltering\nrainfall, lt rained all night, doing\ngood to root crops of all kinds, but\nwas not much help to grain crops.\nMr. and Mrs. S. T. Larsen of\nRiverside-Rock Creek are visitors in\nthe city today on business.\n\u25a0W. Wilson and daughter of Greenwood visited in tho city today on\n(business.\nD. Creech and J. T. Simmons of\nthis city motored to Greenwood\nearly ln the week to do some plumbing work at the C.P.R. station.\nAndrew McCulloch, chief engineer\nof ithe C.P.R. at I'enti'cton, spent\nWednesday In the c\"y renewing acquaintances among our busineas\npeople.\naJV Hi. Matthews of Trail) spenl)\ntbe week-end with his family ln this,\ncity.\nMrs. M. L. Brothers, who has been\nvisiting at the home of her brother\nIn-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Joe\nWillis, ln this city for a couple of\nweeks, returned to her home in Trail\non Sunday evening. Her two sons\nare staying relatives at Christina\nlake.\nThe Cascade ball tossers tangled\nwith the Grand Forks tern Sunday\nlast, mid tbe former team won a\nmost i \",ltlng and well-earned vie-,\ntory b downing the Grand Forks\nboys to' i lie tune of 4 to 3.\nCHIUPINGS from\n.ROCK CREEK\n\u00bb*   AND DISTRICT\n(From The Sun's Correspondent)\nThat passenger tk-aln| Wednesday\nnoon, coming from the west, started\ntwo bad Arcs which might have been\nvery destructive when within six!\nmiles of Rock Creek. Spark from the\nengine falling on the parched, dried\ngrass were soon ablaze. A stiff wind\nwas blowing at the time. The flames\nrolled along at a lively speed. Tbe\nsection men were slow ln putting In\nan appearance owing to their having\nonly a hand speeder, which does not\ntravel as fast as the gasoline speeder, but when they arrived they got to\nwork very quickly with shovels.etc,\nand tried to atop the flro from soing\nany farther. When within about 50\nfeet of the James creek sawmill\nthey fortunotely put out tbe Ore,,\nand the piles of lumber stacked there\nwere saved. Down the Kettle river\ntho flre was burning very fiercely,\nand suddenly it tok a leap across the\nriver and started up the opposite\nbank. It at last was correlled In a\ngulley and was kept from spreading\nfurther, a guard being placed to\nwatch it\n-o\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. William Hutton of\nnear liridesv^le ludtored 'to Rock:\nCreek on Tuesday, calling in to see\nseveral friends. Mr. Hatton reported\nthat moisture was badly needed ln\nthe ground, as It was like flour with\nno substance whatever ln It to keep\nthe vegetables growing.\nRock Creek is having a big dance\non Friday, August 19, uuder the auspices of the Womenjs ajnSjtaAute'i\nin the Rock Creek Creek new hall.\nThe Gustafson orchestra of the Lagoon pavilion at Christina lake will\nplay for the dance. This orchestra ls\nparticularly a line one, with a large\nchoice of snappy music to entertain\nthe crowd. Admission, gentlemen $1,\nladies SOc, with a good supper included. It is erpected tbat there will\nbe a big crowd. The dance uoor is\none of the best in the Interior of\nBritish Columbia and the dances are\nalways   much  enjoyed.\nMrs. Bert Kllett or Kettle Valley\nwas the guest of Mrs Fred Shorn and\nher daughter of Bridesvllle for a few\ndays last week.\nCummin Abel of the Westbrldge\ndistrict was in town last week with\na baflly inflamed eye. Ott going to\nsee the doctor in Greenwood in regard to it. Dr. Wood told him he\nwould have to stop work ln the hay\nfield, as the hay seeds might get in\nthe eye and Irritate lt to a certain\nextent. All his friends hope that his\neye will soon be better.\nThe Misses Margo and Mary Rock\nof Trail, who are visiting with\nfriends ln the valley, motored to\nRock Creek early this week, and\nhuntqd dup several of their ol\nfriends, who were delighted to see\nthem. They are very charming young\nladles and are enjoying their visit\nhere.\nMrs. Ed Hatton of Bridesville is\nvisiting for a few days with Mrs.\nRusch of Rock Creek.\nEd Clappler of Midway motored\nto Rock Creek on Wednesday on a\nbusiness trip.\nMr. and Mrs. Smith of Zenora\nwere in town last nlgbt visiting\nwith friends.\n\u2014o-\nBillle Roberts of Myers creek\nmade a rush call to town on his\nmotorcycle on  Wednesday.\nMiss Annie Schor.n of Bridesvllle\nls visiting with Mrs. J. C. Madge af\nKettle  Valley  for.a  short  vacation.\nA good shower. of rain oame laat\nnight, which was badly needed for\nthe potato crop and other vegetables\nthat have managed to pull through\nthe sweltering heat of the past two\nmonths. It Is surprising how the\nvegetables have managed to keep\nalive and grow iduring auch weather.\n o\u2014\u2014 .\nIf you are going to have a magnificent city, something is In need of\nmoney all the time.\nMIRROR\nBEAUTY SHOP\nPHONE 200\nPhone for our prices.    We do\neither the' ends  of your  hair,\nthe top alone, or the full head.\nPERMANENT    WAVES    $5.00\n(Continued from Page 3)\n(Continued from Page 1)\ni and    pools    of   color on the valley\nlevels.\nThe wide variety, of conditions,\nranging from tha hot dry slopes of\nthe brush-clad foothills to the bleak\nsummits above tlmberline, tbe abode\nof gla lers and perpetual snow,gives\nto the flora an exceedingly diverse\nand Interesting character. Innumerable springs, creeks, rivers, ponds,\nand lakes provide suitable habitats\nfor moisture-loving plants'. Rock?\noutcroppings, enormous cliffs, and\ngravelly ridges accommodate\/ sipei-\ncles adapted to su h situations.\nTbe irregular topography yields\nsouthward-facing slopes, whitph re-i\ncelve the full effect of the sun's rays,\nas well as the northward slopes,\ncool, moist awl shady, where they\nare little felt. The altitude ranges\nfrom 2500 feet in the foothill belt to\nmore than 1.1,000 feet along the\ncrest of the Sierra Nevada.\nItl ls probable that the first white\nmen to look upon Yosemite valley\nwere members of tbe Josetih R.\nWalker expedition of 1833, which\ndescended the westiern slope of the\nSierras. This expedition apparently\ndid not go down Into the valley,\nand the effe tive discovery was not\nmade until 1851, by members or tlie\nMariposa battalion while in pursuit\nof hostile Indians.\nThe first white men who frequented this Yosemite hi nterland were\nminers, sheep herders^ and cattlemen, linen came surveyors and soldiers to guard tbe mountain meadows and forests. And, lastly, tbe\ntourist, at first a little group at long\nintervals, but now in throngs, ti see\ntbe glories of the mountains. The\nfirst systematic reconriulssance of1\nthe region was made by this California geological survey between 1863\nand 1867.\nWe take  orders  for  cleaning  and\npressing, nrlatly done.   Try us once.\nPHONE 200\nCAL-SPA\nMINERAL WATER\nBuilds your resistance. The road to health\nis the road to prosperity. A natural ealcium\ntonic. Corrects acidity of entire system.\nTreatment (11 weeks), $6.23; single buttle,\n$2.25.   Shipped anywhere.\nSOLE  DISTRIBUTORS  POR CANAC %\nD. A. McKINNON &  COMPANY\nGRAND  FORKS. B. C.\n-__\u25a0\nBurns' Garage\nM. H. BURNS, Proprietor\nSecond Street, Grand Forks, Bt C.\nReliable Repair Work\nUnion and Imperial Gas\nDEALBRSINTBB\nNEW ESSEX CHALLENGER\nTHE BEST CAR Ob THE MARKET FOR THB MONEY\nWas a Major\nIn Wrong Army\n\u25a0Major H. Reynolds of London, was\nregistered on a liners passenger list.\nThe purser, running over the names,\nassigned to the same stateroom a\nhusky stockman of Panhandle, Texas. Tbe cattleman protested to the\ncaptain. ''Look here, Cap, I can't\ntravel ita the same stateroom with\nthat Major Reynolds. I can't and I\nwon't far as that goes, neither of us\nlikes the idea.\"\n\"What objection have you to an\narmy officer as a traveling companion?\" the captain asked.\n\"None, generally,\" said the Texan,\n\"only this happens to be the Salvation Army. That major's other name\nIs  Henrietta.\"\nNo Wonder\n\"She says she ls very lonely ln the\nevenings.\"\n\"Yes, her husband never gets out.\"\nThe secret of success is a secret\nto many people.\nDomestic Competition\nIt's nothing out of   the   ordinary\nfor a married man to be outspoken.\nEasy to Answer '\n\"Now, what were idresses like tfen\nyears ago?\" mused the artist.\n,\"Li e mine, dear,\" replied his wife.\nMarshmallows can be usejil as\nholders for the candles of a chllds\nbirthday cake. Bach party guest will\nbe delighted if his piece of cake holds\nmarshmallow and a candle.\nRUSSELL CAFE\nUnder New Management\nWhen in the city, come in and try our 40c\ndaily special lunches\nOn Sundays we serve fif Ac\nChicken Dinners . . . ***\"\nCome in and try our meals, and if satisfied,\ntell others; if not, tell us.\nPermanent Waves\n$5.00\nEvery Beauty Service\nExpertly Performed.\nOur shop is modern\nand rates are reasonable. Phone 55 for appointment.\nIDEAL\nBEAUTY SHOPPE\nMRS. A. A. DOBRY, Beautician\nHereditary\nA caller was entertaining herself\nwith Uttle Muriel, age four, and the\nbaby sister while waiting for their\nmother to appear.\nRepeated efforts failed to get tbe\nbaby, who was just beginning to talk,\nto say a word.\nMuriel watched the visitor's at:\ntempts for a while and then remarked soberly:\n\"It's no use; Jane's awful 'trary;\nthat's the daddy part of her.\"\nA Pocket Lamp\nTo make a pocket lamp, take a\nlong glassbdttle and put 'into it a\npiece of phosphorous about the size\nof a pea. Heat some pure olive oil\nand pourlnto bottle until about one-\nthird full, then cork securely. When\nlight ls needed, uncork for a few seconds and allow air to enter, then replace cork.\nThoughtful Editor\n\"I really think my poem should be\npublished in your paper.\"\n\"Why so?\"\n\"Because I am an old subscriber.\"\n\"My dear friend, we have a number of other old scribers. Their feelings must be considered.\"\nMixing Bread\nIf one cup of thick cream ls used\nwhen mixing bread, it improves the\nbread makes the crust moist and\navoids the necessity of buttering the\n'bread   when   taken from the oven.\nWashday\nIf the yard is too small to hang out\nall tbe wash, try using coat hangehs\nfor the large garments such as heavy\nunderwear. They will take tip less\nspace as they can be hooked side-\nwise on the line and they will also\ndry In better shape.\nHelp..\n\"How do I open this Un?\"\n\"You will  And the dlrrctlons\nside, madam.\"\nIn-\nCatty Chat\n\"This is my twentieth birthday.\"\n'-trange,  today ls my twentieth\nbirthday.\"\n\"Yes, but tbis is mine for the first\ntime.\"\nEvery man can keep a large stock\nof advice to give away.\nDefinition\nA fourth-grade teacher was trying\nto introduce the subject of mining.\n\"What is a mine, Samuel?\" ahe\nasked.\n\"A mine,\" began Samuej, \"why a\nmine's the thing we got inside our\nA good wall mop can be madeby\ntying a flannel bag lver a broom. It\nwill make and ideal mop for brushing off spldtr webs and dust\nAccounting for It\nJimmy\u2014Well, I will say I have a\npretty good opinion of myself.\nBerfle\u2014Yea; you never studied\nyourself ver\/ much, I suppose.\nHOLY TRINITY CHURCH\nREV. W. J. SHiVBRWOOD\nRector\nPhone\n177\nHoly Communion\u2014\n1st, 3rd. 4th and bin    .Sundays   at\n' 8 a.m\n2nd SundavB ln month at 11 a.m.\nMorning Praver and Sermon\u2014\n1st, 3rd. 4th and Bth   Sundays at\n11 a.m\nSunday School\u2014-\nat 10 a.m. until further notice.\nEvening Praver and nermen\u2014\nat 7:30 ezceot the last Sunday In\neach month when inventus: Service\nis held lu the Pariah of Kettle Valley.\nCanoe Trips in Canada\nLakes and Rivers Provide Numerous Attractions\n' Opportunities for an Enjoyable Vacation Almost Unlimited\n\u2014|r-lHE rctiuirements for a suc-\n\" Sijcussful and satisfactory trip\nIby   canoe;   suitable   water,\nJcessful and satisfactory trip\nfi^.'J.'1^1 picturesque country and an\nI y&$ J excellent summer climate,\nk;'\";.i^;;j(.'i\"1 be found almost any-\nLsLiJaJwhere in Canada-. The innumerable lakes and rivers make the\nchoice of trips almost unlimited.\nOno can travel for hundreds of miles\non any of the great rivers, journey-\ninK from lake to lake and portaging\nwhere rapids impede or heights into\n\u2022ene.    Having   decided   upon   the\nkind of trip to be made,' whether\none requiring much effort and experience, or one quite free from\nrapids nnd portages, tbe canoeist has\nonly to select his route.\nEasy of Access\nAlthough railways and the automobile have provided a means of\nrapid transport, Ihere are countless\nplaces in the quiet of the forest,\nout of reach of either. It is such\nplaces, approachable only by canoe,\nthat invite thc adventurer to partake of the wonders of nature. The\nrailways and the development of\ngood roads have however made the\nmajority of canoe routes in Canada\neasily accessible, and one need not\ntravel far from the majority of\nCanadian cities before reaching the\nembarking point, of an enjoyable\ntrip.\nForest Beauty\nIn certain parts one may follow\nthe streams for a long summer\nouting and never see a village or\ndwelling, yet civilization lies so\nclose that return is easily possible.\nWaterfalls, rapids largo and small,\nlakes of singular beauty hidden\ndeep in the forest, and islands\ncovered with pine and spruce trees\nare among the interesting features\nencountered en route. In some\nplaces one may travel hundreds of\nmiles without meeting obstacles of\nany kind.\nThere is a remarkable contrast between the conventionality of modern\nlife and Uio full naturalness of life\nin the great forest, where one may\nit-lax, amid the beauty of natural\nF.uToundiiiKs. A strange appeal of\nimagination comes to one while fol-\n'owing the routes of the historic\nexplorers and contentment prevails\nCITY GROCERY\nFor Staple and Fancy Groceries.\nPrices Right.\nTry our Bulk Teas and Coffees.\nn\nPhone 25\n\"Service and Quality'\nPEN POINTS\nCleopatra is said to have had red\nhair. Tbat was as near to being a|\nblond as was possible ln Egypt\nImaginary troubles fill the world\u2014|\nand no way to exercise them.\nThe average man's ambition ls to [\nlower his record.\nt   Of the many human buds but few|\never  bloom successfully.\nMarriage may be a failure, but so's |\ndivorce.\nA VOLTAGE\nREGULATOR\nWill keep your Receiver operating at the correct voltage and\nssive you several UmeB its cost\nln tubes. It your receiver is out ot\ndate I can put you In a, new nine-\ntube screen grid Superhetrodyne\nin your own cabinet This ls the\nla Radio and fully guaranteed.\nFRANK MOORE\nRegistered Radio Service Engineer\nP. O. Box 393 Phone 181R\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPHONE M\n'S\nE.G. Henniger Co.\n-RAIN, MAY\nFLOUR ANO  FEEO\nLIME AND SALT\nCEMENT ANO PLASTER\nPOU-TRY SUPPLIES\nA. E. MCOOUGALL\n__Sa.1THA.T0a AUD 8UILQEB\nTRY OUR SPECIAL TEA\nat ...(So per\nIb.\nSHOES, SHIRTS, OVERALLS\nGOOD VALUES FOR YOUR\nMONEY\nCALL ANO SEE US BEFORE\nPURCHASING\nJOHN  DONALDSON\nMINERAL MERCHANT\nORAND FORKS\namid thc constant change of beautiful scenery.\n' Fish and Came in Abundance\nCanadian lakes und rirers are\nrenowned for the variety and\nabundance of their fish. Brook and\nlake trout are numerous, tbe latter\noften weighing from fifteen to thirty\npounds while other species of fish\nare plentiful. Eastern Canada is\nwell provided with waterways, well\nsuited to travel by canoe. Canal\nsystems, rivers large and small,\nrapids, falls, lakes, stillwatera and\nall the requirements for an enjoyable\ncanoe trip, await the devotee of thc\npaddle. Whether it be a cruise\nthrough, a well settled region, or an\nadventurous journey through the\nwilderness, the canoeist will find an\nalmost unlimited number of lakes\nand streams.\nThe waterways of western Canada,\nin days gone by, assisted materially\nin unveiling ute mystery of the\ngreat country between lake Superior\nand the Pacific Ocean. Radiating\nfrom lake Winnipeg, are routes of\nromantic interest. Nestling among\ntbe mountains of the coast are many\nbeautiful lakes, also streams that\nwind through the hills, where sport\nfor the. anyer and hunter may be\nfound.\nFree Information\nThe National Development Bureau\nof the Department of the Interior\nat Ottawa, has prepared a series of\nfour booklets entitled \"Canoe Trips,\"\ncopies of which may be had by our\nreaders, free of charge. The series\ncovers the Maritime Provinces, Quebec, Ontario and Western Canada.\nFurther detailed information is avail-\noWo to those who require specific\n.    i on any particular trip.\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS * HANSEN, PROPS.\nCITY BAQQAQE AND SEN ERAL\nTRANSFER\nCOAL, WOOD AND ICE\nFOR SALE\nPHONES*\nPalace Barber Shop\nRAZOR HONINO A SPECIALTY\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nFIRST ST, NEXT P. BURNS'\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Order,\nAtoa Rrepalrtna af All Kinds,\nUphol taring Neatly\n\u00ab. C. McCOTCHBON\nWINNIPEG AVENUE\nRealises Persons\nHo Induce deep In restless persona\ntake a small dose of soda ln a glass\nof warm water before retiring.\nThe Grand Forks San Ig known In\nevery country hi tho world.\nDominion Monumental Works\nAsbestos Product* Co. Roofing\nttaft ESTIMATES FURNISHED\nBnXf\/33 6HH(l F0T(S,8G\nTHE rains of well-\nprinted, neat appear\nlng Stationery as a\nmeans of getting and\nHolding desirable bos\niness has been amply demonstrated. Try\nThe Son for Good\nPrinting.\nWE PRINT-\nWeddlng Invitations\nDance Programs\nBusiness Cards\nVlsittn Cards\nShipping Tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNotcheads\nMlllaa^amg\nPamphlets\nPrice Lists\nEnvelopes\nCiroulan\nDodgem\nPosters\nManns\nEtc\nlatest Styles Types\nTHE SUN\nColombia  Are.  and\nLike Street\nTELEPHONE IU\nWhipped Cream\nWhipped    cream    will    bo much\nsweeter If a small pinch of salt II\nadded to the cream before whipping.\nVengeance la something yon*aee\nrepeated again and again h> history.\nIt is reasonably certain.\nBecause you know tha real facta\nla not always a reaaon -why yon\nshould butt in and opofl tb* talk.\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 1929-05-92","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_08_12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0407222","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"}]}}