"95c12419-3f28-4d16-89c6-7d7522ec0c55"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1924-10-17"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0341147/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " -iS-SA\nA practical way to support your ideals is to support the men who most nearly represent them\nLIBERALS START\nTHE CAMPAIGN\nCol. Kdgett Addressed the\nMember of Liberal Association on Tuesday\nEvening\nToday do ooe in Canada need be\nashamed of Liberalism, or to call\nhimself a Liberal, was the trend of\na short address delivered by Col.\nEdgett, of Penticton, on Tuesday\nevening before n general meeting of\nthe Orand Forks Liberal associas\ntion. Aod the colooel gave good rea\nB os for this assertion.\nThe meeting whs the best attended\nheld here for some time, there being\nabout a hundred persons present,\nnearly half of whom 'were ladies,\nThie indicates that the electors are\nfully alive to the Importance of the\nissues involved in the federal by-i\nelection in thiA-unstituency.\nMr. Edgett went fully into the\nissues involved in the present by-\nelection, and geve good reasons for\nnot ligning himself with either of\nthe old parties on his return from\nthe front. He had siuce watched\ntbe actions of tho tbree parties and\nhad become a Liberal. He was right\nat home in Grand Forks, as ho had\naddressed an audience bere on-a\nprevious occation.\nLegislative Library\ncylnd KETTLE VALLEY ORCHARDIST\nTWENTY-TREK) TEAK\u00E2\u0080\u0094No. 50\n\"Tell me what you Know in trwi\nI can'guessas well as you.\"C\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1924\nenclosed his qunrterly cheque from\npostofliee headquarters. He was in\npoor health at tbe time and in poor\nphysical condition.\nProvincial police and searcher followed his tracks down behind his\noffice and along the railway tracks\nof the C.P.U. Here all traces were\nlost. After both sides of the tracks\nwere beaten out without success, the\nsearch ended. Suicide is the theory\nof the police. The myBtery is the\ndisappearance of Mr. Wilkinson's\ndog.\nL\nFOR THE P.G.E.\nImmigration Officii P. T. McCal\nlum returned toj he city on Satur\nday evening from .1 burliness trip to\nQuesnel, Horsefly, Williams Lake,\nUiske Creek nnd several other points\nNo one need apologize for being a|ln tbe C*riboo, whe.'e he was inves.\ntigating matters in connection with\nLiberal, said the colonel. The King\ngovernment had found the C.N.R. in\nthe hands of politicians, and it was\nbeing operated at a tremendous\ndeficit. The Liberals had taken it out\npolitics; it in now earning more than\noperating expenses, The Liberal\ngovernment had balanced the buget,\nwhich was a very creditable thing for\nCanada to do The fruit growers had\nreceived more protection under the\nKiug government than they did under the Meighen government,and the\nanti dumping clause, brought in by\nHon. Mr. Fielding, is now strictly\nenforced. rt is self operative.\nCol. Edgett compared the treat'\nment given ex service men under the\nBorden and Meighen administrations\nwith that which had been given them\nby the Libera1 administration Under\nthe Meigiien regime they had been denied u second chance to make good\non the land Premier Kim* had appointed a royal commission to enquire\ninto thoir wishes\nThe speaker approval of Premier\nKiug'ti desire lo reform the senate,\nas that body is overruling much good\nlegislation enacted by the house.\nVVh\u00C2\u00BBn tlie Liberal came into po\u00C2\u00AB er,\nsaid Mr. Edgett, the Canadian dollar\nwas worth 86 cents; it is now worth\n100 certs Our domestic and export\ntrade has increased wonderfu|ly, and\nthe wheat of the northwest is now\nparsing through Canadian channels.\nTho three years of tho King administration, concluded Mr Kdgett,\nhas ilone moro to unite all sections of\nCanada than all former governments\ncombined did. Thu, speaker paid a\nhigh tribute to the sterling qualities\nof Candidate Sutherland\nto he, and each year sees work car-\nrind on for longer periods. However, Mr. McNiven has warned oot.\nelders not to come here looking for\nwork, unless thev hnve suffiolent\nfunds to carry then, (or n few\nmonths. He shows that ihe men\nreturning home to British Columbia\nfrom the prairie harvest fields have\nmuch belter chance to pick up the\njobs offering.\nS.ich success has been uid witb in\nthe construction nf the new buildings tor tbe University of British\nColumbia at Point Orey this year\nthat the government has decided to\nprovide for a forestry building, to\nbe used as a testing laboratory. The\nenrollment at the institution for\nnext year is larger than ever before,\naud ihe University of British Columbia is fast taking its place in rhe\nFair Yankee\u00E2\u0080\u0094''Say, pop, wasn't it cute of these English to name -roljt raak of guch inari-tationa all\nver the continent.\nSCENE: LINCOLN CATHEDRAL\nnkee\u00E2\u0080\u0094'Say,\nthis after our great Ahe?'1\nIL\nNEWS AND VIEWS\nHUNT EOR MISSING\nFIFE POSTMASTER\nCOM. 9 TO AN END\nthe British immigrants and Chioese\nimmigration. Mr. McCallum states\nthat the trip over the Pacific Great\nEastern, and the side trips by auto,\nand it was a great revelation to bim.\nThe country in general is rolling\nwith large areas of pasture land,\ncovered with herds of cattle, which\nare gradually giving way to sheep.\nThe many beautiful lakes and\nstreams abound with fish, and ducks\nof all kinds ate to be seen swim\nming on the surface, and a little\nlater in the season ge<*sefrom the\nnorth will be seen in abundance.\nMining operations at Cedar Creek\nare very active, said Mr. McCa'lum,\nbut at present mining on tbe Horses\nliy io at a standstill on account of\nthe death of Mr. Ward, who held\nimge mining interests at tbis point.\nMr McCallum considered himself\nlucky in going to Horsefly, as be\nthere discovered bis brother's grave,\nwbo was drowned iu the Horsefly\ntweuty seven years ago. He fount:'\nthat there had been erejted a nicely\npaint d tence and headboard with\nthe name and date inscribed thereon.\nMr. McCalium says that on his\nmore than 300,000 miles of travel\nduring the past sixteen years he has\nnever met a more congeal il and\nobliging sleeping car conductor than\nJohn Phillips, whom everybody\ncalls Jobn for short. His sole de<\nsii'e seems to he to cater to the coin-\nfort of the passengers. The present\nterminus ofthe Pacilic Gnat E-iaiem\nis Quesnel, wbeie it makes connection by boat for Fort Oeorge. Mr,\nMcCullum can see reason why,when\ntransportation is opened to the Peace\nUiver couutry, the Pacilic Great\nEastern sbould uot be a revenue pro\nducer fur tbe province.\nVictoria, Ont. 16. Further evis\ndeuce of the importance of B.C.\nports in the grain trade is shown\nthrough the incorporation last week\nof the Saskatchewan Cooperative\nElevator company, of Regina and\nVancouver, with a capital of #5,-\n000,000. Ever since Premier Oliver\nlaunched his famous drive for lower\nfreight rates prairie grain growers\nhave turned their eyes to the Pacific\ncoast. Alrea y millions of dollars\nof profit have come to this province\nand the prairie province through\ndecreased rates, and the end is not\nyet.\nTenders have beeu called for hy Hon.\nW. H. Sutherland, minister of public works, for the completion of the\nHope Spence's Bridge section ot tht\ntraiisporv.ncial highway, nl a cost\nof approximately 11,000,000. An\nadditional $250,000 will be required\nfor ths construction of tbe steel\nbridge across the Fraser river at\nSpuzzuua. The bids are returnable\nwithin four weeks and the new\nlegislature will be asked to decide\nupon the gra ting of the necessary\nmoney.\nA contract has also been let for\n$60,000 to Fred Dawson, contractor.\nVancouver, for highway work between Golden and Yoho Park. This\nwill link up the circle route of tbe\nBanff-Windermere highway.\nHon. T. D. Pattullo, minister of\nlands, reports that the forest revenue\nfor .September was $308,000, a gain\nof $50,000 over the same moutb in\n1923.\nIN ACCIDENT\nAnother link in British Columbia's highway system iB to be forged\nImproved unemployed conditions^\nin British Columbia arv reported by\nJ. D McNiven, deputy minister of\nlabor, who returned recently from\nattending a labor conference at Ottawa. Seasonal employment in this\nprovince is not so marked as it used\nHistoric Site at Friendly Cove, B.C.\nCollision of Bicycle unci\nAutomobile Results in\n'Death of Young Doukhobor\nAfter a weeks searching police\nofficers bave reported to Inspector\nDunwoody, of the providcial police I-\nat Nelson, tbat no success haB Been\nachieved io tho hunt for J. F. Wil\u00C2\u00BB\nkiusoiii postmaster al Fife, wbodis-\nappeared on October 3 with his dog\nand'bis old shotgun.\nTbe search bas been fruitless, although every portion of territory\nnear Fife has been carefulty gone\nover by organized searching parties\nThe search has been dropped for\nthe present.\nWilkinson left Fife on October 3,\nafter arranging his mail sacks some\nhours earlier tban usual. He left a\nletter for bis wife, a school teacher\nfive miles from Fife, in whioh waa\nOnce more the labor department,\nunder Attorney General Manson,\nhas effected the sett ement of labor\ndifferences. The threatened mine s'\nstrike iu Nanaimo was averted and\nafter the men bad quit work for one\nday they went back again. Deputy\nMinister J. D. McNiven was largely\ninstrumental in smoothing over tbe\ndifficulties of tbe miners and a tbree\nyear agreement has heen signed.\nOespiee comparative hard times all\noverthe continent, the workers have\noniy suffered an insignificant cut in\ntbeir remuneration. The daily\nbonus of one dollar was cut to 90\noents.\nTbe picking of the apple crop in\nthe valley ia now about finish d.\nThe historic past of the Nootka section of the West Coast, waa recalled\nrecently whon Lieutenant-Governor Walter C. Nichol, of British Columbia, unveiled and dedicated a monument commemorating the explorations of\nthose great English navigators, Captain Cook and Captain Vancouver.\nThe monument was built under the auspices of the Historic Sites and\nMonuments Board of Canada whieh is placing similar memorials across tlio\nDominion on sites hallowed by interesting chapters of Canadian history.\nA large party travelled on the Canadian Pacific S.S. Princess Maquinna\nfor the ceremony and left the steamer at the cannery whaif, boarding\nlaunches for the short run to Friendly Cove. The pacty included Lieut.-\nGovernor Nichol, H. J. S. Muskett, his secretary, Judge Howay and Mr.\nForsyth, Dr. C. S. Newcombe, the well-known historical authority who\nwrote the \"Circumnavigation of Vancouver Island,\" Prof. W. N. Sage of the\nUniversity of British Columbia, Mrs. R. B. McMicking, representing Uie\nI.O.D.E., Mrs. and Miss Howay, Thomas Deasy, late Indian agent for\nthe Queen Charlotte agency and a pioneer of 1X59, Dr. D;ivid Donald,\nMrs. Cave-Browne-Cave, and Professor Macmillan Brown, chancellor of\nthe University of New Zealand. Dr. Macmillan Brown is one of the leading\nethnologists of the Pacific, and has been spending the summer on the coast\ninvestigating the Indians and tlieir customs.\nThe new monument is seven feet broad by eleven feet high, with a\nstandard size bronze tablet bearing the following inscription:\n\"Nootka Sound, discovered by Capt. Cook, in March, 177.S. In June,\n1789, Spain took possession and established and maintained a settlement\nuntil 1795. The capture of British vessels in 1789 almost led to war, which\nwas avoided by the Nootka Convention, 1790. Vancouver and Quadra met\nhere in August, 1792, to determine the land to bo restored under the convention.\"\nA feature of the entertainment provided those who took part in the unveiling ceremony was the Indian dancing, arranged by aborigines 'iom\nClayoquot Sound, thc Wicaninish of the early navigators' journals.\nTentative plan** arc afoot for an elaborate pageant tf.' be held \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' 'V1-nelly\nCove, Nootka Island, in four years time to celebrate tho 160th - ......ary\nof events commemorated by the unveiling of the cairn.\nAlex Jmayoff, a Doukhobor\nyouth, was fatally injured on Saturn\nday night at the corner of Winnipeg avenue and Third street when\nhe run agiinst D, McPherson's automobile on an unlighted bicycle.\nMr. McPherson and Carl Wols\nfrnm were driving down Winnipeg\navenue at a moderate speed. When\nIhey reached the Winnipeg hotel,\nJmayoff made a dash on his wheel\nfrom the side of building into the\nstre t, running into the side of tbe\nctr. He was thrown violently to the\nstreet, on his back, lt is supposed\nthat his ead must have struck a\nrook or some oiher hard substanop,\nas tbere was a deep wound on tbi\nback of it. The car did not puss\nover him and then* were no other\nwounds on his body.\nJmayoff was carried into Uie Winnipeg hotel and Dr Kingston was\nuumrained. Later he wus removed\ntil tbe Orand Forks bospil il, hut he\ndied four hours after thi ident\nwithout b ving regained oi 'ioues\nriefs\nAi the iri(*tiest on Monday morning the jury, composed of Donald\nMet' ilium, foreman, Miles Barn I ,\nWilliam Simpson,II. II Henderson,\nDun Docksteader and W. Chalmers,\nreturned a verdict of sccld-nta\ndeath, and Mr. McPherson w i- ex.\noocrated from all blame A ri con ,\ntneudation was also made thai more\nlights he placed at the intersettionuf\nthese streets.\nContract to Lay Bridge\nStreet Cement Sidewalk Awarded to T. A.\nWright\nToe ri^ulur meeting of the city\ncouncil wus held in the OOUOCil\nobambei on M oday evening, Mayor\nA-fs and Aid. Lid icut, Mel s\nami Miller bt-iug present\nTin COUOCil decided to ask for\niii v. lenders for tbe sale of :he w ne-\nhou-! ir the Grenby smelter site,\nsuch lenders to be in October 27 at\n(i jl Is..\nP. Burns & Co. were grauted per-\nmission to install a small drain pipe\n.i rose the alley in block 6,\nTl,' mcil granted permission lo\nthe (Jr toby company to issue a deed\nto the South Kootenay Wadr\nPowei company for a small parcel\nof hod occupied by ihe Bubstation,\nthe easement of the power oompany\nacross district lots 391 and 495 to\nremain as at present.\nThe proposed cement sidewalk on\nBridge s reel wae discussed jxi some\nlength Tlie chairman of the finance\noommittee submitted a report of\nreveiiin s, for tbe lirst nine months of\nthe current year, which showed a\ndecrease over tbe same period of last\nyear. The council decided, however, to proceed with the work :.nd\nappointed Aid Liddicoat as engi-\nni \u00E2\u0096\u00A0! in charge, in the absence from\ntown of Aid, McDonald.\nI'h \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 cuter and tight committee\nreported about j- of an inch of\nwaler io the Mill creek flume; also\ntbst the question of water rates to\nthe West Kootenay Company was\nnaisi negotiation, nnd also that the\nreservoir will be emptied, cleaned\nand inspected, and that the hydrantB\nwill be drained mid prepared for\nwinter.\nThe hoard of works reported that\nthe nev drain at tbe head of Win-\nn'peg avenue hud been completed\nund the railing on tbe Winnipeg\navenue fill bad been repaired; trespass signs had been erected ut the\nOranby smelter site.\nTbe council decided to keep tlie\ncaretaker at the c-tnet'ry at work\nuntil October Slst.\nTbe mayor and the city clerk were\nauthorized to sign the contract cuv-\neriug the cement sidewalk on Bridge\nstreet.\nUnremitting in hie efforts to s\ncure tbe removal of freight rates di\ncrimination against British Columbia, Premier Oliver has returned\nfrom another trip to Ottawa. Wbile\nhe bad no victory to announce in\ntbis connection,it is learned that the\ngovernment leader's representations\nhave brought home in ni uncertain\nmanner to the Canadian govern\"\nment that unless justice is given this\nprovince serious action may have to\nbetaken. The matter wi[l be aired\nduring tbe coming session of lbe\nlegislature.\nAt a special meeting at 11:,')() tbiH\nmorning, the oonncil awarded\ncon tract for the cement sidi-\nthe\nwalk on Bridge strei t to T. A.\nWright at $810,o\ni last week lo growers by\nii (.-' Exobange ut 8s I moo\nidvai payment on lbe\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0rop nf lo cents a box\nweek of the close of the\nI ibis yurii't v h u feathi r\nIn tbe ip of tbe Afuooiated Growers li i he looal exchange of Salmon\nAro. Ii not yet known what tbe\nfinal p'ii.,r will be for Wealthies,\nWoik in the concrete warehouse\nat that plsce is proceeding rapidly,\nand i iuforced concrete walls ate\npre ii. illy completed to the top.\nThe ion is now in place and cement\nand gi \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"1 ire being raised to tbis\nlevel b. means of a bucket and\nchain eh valor operated by nn old-\nstyle automobile engine which has\nbeen rigged up as a stationary engine. Water has also boen laid on\nnt theroof.and the concrete is mixed\nand poured into theS.inch 'orin of\nthe second storey wall. The roof\nitself is flat, with a slope to the wes',\nand will be covered with heavy roof-\nini* material,\nNo hoy w.ho I- denied College\ntraining can think up so many ways\nto ask dad for money .i.'.* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -*W****W-\ MB \u00C2\u00AB* \"*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nIHHMMMWIini\nTHE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n3to> (Sratti. Jfarka \u00C2\u00A7un\nAN INDEPENDENT NEWS a\P11\nG. A. EVANS, EDITOR AHO **> J JLISHER\nFSH8UB8CRIPTION RATES\u00E2\u0080\u0094 PAY VILE IN ADVANCE\nOne Tear (in Canada and Great Britain) SI.OO\nOne Year (in the United States) 1.50\nAddresr -\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPhonb 101R\nOFFICE: COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET\n-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2cations to\njThk Grand Fork's Sun\nGrand Forks. \i C\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1924\nNotes \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Notions \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Notables\nThe fruit grower of Yale constituency will,\nif he has his own best interests at heart, vote\nfor D. W. Sutherland on election day. The\npresent Liberal government at Ottawa has\ngiven adequate protection to the fruit itidus\ntry of the province, and it has made the antidumping clause effective, things that the Borden and Meighen administrations failed to do.\nTbere is no doubt of the duty on fruit having\nbeen imposed against the will ol the people of\nthe prairie provinces, and of the government\nmaking enemies in that part ofthe country by\nnot putting fruit on the free list. If the electors\nof Yale, then, return an opposition member the\nOttawa government would be justified in believing that British Columbia does not want\nthe present duty on fruit, and it might accede\nto tha wishes of the prairie people. The government has two years more to run before it\nneeds appeal to the country, and in that time\nthe British Columbia grower might be ruined.\nYale is the principal fruit growing district in\nlhe province, and it is the duty of Yale to tell\nOttawa that it is satisfied with the present\nprotection of the industry.\nmarry her a third time and divorce her. But\nbefore he marries her a fourth time she must\nhave been married, if only for one day, to\nsome other man and then divorced. If a husband chooses, he may indulge in a cubic divorce process by saying before two witnesses,\n\"I divorce you with three divorces.\"\njenijan\u00C2\u00A3\nLatest available figures show the white race\nis not in the majority. Colored races, in fact,\nare in the majority of 2 to 1. The whites\nnumber 520,000,000; the Mongolian, 420,000,-\n000, the brown races, 370,000,000, and the\nnero race 520,050,000.\nCaravans as cozy as small flats, with a speed\nof 30 miles an hour, are the newest form of\nluxury for Londoners who love the simple\nlife. The caravans are twelve feet long, and\nafford sleeding accommodations for three persons. They have good kitchen, sinks and ventilated larders.\nMan proposes\u00E2\u0080\u0094or the girl gets left.\nTrees some'imes assume grotesque shapes\naud one can trace in their branches the outlines\nof animals or birds. Occasionally, too, the\nmonarchs of the forest' may resemble giants\nand monsters of legendary lore. But not often\ndo they grow in such a way as to give the idea\nof a geographical formation. Such a tree, however, can be seen growing in \"The Lady ofthe\nLake\" district of Scotland. Its short and long\nlimbs give a distinct impression of the map of\nEngland.\nThe man who persists in doing others often\nterminates his career by doing time.\nSay \"Bayer\"-Insist!\nFor Pain Headache\nNeuralgia Rheumatism\nLumbago Colds\nC-* A.****. Accept only a\n%J&f^^ Bayer package\nLADIES\nwhich contains proven directions\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxen of 12 tablet*\nAlso bottles of 24 and 100\u00E2\u0080\u0094Druggists\nAspirin Is tlio trade murk (registered ln\nCanada) of lin yer M au u I'm-1 UN of Mono-\nacetlcncldctttcr of Salic.vHcuclil\nThe Nile has a greater variety of fish than\nany other river in the world. An expedition\nsent by the British museum brough back 9000\nspecimens.\nMore than 2,122,970 acres of forest lauds\nhave been acquired by the American federal\ngovernment on the watersheds of navigable\nstreams as a safeguard agaiust floods and to\npromote the regularity of stream flow, it is disclosed in a circular issued recently by the\nforest reserve. The purchase of the land was\nprovided for thirteen years ago by the passage\nof the Weeks law. Thc federal government\nalready controlled large national forests b the\nwest which to a large exte it were located on\nthe watersheds of navigable streams tliere, .so\nmost of the land acquired under tho Weeks\nlaw is in the east and south.\nIn the course of an investigation of some\nplant diseases that attack the common onion\nplant, Dr J. C. Walker has discovered that\nthe colored variety of onions aro highly resistant to the disease, whereas the pure white\nonions succumb at once. The secret is that\nthc skins of the colored onions contain a\nchemical which is poisonous to the germs\nc uising the disease. If one ol these germs\ntries to ponetrate into the colored onion bulb\nthe germ is killed. White onions lack ihe\ngerm poison and disease finds ihem there fore\nan easy prey.\nSciucely as big as a tooth, the tiniest skull\nin the world was brought recently to the\nUnited .States. It took infinite [jiitiei co and\nskill at the hands of a Chiue.se woikman who\nlabored many months to complete lhe curiosity. It is complete in every detail and\ncarved from a minute piece oi ivory small\nenough to fit on the tip of a pencil.\nTo protect local buyers of goo i- against\nmisrepresentation in the length of cotton\ngoods, a government regulation in Egypt requires that all goods be folded in lengths of\none meter or yard.\nCustom in Turkey has math almost any\ntrivial cause sufficient ground for a man to\ndivorce his wife. It has made the Turk man\nthe owner of the power to divorce. He may\nrid himself of his wife by merely saying before\ntwo witnesses, \"I divorce you \" Then, if he\nwishes, he may marry her again ior a second\ntime, divorce her by thc same simple process,\nThese roses under my window make no\nreference to former roses, or to better ones;\nthey are for what they are; they exist with\nGod today. There is no time to them. There\nis simply ihe rose; it is perfect in every moment of its existence. Before a leafbud has\nburst, its whole life acts; ln the full-blown\nfloMer there is no more; in the leafless root\nthere is no less.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Emerson.\nIn all the nniverss there are no two souls\nalike. There are no two with the same work\nto do.\nThe mau who habitually shirks responsi\nbilities, misses opportunities for developing\nhis capacities. Accepting responsiqilities de\nvelops initiative, inventiveness, ingenuity, resourcefulness and efficiency. It does what\nnothing else can do.\nNext to conscience, pride is the best monitor.\nBy means of photographs of the sun, Prof.\nG. H. Peters, ofthe United States observa\ntory, showed members of the American Astronomical society in session at Hanover, N,\nII., how the number of spots on the sun had\ndecreased and increased durin^a pi riod of\nmany months Few spots in August, 1923,\nafter several months of decrease in numbers\nand followed by a sharp increase in September\nwere taken to indicate the ending of a cycle of\n11 years of solar activity and the beginning of\na new period of similar length\no4ncient History*\nItems Taken Prom The Urand Porks Sun lor the Corresponding\nWeek Twenty Years Ago\nQuite the newest thing iu town is a portable\ngasoline sawmill for cutting cordwood.\nThe track ay ing machiue of the Great\nNorthern railway reached tlie Granby smelter\nWednesday morning.\nThe electric charge car, a great labor saver\nover the method heretofore employed in charging the furnaces, has been installed al the\nGranby smelter.\nAt the Armstrong Jair Martin Burrell, of\nthis city, took four first prizes and two seeond\nprizes for apples, two first prizes for pears\nand one first prize for grapes.\nHere in Grand Porks we don't have to\ndodge automobiles, for obvious reasons, but\nmust be satisfied with dodging bicycles, which\nproves almost as exciting a pastime Now\nthat the rainy season is here, and the streets\nare unusually muddy, the bicyclists have more\ngenerally taken to the sidewalks.\nK. SCI1KER\nWholes-ili*! and Beta!I\nTOBACCONIST\ns-uier.iis\nJuuvhuu Cigars, .Pipes\nConiectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGnmu troik**\u00C2\u00BB B. V*\nSome lnt< lTstlng facts were mada\npublic by E. J. Belleisle, superintendent ot lho fish and game de-\npa; Iment of the Province of Qiuboc,\nw'ni .i i:i Montreal\nprovin r. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 now li \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nlife, ho r:.ys, mainly\nconservation policy,\ncorves are rent '. ,,,\nClllitm t .: ! J ' uruie\nthey ap wan'.;\nf>U\u00C2\u00BBl si; ':, , imiin t:.:c,..\nOi'..' 1 n00 wardens.\nrecently. The\nling witli wild\nbecause uf its\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.-/hen by pre-\nfish and game\n:.:;>;':,; 'hat\ni.-'. There are\n'!\u00C2\u00A3 a lo'.ai ux\nKeep Cool\nLook Cool\nand Feel\nComfortable\nat little cost. Just buy\na couple of those nice\nBungalow\nDresses \u00C2\u00B0*n'y $1.50\nand a pair of Sandals,\nThen you may laugh at\nthe hot days.\nS. T. HULL\nEstablished 1910\nReal Estate and insurance\nRealdent Agent Grnnd Porka Tow Ditto\nCompany, Limited\nFaring Orchards City l'rnperly\nOsTent-! ut Nelaon. Cttljrary, Wlhssli ear lisi-l\nothes Pruirii'p.iintH. Vmirmivor Ajfenr :\nPl'NDKH INVKSTMKNTS\nK.VCTKNBUI1Y LANDS 1.1*1.,\nK.teblUhCil In 1910. wears* U: t. ;>oatllt*si iss\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2install reliable Information ' 'iiisiariifiirr l lilt,\ndistrict.\nWrite tor On* I lltsl ntnse\nE,C. Henniger Go.\nDONALDSON\nS\nPhone 30\nGrain, Hay\nFlour am! Peed\nLime and Suit\nCement and Plaster\nPoultry Sun-plies\nGrand Forks, IJ. C.\n'i';,.! '.' nas-Canada Limited, crack\ntrajiscontuenia' express of the Ca-\nnadain Pacific Railway, completed\nits last iu'i uf tlu HABOll on September 31th. and will not be\nope ated again until next May. The\ntn:in, which ;.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. Lhe fastest long-distance express in North America,\ncovered 75S,74S miles in the reason,\nor three time\" the distance between\nthe earth and the moon, in its 238\nruns, and carried the equivalent of\nt!5,000 passengers for varying distances.\nThe new win;-: of the Chateau\nLake Louise, the Canadian Pacific\nRailway's hotel at Lake Louise, one\nof the choicest beauty spots in the\nRockies, is now under construction\nto replace that portion destroyed by\nfire some months ago. It will be a\nnine-storey, fire-proof, steel-frame\nstructure of stujeo, brick and stone,\nrichly furnished in the best style of\na mountain hotel, and will contain\n280 bedrooms, bringing the total in\nthe hotel up to 390.\nThe hunt for fur is extending\nnorthward each year, according to\nofficials of the Hudson's Bay Company and Rcvillon Freres. They\nhave already despatched their\nsteamers on their annual tour of\nthe northern posts which each season are being located farther and\nfarther north as the field of the\npelt hunters Is extended into the\nArctic. The Hudson's Bay Company now haa a numerous chain of\nposts in Huff inland and other areas\nnorth of Hudson Strait.\nCorporation of the City of Grand Forks\nMUNICIPAL\nVOTERS' LIST\nEOR 1925\nWill be composed of the names of the Registered\nowners of real property and registered holders of\nagreements for sale, as at^November 30th next.\nAnd Householders and Licensees who have taken\nthe necessary statutory declaration during this month.\nSuch declaration may be takken and must be filed at\nthe Office of the City Clerk on or before October 31st.\nJOHN A\nL\nHUTTON.\nCity Clerk.\nMassey-Harris\nIMPLEMENTS\nVVe are agents for the well known Massey-\nHarris line of . farm equipment. Lot us\nfigure on your needs.\nA Complete Line of Garden Tools\nMILLER & GARDNER\nFurniture and Hardware\nBeauty Flies For Speckled Beauties\nabove pretty girl, one of a party of five\nher string of speckled beauties.\n|t. 3 .vite in the mountains of Northern Quebec is famous\nJ as p summer and winter resort. Winter times they use a\nwingless aeroplane for ski joring, but in summer they put the\nwings and a body on and use it for fishing and swimming. Behind almost every mountain of the Laurentians there is a lake\nor two \u00E2\u0080\u0094 so the plane comes in handy for jumping ovr the\nhills to chase the sporting bass and trout to their lairs. The\nhas just come in from a flying trip to a nearby lake and is justly proud of THE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nE. P. Ranch improving Western Stock\nH\nere art\ndTh\nere\nMore than ono hundred and fifty\ntraders from the Far North arrived\nin Edmonton, Alta., recently bringing with them fur sales to the value\nof approximately $500,000.\nTarzan Second, the largest wooden scow in thc world, was launched\nrecently at the Wallace shipyards,\nVancouver, 13.C She is 1,000 tons\nburden and has .^10,000 feet of British Columbia lumber in her makeup. The scow is to be used as a\ncarrier for a great pile-driver fo\u00C2\u00BB\nSydney E. Junkins Company.\n(Top)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tlie Prince of Wales' bent Brn*K (ratten nre here Heen ut work on IiIn ranch nt HIbIi Ulver, Alca.\nTney nre n Ciiinoux lieril nnd incliislc many ;>rl\u00C2\u00BBic winners).\nI1\"*'*)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Will Somcrsi,\" n fumosiH race-lions- IsclonftinK to ills >i.-sis.-.iy the KIsik, iiii.: loaned to the Prince\not Wale's, who Im becphsK him on his ruisch nt IHeh River to Improve the equine Kloeb s>f Ailsertn.\n(Illulil)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Kine of the Fairies;\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094ii senior uml Krnud champion Short Horn hull Inipo.teil and owned liy the\nPrince of WnlcH iiusl one of the nsiiny fine nnlmuls on thc Prince's. Hunch nt IHkIi Klver on the t,'n!irnry-l.etli-\nbrldgc branch of the Cunudlau Pnclllc.\nThe way to approach the E.P. ranch is from Calgary\nto High River, 40 miles south, en the Canadian\nPacific Railway. From High River one lias to drive\nsouthwest a distance of 36 miles through one of the\nrichest grain-growing and stock-raising countries in\nNorth Ameriea. In the distance the jagged peaks of the\nRockies dip the clouds and below, weli-wooded, are the\nfoothills. The road cuts through the centre of the\n\"Bar-U\" ranch aud about one mile and a half from the\nlimits of the \"Bar-U\" the low rambling bungalow where\nthe Prince in now living is seen through a pretty glen. It\nis a homelike looking place typical of many a rancher's\nhome in \"Sunny Alberta.\" Here his Royal Highness goes\n\"back to the land.\"\nThe Prince of Wales has never ceased to exhibit a\nkeen interest in his ranch, and fresh indications are\nperiodically given of the importance ha attaches' to it\nand the work it is doing. After purchasing tho ranch, and\nbeforo returning to England, the Prince made arrange-\nmentn for the shipment of some o( tho best st< \u00E2\u0096\u00A0)\u00E2\u0096\u00A0: in the\nBritish Iska io tho Canadian .Vest. Thorouflibrea\nhorses came from tho Royal stall, Shi rthorn I fn i:i the\nKing's farm, Shropshire sheep ttoz. .... Duke pf V \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\nminster's estate, and hardy Dartmoor ponies from the\nDevon Moors, a typo of animal previously unknown in\nCanada. From time to time since then fresh additions\nof the most excellent stock have been made. The wort:\nstill continues.\nIn an area such as Western Canada, which has for\nyears devoted itself to the elevation of the quality of\nlivestock and has become internationally famous for the\nsuperior typo of its horses and cattle, importations musr.\nbe of an outstanding distinctiveness to be worthy of\nspecial note, but this tha E.P. Ranch has effected. At\nAlberta provincial exhibitions the animals from High\nRiver are attractive features.\nIn its brief history, the E.P. Ranch has come to play\nan important part in the Western Canadian live-stock\nindustry, and it has done not a llttlo in the development\nof a more sympathetic understanding for Canadian\nagriculture in the. British Isltjd. Its establishment was\nan indication of tho Importance attached to agriculture\nin the Dominions of the Empire its continuance and\npromotion an encouragement to the western live-stock\nindustry, faith in the future, and a stimulus to the\n.*.'.'. i*anient bf perfection ' * breeding.\nTwo iiii laurs have bcen located\nIn the Red Doi \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \" illey, Alta., near\n11 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Canadian Pacific Railway lino\n' the University of\nTor into i , rom posed oi\nfow whi prospected fo\u00C2\u00BB\n* '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"' in l gorge and are\n!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 up I hi prehistoric mon-\nston -.,, nl to tha Royal On-\ntario In \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 urn .*.- >i 'ier skeleton\nI b n located By the Geological\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - y of Canada.\nOne of the oiititanding features\nof Cai ;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2. i tr with the Orient\nduri**sj tbi ; a it year er so has been\nthe i-eniq 1 i icn -ise in wheat\nflour ;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .-. . -,. I.,r rU* of Canadian\nwh.-at flout |nt*> :' i'i : .long in 1923\nwere th - :..\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i rocord, showing\nan inc. . of I I par cent in volume oyer thpse of 11)22. The fig-\nures an.! values were: 11)22, 79,585\nbarrels, vt-lued at \u00C2\u00A3120,060* 1923,\n191,821 barrels valued at \u00C2\u00A3240,044.\nOn July 11, Her Majesty the\nQueen of Spain and her two daughters visited the Canadian Pacific\nRailway's pavilion *t the British\nEmpire Exhibition Her Majesty\nevinced deep interest in all she saw\nand declared the exhibit to be \"perfectly lovely.\"\nAlthough the present season of\nocean travel has reached the period\nusually associated with a falling off\nin the number of passengers, steamship companies report that little decrease is apparent this year and\nthat the total volume of passenger\ntraffic in 1924#will probably bt the\nlargest of ans fear since the war.\nElectrG-piafciiii.g a Canadian Railway Operation\n-shewing electro-plating opera Hunt, at tlio Angus Shops, Montreal. No. 1 shows the tanks In which aumll a-rttcleB an 1\nIng process. The text below explains the other photographs fully.\nI for plating, and No. 8 the\nPassengers on the Trans-Canada ana other Canadian trains have often\nadmired the tableware with which the dining cars are equipped, but\ncomparatively few of the travelling public appreciate the extent to which\neleotro-platlng enters into every day use on a Railway. As a matter of\nteot, practically all metal hardware pans of passenger equipment interiors are plated, many of the engine parts, Including the copper re-\nflector of the head-light are plated, and various platings are used, on a\nthouaand and one articles which enter daily into the life of a railroader.\nThe traveller notices the sliver plate perhaps more than any other,\nbut many metals are used by the railroad companies. Cold, for in-\nstance, IB used by the Canadian Paolfic for plating- pepper caster tops\nand similar articles, copper is used on lighting end other metal car fixtures, zinc on refrigerator hardware, nickel on kitchen utensils, tlu on\ntrainmen's lanterns, mercury on telegraph elements and aluminum or\nlead on miscellaneous articles.\nAt its Angus Shops, Montreal, the Canadian Pacific Railway Company\nhas quite an extensive plant where the most of its electro-plating is car-\nried on. The method used by this Company Is a simple one but none the\nI\u00C2\u00ABn effective.\nThe articles to be plated are first chemically cleaned, after which\ntbey are usually bung from a metal bar into a long vat where they ave\nImmersed in a chemical solution which varies with the metal''to be d;v\nposited. The electric current, which is of low voltage, is. co:\npositive polo to the metal plate or plates, and the negativ, lu i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i< r\nMB ****** tk* artlelea to be plated are suspended. As the electric cur-.\nrent flows from the plating metal to the suspended artiotesv the metal Is\ncarried through the solution and deposited ln the form of a thin coating\nover the entire surface of the required article.\nThis process is well illustrated In No. 2, which shows two electrlo\nheadlight reflectors ln the process Of receiving silver plating. In this\ncase the plate of silver is suspended ln the centre of the reflector, which\nis filled with cyanide ef potassium solution, and the electric current flows\nfrom the plate to the reflector which ls, itself, the negative pole.\nIllustration No. 3 shows the next step in the treatment of the headlight reflector, which, by the way, gives the highest concentration of light\nknown. This is hand burnishing, the operator burnishing two reflectors\nin a working (lay. For arttelos which can be readily polished by a\nrotating buffing wheel, this is accomplished ln the manner shown in No. 4.\nUpon completion of the polishing operation, articles to be so treated are\nplaced in a metal container and, by means of a small compressed air gun,\nsprayed with suitable lacquer. If it ls desired to oxidise the plated\narticle ie order to make it harmonize with woodwork or other material,\nas ia oft\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 tlio case with copper platings, It Ib exposed to heat or vapor,\nor immersed in some solution prior to the application of the finishing\ncoat of. lacquer.\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway Company was the first large corporation iu Canada to lnstal its own electro-plating plant, but during the last\n, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 vei:-, thia method of protecting metal from oxidation has developed\ninto quite au industry and one which employs a large number of i\n' woi ionen.\nffi\n&j DO YOU WANT\n8 THE PEOPLE\nJ\u00C2\u00A7 TO READ YOUR %}\nM ADVERTISEMENT ^\nB '. I\nPeople take The Sun pW\nbecause they believe M\nit is worth (he price we ffj\ncharge f <>r it. It is -**}}\ntherefore reasonable to sL\nennnneA tli ji i fli-p-v r-f\u00C2\u00BBHcl Sri\nI\nffi\nSj WE DO NOT\nit* WANT CHARITY\nADVERTISING\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\e*\ntM\nsuppose that they read\nits contents, including\nadvertisments. This\nis not always the case\nwifh newspapers that\nare offered as prem- RB\niums with chromos or hf,\nlottery tickets hf\nm\nB\nfi\nAdvertising \"to help J|\nthe editor.\" But we do {Jj\nwant bus!nessadver-lis- m\nang by progressive busi- Jj\ni,ess men who know Jj\nthat sensible advertis- Jj\ning brings results and Jj\npays. If yon have some- JJ\nthing to \u00C2\u00BBffer ihe pub- JJ\nlie th i.i will benefit Jj\nthem and you as well, Jj\nthe newspaper reaches Jj|\nmore people than a bill Jj\nboard jj\nM\nM\nfi\nfi\nfi\nfi\nand if > ou haves the \)**l\ngoods you cmdobusi- \J**\\nness with them u-*\\nSUN READERS\nKNOW WHAT\nTHEY WAiT THE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nFor Flavor\ninsist on\nH009\nAlways fresh and pure. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sold\nonly in sealed aluminum packets.\nNews of the City\nMr, eud Mre. J. P. McNevin, formerly of Qrand Forks but now living in Vancouver, visited at tbe\nbome of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hutton for a few days tbis week. Tbey\nwere returning bome from an extended trip to Nova Scotia, Capo\nBreton Island and many points in\ntbe Maritime provinces.\nIt might be possible to train the\nrobins to become expert apple packers. Tbey oan pick an extra fancy\napple from a cull every time.\nIt isn't at all difficult to forget\nabout keeping up tbe fire wben you\nare listening to the radio.\nLiberal committee rooms have\nbeen opened in the Henniger building.\nMayor Acres went up to Green\nwood last nigh .\nSCHOOL BOARD\nAPPOINTS JANITOR\nBesides transacsing a great deal\nof routine business, the Gran-I\nForks school board, at its regu ar\nmonthly meeting on Tuesday evening, appointed Albert Benaon care-\ntaker of the two school buildings\nat a salary of $125 per month. The\ntender of the Grand Forks Transfer\noompany for two carloads of Tabor\nooal was also accepted.\nLIBERAL LADIES\nORGANIZE CLUB\nAfter the meeting of the Liberal\nassociation on Tuesday evening,\na Ladies' Liberal club was organized\nwith a good membership. Tbe following officers were elected: President, Mrs. A. F. Michener; vice-\npresident, Mrs. F. D. Gordon; secretary-treasurer, Mrs. F. J. Meller;\nexecutiue, Mrs. P. T. McCallum,\nMrs. John Ross,-Mrs. K. Hendenon\nand Mrs. A. Graham.\nThe club haB begun to make\nprepirations to take an active part\nin the Yale by-eleclinn, and its existence will assuredly be made manifest on election.\nTHE WEATHER\nThe following is the minimum\nand maximum temperature for eaob\nday during the past .seek, aH re-\nfibrded by tin.' government thermometer on K. F. Liiw'h ranch:\nMax. Min.\nOct. 10\u00E2\u0080\u0094Friday 56 27\nLI\u00E2\u0080\u0094Saturday 53 82\n12\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sunday -H 32\n13 \u00E2\u0080\u0094Monday 48 84\nU\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tnesday B8 42\n15\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wednesday 70 :)<>\n16\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thursday 88' 88\n[nohes\nRainfall 0.02\nAMENDED GAME LAWS\nopen season from .September 15 to\nDecember 15, 1924.\nFur Bearing Animals\u00E2\u0080\u0094In tbat\nportion uf the Ktistern district south\nof the main line of the C P.M.. tbere\nshall be a close season on all fu\nhearing animals, except iu regard to\nmust-rats in the Columbia electoral\ndistrict.\nDucks\u00E2\u0080\u0094(Except wood and eidei\nducks), VVilBon snipe, coots, black-\nbreasted and golden plover, greater\nand lH->ger yellowlegs, September 15\n%o December 30.\nGeeFe and llrant\u00E2\u0080\u0094September 15\nto December 30.\nGrouse and Ptarmigan\u00E2\u0080\u0094(Except\nprairie chicken and sharp-tailed\ngrouse), September 15 to October\n15.\nBag Limits\nIn respect to big game no person\nshall kill or take or have in his possession during the open season more\nthau two deer, all of which must be\nof the male sex; and no person shall\nkill or take or have in his possession\nduring tht- open season more than\nthree bear of any species other tha\ngrizzly, aud one of this species; and\nno perton shall at any time kill or\ntake or have in his possession dur\ning the open season more than two\nmountain goat.\nGrouse nnd ptarmigan (except\nprairii chicken in the Eastern diB\ntric.t), 6 of one species or 12 of all\nspecies in one day; total bag limit,\n50 in Ihe aggregate.\nDucks- Daily hag limit, 20; total\nhag limit, 150.\nGeeee\u00E2\u0080\u0094Daily bag limit, 10; total\nbag limit, 50.\nUrunt\u00E2\u0080\u0094Daily bag limit, 10; total\nbag limit, 50.\nBlack bre^sttd and Golden Plover\nand Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Daily bug limit, 15 in the aggregate f nil kinds; total bag limit,\n150 in the aggregate.\nWilson Snipe\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dail/ bag limit,\n25; total hug limit, 150.\nThe following is tbe amended\ngame regulations relative to tbe\nGrand Forks-Greenwood electoral\ndistric, whieh is in the Eastern disi-\ntricl:\nBig Game and Game Birds\nMountain Goat\u00E2\u0080\u0094September 15 to\nDecember lf>, 1924\nBear- September 15 to June 15,\n1925.\nDeer\u00E2\u0080\u0094(Mule, whito-tail and\ncoast), huckB only, throughout the\nnorthern and eastern districts (except white-tail deer io that portion\nof the Eis-tern district known as\nNorth and South Okanogan and\nSimilkameen electoral districts, and\nin the Grand Forks-Greenwood\nelectoral district west of tbe summit of tbe Midway mounuins),\nIS YOUNGEST OFFICIAL\nOF CANADIAN PACIFIC\nUSO SOLLOWAY\nLeo Solloway, recently appointed\nAsiatic Freight Agent of the Canadian Pacific Railway with olliee at\nMontreal and supervision over Oriental and Australasian traffic via\nPacific Ports.\nBorn in Vancouver in 1895, Mr.\nSolloway has the distinction now of\nbeing the youngest official in Canadian Pacific service, a distinction\nwhich he has won through fourteen\nyears' service in the freight department of the Company. He com-\nmenced work as stenographer in the\nsteamship department of the General\nFreight office in Vancouver in 1910,\nand remained in that department\nuntil 1915 when he enlisted for active\nservice with the 72nd Highlanders.\nHe returned from overseas in the Fall\nof 1917 and was attached to the\nsteamship export department in Vancouver until 1918 when he was loaned\nto the British Ministry of Shipping,\nacting as assistant to the agent of the\nMinistry at the Pacific port.\nIn June 1919, Mr. Solloway went\nto Montreal as chief clerk to the\nAsiatic Freight Agent. Two years\nlater he was appointed chief clerk lo\nthe General Foreign Freight Agc;,-:t,\nand last May appointed as Act'n-\u00C2\u00BB\nAsiatic Freight Agent whi'-h 0(11111\nhas been confirmed by promuli:atio;i\nH\nere an\ndTn\nere\nTourist business throughout Canada has been remarkably productive this year and it is estimated\nthat its total value for the Dominion will exceed $100,000,000.\nThis places the tourist traffic high\namong Canada's industries.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ne et\nThe \"Princess Kathleen\",\nthe two fine steamers uniler construction for the Canadian Pacific\nRailway's British Columbia coastal\nservice, was launched at Glasgow,\nScotland, on September 27th. Lady\nMount Stephen, widow of Lord\nMount Stephen, former president of\nthc company, performed the launching ceremony.\nAs an indication of how plentiful\nwild (fame has become of recent\nyears in the Province of Quebec\ncomes a report from Montreal,\nwhich ri cords the recent appearance\nof a full-grown hull moose in Rose-\nmount, a suburb of thc city. It is\nthought to have strayed into the\nneighborhood from the forest to the\nnorth. The aninif.l was quite tame\nand was easily captured.\nThe Duke of Alba, who, with\nother S; anish grandees\", recently\ncompleted an extensive tour of Canada, purchased a number of very\nvaluable furs for gifts to be presented to his friends, including the\nKing and Queen of Spain. The furs\nwere acquired while the Duke was\nsojourning at Banff, the popular\nmountain resort en tbe Canadian Pacific main line.\nSo greatly has the turkey industry grown in Saskatchewan that\nmarketing pools have now bean arranged by the Saskatchewan Department of Agriculture and the\nSaskatchewan Grain Growers' Association for the marketing at both\ndressed and live turkeys this fall.\nInspectors will be furnished for\ngrading and giving killing and\ndressing demonstrations.\ndo heavy was the movement of\ngrain from the lakes to the port of\nMontreal recently that serious congestion was feared. The storage\ncapacity of the port is 10,100,000\nbushels and thc grain in sight was\ngreatly in excess of this figure.\nBut skilful handling quickly reduced the amount in hand to 7,966,-\n442 bushels, relieving the situation\ncompletely. No further possibility\nof congestion is anticipated.\nIt is expected that before tha\nseason closes, the work of rock-\nballasting the main lines of the\nCanadian Pacific Railway in the\nQuebec District between Montreal\nand Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto\nand Montreal and Quebec will bs\ncompleted. The latter section requires only a few miles to be finished, while the other portions of\nline referred to have already been\nfinished. As a result, the Canadian\nPacific will have in theBe lines a\nroad-bed which is not excelled by\nany other on this continent.\nLAND REGISTRY AGT\n(Suction 227.)\nIN THE MATTUB ol Application No. 377B0F\nami lis Tlie Mutter el Lots 17,18 and ID,\nBlock 19, Muii 23, Oity of Urand Forka.\nTAKE NOXIUK tlmt the above application\nban been made to register Thomas Ahearn,\nOttawa, Ontario, as the owner in lee of the\nabove lands and for the Issue to the said\nThoraiiB Aheurn of a Certificate of Indefeasible Title thereto, and that in -support of aucli\napplication there appears in the chain oi title\nucouveyunee date.l27th July, lUl'i, from The\nDominion I'erinuiieiit Loan . oinpauy under\nits loip\". ate teul lo Thomas Ahearn of\nLots 18 and 111, Muck 19, Map 23, uml r the\npower of sale contained lu u certain mortgage tltitod the 21st day of April, 1899, from\nJoseph K. Johnson to The I'loviiscial Building\nand , l.uun Association, and which mortgage\nwas assigned by the Provincial Building und\nLoan Assuciatioit to The Dominion Permanent Loan Company by assignment dated\n811th June, 190-2.\nAnd i<'ui'THKH Take NOTICB that registration will bc effected in pursuance of lhe\nabove applloatlon ami a Certificate ef Indefensible Title to the siti-i lands issued tu the\nsaid Tliolniis Ahearn after tin; lapse of fourteen days irom the service upon yotl of ttiis\nnotice (which may be elfet'lcil ns iliioctcd\nhereunder) unless you shull take and prosecute the proper proceedings to establish your\nulaim. if uuy, to the said lumls, or to prevent\nsueh proposed uctlou ou Bay part.\nDated ut the Laml Uegistry orttcc,''Kum-\nloops, 11. C, this 14th day s>( October, A.D.\n1924.\nE. 8. STOKES,\nRegistrar of Titles,\nTo Joseph K. Johnson.\nI direct service of above Notice by publication once a week for two weeks in a newspaper circulating nearest tlie lands.\nK.S.STOKES,\nRegistrar of Titles.\nTIMBER SALE X6494\nSEALED TBNDERS will be reeeiveit by thc\nDistrlot Forester, Nelson, not later thau\nn i on the 25lh day of Oetober, 1924,\nfur ths purohase of Licence X6194, near\nSutherland Creek, to cut 2,700 lineal feet of\nPoles nud 11 -'itl How\" Ties.\nOn- (1) > ear will be allowed for removal of\ntimber-\nFurther particular of the District Forester, Ne aoll.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^Always Fresh\nOur stock ot Staple and Fancy Groceries is\nconstantly moving from our shelves to the consumers. It therefore has no time to become\nstale.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25 H. H. HENDERSON, PROP.\n>.J TRY OUR TEAS AND COFFEES\nTIMBER SALE X6585\nSEALED TENDERS will be received by the\nDistrlot Forester, Nelso ot later than\nnoon ou the 25th duy of October, 1921, lor\nthe purohase of Licence X6585, near Suther-\nlaud Creek, tu cut 48UU linonl feet of Poles.\nOne (1) year will be allowed lor removal of\ntimber.\nFurther particulars of tho Distrlot Fores-\nter, Nelson, B. C.\nFRUITGROWERS\nWe will handle your Fruit and\nVegetables for 10 per cent or\nbuy it outright. Write us for full\nparticulars\nUHSSTIFF UNITED. MOOSE MW, SASK.\nRIDE THEBE ON CLEVELAND\nIT brings the whole country for mi Ios uniuinl within easy roach.\nH'tvo you seon the new models! They're as graceful us swallows! As\nbright as now coin! As weatherproof as ailuuki Automobile Steel\nBearings Frame of English Seamless Stool Tubing, Hard Maple\nUims. Hercules Brako. Everything complete. Ileal CJuality. Real\nValue Easy Terms. Wo aro tbe people to mount you right.\nJ. R. MOOYBOER &H^Mft%\nOpen Saturday Evenings Till 10 o'Cl.k\nShip Your Cream lo\nTbe Kettle Valley\nCreamery Go.\nWe pay the highest price and assnro\nyou tliD most accurate tast. Give your\nlooal creamery your trade.\nKETTLE VALLEY CUEANERY COMPANY\nA, E. MCD0U6ALL\nCiWi.AiUiJrl AM UUi\\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I*?-. j.x,!i\nlAftent\nboiiiiiiii-ii Monument ul Worka\nAsjbetjtosLi'rotluct a Co. Roofinft\nESTIMATES FURNISHED\nBOX 332 GRAND FORKS, B. C\nDoric Was Greek to Him\nOne of the best of many good\nstorios told by Will Pyffe, the Scottish comedian, concerns a countryman\nof his who was on his first vifit to\nLondon. Loaning over BlackfriarB\nbridgo as dusk was falling, he was\nastounded to see ull the lights on the\nembankment Hare up with oue accord\nas if by magic. He walked up to the\nnearest policeman and said in surprised tones:\n\"Tell me, minnie, who' lichted a'\nthe lichties1?\"\nThe policeman scratched his head\nand thought hard. \"Beg panluii,\nsir,\" he said ut last.\n\"1 was juist \u00E2\u0080\u00A2Hskin' yo wlia' lichted\na'the lichties,\" repeated tho visitor.\nThe policeman was dumfoudded,\nand at last courtesy lied from his\nsoul. \"Garn,ye Portuguese blighter,\"\nho ordered sharply. \" 'Oppit!\"\nTIIE HUB\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bring your boot\n^and shoe repairs to my\ni 'shop for neat and prompt\nwork. Look for the big\nboot.\u00E2\u0080\u0094GEO. ARMSON\nPICTURES\nThe West Kootenay Power &\nLight compmiy ie increasing the\ncapacity of its power plant by 60,i>\n000 horsepower.\nThe man who is wronged\ncan forget it; the man who\nwronged him never can.\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds.\nUpholstering Neatly Done\nr. c. McCutcheon\nWINKIPBO AVMDI\nCORPORAHON OF THE CITY OF GBAND\n' FORKS, B. C.\nSealed bids will bo received by the\nundersigned till^ Monday, October\n27th, at 6 P.M., for the purchase or\nrental of the warehouse at the Granby\nsmelter site.\nJOHtf A. HUTTON, Clerk.\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFORFINEPRIJtTING\nOur\nHobby\nis\nGood\nPrinting\nrpHlS value of well-\nprmted, neat appearing stationery as\na meansof getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelsewhere.\nWedding invitations\nBall programs\nBusiness cards\nVi;if'ng cards\nSh'i- ing tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheads\nPamphlets\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nJGKANI) FOttKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS S HANSEN. Prop.\nCity Baggage and General\nJTronsfcr.gj J\n 1 : '.fl\nCoal, Wood and^Ice\nfor Sale\nOffice at R. F. Petric's Store\nPhone 64\nYale Barber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nYALK EtOTKL, FlltBT' I KURTJ| 1\nNew Type\n{Latest Style\nFaces\nTHE SUN\nColombia Avenue and\nWw Street\nTELEPHONE\nR101\nSYNOPSIS OF ,\nLAND ACTAMENDMENTS\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nit, unreserved,\n'rown landa may be -Nr*-*a*spt\u00C2\u00ABd by\nBritish subjects over 11 nm W ac*,\nm* ba aliens en t*tw*xbm Intention\nto keeemi Britlah subjeote, oondl-\nUoaal open residenoe, eooupetlon,\nind Improvement ter agrtoulturel\nmo aan o-a oaiaunau irsasa sn *txxmx*,w\naddressing tb* Department et\nnda, Viotorla, B.O, ar te ear Oev-\nFall Information oonoarnlna regu-\niatlena regarding pra-enptteM te\nifiven ia Bulletin No. 1, Land Series.\nHow to Pre-empt Lend,\" copies et\nwhich aan be obtained free of oherg*\nl-onda, Vlotori\n. rnmant Agent\nReoarda will b* granted oovartna\nnily land aultabl* Ier egrioultural\npurpooia, and whioh la not tlmbur-\nland, ta, earrylnf ov*r 6*000 board\nfeet per aor* waet ot th* Coaat Bang-*\nand MM feat per aere eaat of that\nRange.\nApplication* fer pr*-amptloni are\n aorea,\nmay be purohased or leased, the conditions Inoludlng payment of\nstuaapege.\nHOMESITE LBASE8\nUnaurveyed areaa, aet exceeding Iv\naores, may be leaaed aa homeeltea,\nconditional upon a dwelling being\nereoted ln the flrst year, title being\nobtainable after residenoe and Improvement conditions are fulfilled\nand land haa been surveyed.\nLEASES\nFor graaing and Industrial pur-\npoees areaa not exceeding 640 aorea\nmay be leaaed by one person er e\noompany. t \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\nGRAZING '\nUnder th* Oraalng A\u00C2\u00BBt the Prev-\nine* ta divided Into grazing districts\nand the range administered under a\nOraalng Commissioner. Annual\ngraaing permits ar* Issued based on\nnumbers ranged, priority being given\n'o established owners. Stook-ownera\nnay form associations for range\nmnagornent. Free, or partially free,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'-mlta are available for settler*,\nitnpors ang travellers, up to tea\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2son si. s^"@en . "Titled The Evening Sun from 1902-01-02 to 1912-09-13

Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13

Titled The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-09-20 to 1929-05-10"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Grand Forks (B.C.)"@en . "Grand_Forks_Sun_1924_10_17"@en . "10.14288/1.0341147"@en . "English"@en . "49.031111"@en . "-118.439167"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Grand Forks, B.C. : G.A. Evans"@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .