"95c12419-3f28-4d16-89c6-7d7522ec0c55"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1926-10-22"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0341283/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Stir, up a man's sentiment if you wish to convince him, not his sense of logic\nPort Coqultlam, October 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The\nlure ot the wild and Its ever present\npromise that Just round the corner\nmay be found tho lode of gold fur\nwhich all prospectors strive, nearly\nproved fatal once agaltn to an aged\npioneer who has fa th that Bomeday\nhe Will find an 101 iDorado.\n..Thlg time It wtg Robert A. .(Ooe.)\nBrown,, of.. Qrand Forka, 70, known\nthroughout., the. Friser valley, who\nalmost paid tha supeme price. More\nyouthful men, tcuatomed to the perils\ntnd privations of the wilds, are .now\nearrylng him out on t stretcher. One\nof. h s. feet Is frozen and he Is In t>\nbadly emaciated condition.\nThe aged prospector had boen In\nthe Wild country north of 1'ltt lake\nalone since August and should have\nbeen out before the middle of September,\nProvincial Constable Oeorge Elliott and A. MoMartin, trapper of\nHammond.weiit in search of him\ntwo weeks ago, carry ng food and\ncomforts ln case he was in need.\nFOUND IN CABIN\nOver windfalls and crags, searching every part of the country as\nthey penetrated into the roughest\nparts, they took longer than had\nthey been going on ordinary mis-\nBdons.\nBrown wus found lying in an old\nJog cabin near Seven-Mile creek, 26\nmiles from P tt lake; alive, but In\nvery low condition. He had no\nmutches to light a fire, one foot was\nseverely frosted and his food was\nalmost gone.\n-Quickly lighting a fire they prepared warm food, attended to his\nfoot and, itmlmedilately he was comfortable, one man proceeded back\nfor more food, medic ne and a\nstretcher. The other remained to\ndoctor the patient.\nThey will carry Brown out\n-through dense forest and under -\nbrush to the head of Pitt lake.\nBrown was one of those who accompanied Qeorge Platzer, his son\nGeorge, <&-. A. Brawn, Qrand Porks,\n-Mid Alfred Perrp, Vancouver, on an\nexpedition when they discovered an\nimmense glacier, 20 miles in w dth\nat 7000 feet altitude, four days' pack\ntroiri the confluence of the Pitt\nriver and Pitt lake.\nThe party penetrated to tSeven-\nMile creek, so named because ot Its\ndistance from Pitt river, Above the\nIce, rent asunder ln places by vast\ncrevices and chasm e surpassing\nthose ot the Alps or Urau moun\ntains.\nWERE WELL REPAID\nIt took 14 hours to cross this\nBtretch ot level Ice, but on the other\n'Bide 'the party considered themselves\nwell awarded, as they found deposlts\nof rich mineral-bear ng ore. Showing content high in copper and gold,\nthis ore encouraged therm to search\ntor pockiets of thie precious metal\nand when the party decided to return, \"Doc\" Brown eleoted to re-\nmaaln.\nOther members of the original\nparty returned to Vancouver Au\ngust 12.\n)\n<_Ana KETTLE VALLEy ORCHARDIST\nTWENTY-FIFTH YEAR-No 51\n\"Tell me what too Know Is tni\u00C2\u00BB\nI canKiKss as well as you.\"*-*\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1926;\nGrower Gets Only 7 Per\nGer tof Sale Priceof Apples\n(Laurence\nDonovan\nSun.)\nln\nOROP ESTIMATE HAS\nNOT BEEN REDUCED\nThe official estlmlaite ot Uanada's\ncurrent wheat crop was revised upward on September 10 to 399,008,000\n(bushels. This figure has not been\nreduced 'by subsequent bad harvesting weather, though there has been\na lowering of grades.\nThe October 13 estimate by the\nNorthwest Grain Growers' tssocia-\ntion.based on threshing returns,\ngives a grand total of 409,201,000\nbushels. Of this 353,301,000 bushels\nhas been Inspected; 900,000 ls still\nln the farmers' hands'5,000,000 Is\nreserved for seed; and 10,000,000 is\nallowed for wastage.\nAIMEE SEMPLE McPHERSON\nMnre than usual Canadian-interest\nattaches to the preliminary hearing\nOf the charges against thiu noted\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2vangellst at Los Angeles, from the\nfact that she ia a Canadian *ay\nbirth, having been born aud grown\nup near Ingersoll, Ontario. She '.3\nremembered aa a remarkably list-d-\nsome girl with wonderful red hair\nMid a peach-bloom complexion.\nNinety-three per cent of the retail\nprloe of a pound of British Columbia\napples on the London market goes to\nthose who buy and sell and transport!\ncent of the London retail price goeB |\ninto the pocket of the fruit grower'\nin British Columbia, who produced\ntlie apple. ;\nTake these almost Incredible figures as a basis of tact, this may be\nadded, that ot every 100 apples consumed in the United Kingdom, 19 apples are grown t n Canada and 38\nam grown ln the United States. And\nfiguring ithe apple as t basis, it is\nshown that the greater percentage\not all fruits consumed ln the United\nKingdom are imported there by\ncountries foreign to tbe empire tnd\nits dominions.\nOnly a days ago an eminent agri-\nculaural authority declared tbe outstanding need of British Columbia\nto be marketing organization. ..\nWHAT OF THE GROWER\nFaced by the urgent necessity of\nencouraging and fostering the development of its millions of acres of\nagricultural and fruit lands, as a\nfundamental means of originating\nlanded wealth, and as a further\nmeans for providing an Increasing\ndomestic market for home manufactured lndustral produts, at the\noutset it is discovered that Canada\nis faced with the tremendously urgent necessity of developing a super-\norganization for packing, marketing,\npreserving and transporting fruits.\nOtherwise, all ot the settlement possibilities that may be poured into\nthe laie end of the horn are going to\ncon\u00C2\u00BB)e out the small end squeezed almost dry of prospects, investment\nand ambition.\n.First, taking the home market\nbeginning right in Vancouver, the\nimpost of buying and selling, trans\npuliation and handling, leaves such\nBmall diaritln for the growter that lt\nis wholly accountable for the thousands of tons of fruit annually left to\ndecay on the trees.\nFACING THE FACT8\n{Settlement is the first element of\nprosperity. It is settlemlent, and\nprosperous settlement that establishes a wide domestic market.\nIn turn, the broad domestic mar-\nket make possible the development\nof the greater foreign market. In\nother words, because the United\nStates .has 110,000,000 people that\nannually eat mlore apples per capita\nthan the people of the United Kingdom, that country can . afford to\nshade ithe prices of its surplus fruits\nfor the BriitiBh market. Moreover,\nIt can afford growers' marketing\norganizations, storage warehouses,\nmotor transportation, even control\nof ships, in order that some portion\not that 93 per cent of spreadbetween\nthe grower and the consumer may\nbe returned, to the grower.\nIMPERIAL REPORT TELL8\nThe figure s and facts quoted are\nnat fanciful approximations, but the\nresult of minute and detailed research by the imperial economic\ncommittee, jupointed by the varvarl-\nous \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'governments of the British empire. Before quoting more in detail\nfrom that report, some au\u00C2\u00BB leuuu-Ks:\n::Well, It's the Bystem. iSamethlng\nthe grower doesn't understand. It\nis ..customary, tradialonaland eco-\nnomically necessary that dlstrlbu\ntion be thus provided,\"\nSo? A man named Paulhamus in\nthe Puyallup valley in Washington\nproved otherwise.\nSimplest solutions are the most\noften evaded for the greatest length\not -Mme. The fruit grower, to be\nspecific, the apple grower of British\nColumbia, lives ln ignoble isolation\nfrom his market. Vou think his\nUfo'B wtork Is selling apples, lt\nIsn't. He only grows them. Once\ngrown, the business of selling the\napple becomes* a mysterious process,\nconfused by technical terms off\nbrokerage, transporation and what\nnot.\nTHE SIMPLE SHORT CUT\nQreat movemients are arrived at\nby short cuts, lopping off of mossy\ntook a short cut He sold, why\nshould not the -grower, collectively,\nown Mb own warehouses, canneries,\nmotor transportation, selling agen\ncles, ete? 'Remember, fruit growers\nln the United States went through\nthe Bame mill as British Columbia\ngrowers. And, guided by one mran,\nthey began to acquire them.\n\"When Paulhamus died a little\nmore than a year ago, he had made\nscores of growers wealthy, created\nthe immensely profitable. Western\nWashington fair, and had caused a\nfew farmer fruit growlers to climb\nover the barnyard gate and find out\nwhy all the profits were on the outside.\nWHY IS THE NEED?\nBut is the need of all thia apparent? *\n. Referring to the imperial economic\nreport, we tind these excerpts:\n\"ill, as the committee believes, the\nbulk of the fruit requirements of the\nUnited Kingdom from abroad oould\ni ba obtained from the empire, the re-\n: suit would clearly be an Increase in\n! this country.\nI \"It appears that on an average\n, each of va eats 100 apples,\nVanoouver Of the apples 38 come from the Uni-\ni tedStates, 25 from the United King\ndom, 19 arelmported from Canada\nand 8 from' Australia and New Zealand.\"\nTHE FOREIGN SUPPLY\nCanada being unaffected by similar showing on oranges and bananas,\nthat reference is omitted.\n..The report continues: These\nfigures go to the root of the matter,\nfor they ahow that In each case the\ncommanding position. In the trade\nheld by foreigners is not due solely\nto lack, of .enterprise, but to econo-\nmls causes that are far less simple.\n\"In., fact, the American apple industry affords another example of\nthe disturbing effect on international\ntrade created by an exportable surplus that can be sold at any price,\nbecause the home market for the\nmain output. Is proteced In the\nUnited States there are 115,000,000\npersons who consume, more fruit\nthan the population here\n\"The home market is, therefore,\nenormous and fairly constant, and\nit I* evident that a relatively small\nincrease in the crop means an Immensely relative increase In the exportable surplus. Indeed, In a recent year an Increase of 8 per cent\nin the total American crop resulted\nIn an increase of 100 per cent In the\nguantity exported, and .In this way\nthe prospects of British tnd Canadi\nan growers are always liable to be\ndestroyed by American competition,\nwhich, with th adoption of cold storage, promises to be even more se\nvere.\nSETTLERS DESERTING\n\"Already new settlers in Canada,\nAustralia and New Zealand have in\nsome cases become disheartened\nthat ithy deserted new orchards.\n\"No advantage appearsto be derived hy the consumer in the United\nKingdom' from the occasional getting of the market by large supplies\nof apples from the United States.\n\"The consumer is apparently the\nlaet person to benefit from the fluctuation ot prices. The committee\ndeclares that both the home con-\nBumter and the producer at home and\nin the emjpire are at a disadvantage,\nbut a remedy is not immediately ap\nparent.\"\nAPPLES BOLL\n10\nti\nHeavy shipments of British Columbia apples are be ng received on\nUie -prairie market, according to b.\nA. Grant, markets commissioner for\nBritish Columbia, stationed at Calgary. iMV. Grant's bulletin reads:\n\"Weather during the past week has\ngenerally ibeen favorable for threshing operations, with the except on\nof a heavy thunder storm on Thursday, followed by rain and ball.\n\"Heavy shipments of British Col-\nubmia apples, onions and potatoes\nare now being received. A car of\nGrimes Golden apples have just arrived from Armstrong and are reported as being of super or quality.\n\"The apple market Is not very\nbrisk, but favorable weather should\nsee a fair demand for crated stock.\n\"The potato market ls easier, due\nto stocks on hand and the possibility\nof now digging Alberta potatoes.\nTwo cars of British Columhia potatoes arrived dur ng the week showing some damage from field frost.\"\nFEDERAL ELECTION\nFIGURE8 COMPLETE\nComplete figures available show a\ntotal of 3,170,000 ballots eaat in the\nrecent election. Conservative candidates received approximately ly\n476,747 votes, Liberals 1,361,876, Progressives 110s630v L berai-Progres-\nslveB 93,057, United Farmers of Alberta 60,457, Labor 50,153, Independents 17,790.\nIn British Columlbia the vote stood:\nConservative 100,119, Liberal 68,264,\nLabor 11,792. Independent 4323.\nIn the twelve months ending with\nthe sixth month in this year, according to the Dominion Dairy News\nLetter, Canada's e**rpont of butter decreased close oipon two and a half\nmillion pounds compared with ehe\nprevious year's returns, 'but a cent\nand a half per pound increase in\nprice to some extent counterbalanced the deficit. On the other hand\nthe total export of cheese Increased\nby over twelve million pounds and\nby almos t three oents a pound in\nprice.\n\"Pa,\" said young Billy, \"What's a\ngolf hazard?\"\nAnd his wise parent replied:\n\"Some of the stuff that's handed\naround in the locker-rooms, son.\"\n'Man (in barber chair)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Be careful not to cut my hair too short\u00E2\u0080\u0094\npeople-will take mo tor my wlte.\"\nArctic\nAdventures\nMY FIR8T WINTER POLAR BEAR\n(Written for The Grand Porks Sun\nby 'Henry Ette, the Navigator.)\nThe midnight sun at 80 deg. N.L.\nhad tor four long' Bum-mer months\nbeen incessantly shining on Ice, sea,\nicebergs, vraen fields, eternally\nsnowclad iron mountains and stream\ning blue salmon rivers with a flue\nrosy tint. At the end of August he\nbegins to grow tired tnd approaches\nthe horizon; then it is time for the\npolar bear\u00E2\u0080\u0094the largest beast of prey\nand 'absolute monarch of the Arctic\nregions\u00E2\u0080\u0094to cast oc his yellow summer coat, soiled by seal-blood, and\nput on bis dazzling white winter coat\nand go southwards. The higher the\nmidnight sun, the more to the north\ngoes the bear; the lower the sun, the\nmore to the south goes he. It iB\ndifficult to find food in the pinch-\ndark polar night, where the great\nstillness is only brokenby the howling of the storm, mingled with the\nhigh, shrill, ghostly cryof the white\nWolves, while stones will crack like\nglass in the paralyzing cold of -40\ndeg. Reamur.\nThe seals have gone to the coasts;\nthey prefer to be in the neighborhood of water; therefore the bear\nn*|ust choose the same way.\nOne day in late autumn a yellowish-white mass is seen moving slowly across the endless Arctic wastes,\nspatted with pointed screwings and\nhere and there small icebergs. Now\nand then he stops at the top of a\nscrewing, turning his broad, triangular head with the black pointed nozzle towards the highest top of the\nnearest mountain, and when, like the\nseaman , he has taken his bearings,\nhe stalks on again with his long\nstraddling forelegs.\nOnly the teemling she-bears make\nthemselves a lair nnder a thick field\nof snow sheltered bv the mountains,\nand will not appear until next sping\nwith their newly snow-white young\nones. The she lis not to be trifled\nwith. The he-bears, on tho contrary,\ncontinue their wanderings through\nthe long polar night in an incessant\nstruggle for food. Their inch-thick\nblubber covering will last till Christmastime, but when it is consumed\ntnd they walk about with only a little wator in their shrunken bellies,\ndeath by hunger is at ,the door,\nHooray! A depot! Away with the\nstones! They are flung aside by the\nheavy rigbt paw, strong enough with\none single blow to make a big walrus drop, fainting. A barrel! The\nbottom is broken by a heavy blow.\nAlas! dry biscuits only. What Is that\nto a hungry old bear! It is blubber,\nliver, blood, and lastly, flesh he\nv/lants. But what lis this! On the\nbreeze comes an almost imperceptible, peculiar smell, and quick as\nlightning the bear turns his nozzle\n(with the absolutely phenomenal\nsense of smell) in that directiou.\nWhat is it? Burnt blubber and\nfeathers! And on he trots mile after\nmlile, led by the peculiar smell, till\nat last he stops in front of a little\nhut. Am!ong tons of seal walrus\nmeat the bear ls able In a trice to\nfind a bit of blubber not bigger than\na match-box. If not able to find any\nthing eatable, he is instantly Inslined\nto turn everythng upside down and\nbreak all he can get at with his heavy\npaws.\nOn. the east coast of Greenland,\nalong lthe 1600 miles of mainpac, in\nand out of the fjords, there is a trek\nof at least 500 animals every spring\nand autumh. Once three bears forced\nan entrance into the house of the\nsettlement manager, where they\nwere shot ln the kitchen, and last\nyear a Danish hunter was killed in\nthe Immense silence by a furious\nhe-bear. Even the most skilful\nsharpshooter Is helpless In the titer\nnal polar larkness where he ls barely able to see the groove tnd block-\nsight of his own rifle, and the bear-\nhunter who wants to get the animals\nfrom windward had better trail a\nseal-skin with the blubber on a few\nmiles out along the coast. Should\nthe night wanderer meet a trail, he\nwil lnstantdw give up his formJer\ncourse. After him follows a pack of\nhowling white wolves and at their\nheels some white and blue foxes, All\nthe larger and smaller beasts of prey\nin the Arctic solitude know vesy\nwell that when the rich are feasting\nthere will be some crumbs left for\nNortheastland, 80 deg. N.L., 1902-03,\nI had brought some wolf traps, and\nnow I wanted to try them on the\npooner and I myself set the trap,\nkekeeping our fingers at a safe distance; then w pltoea a piece of\nblubber on the plate anl put it down\ntbout 50 yards from the hut, fastened to a long iron chain with an\nanchor. Th first to go into the\ntrati was a great sea-gull, the biggest\nbird of the Arctic. Gracefully he\nalighted on the blubber on his aut-\nspread greyish brown w ngs and\npecked at lt The trapclapped and\nthe sea-gull wias clipped ln two.\nThen I decided not to use the trap\ntill the sun had disappeared over the\nhoolzon and the gulls had gone\nsouthwards. Clad in Eskimo costume, n*|y Larsen seal-rifle between\nmy knees, 1 kept watch at a loophole\nin the wall during the night.\nsun was a few hours in the day\nabove the hor zon.\nThe first winter bear escaped from\nme, unfortunately. One calm nver-\ncast pitch-dark night at 1 o'clock I\nheard an angry hissing and growling, and, rifle in hand, I sprang out,\nbut the bear had already aisappear-\ned, leaving four claws tnd some white\nhairs in the trap. I swore a heavy\noath that next time he should be\nm no, even if it should be my turn\nthen to lose some hairs and claws.\nFour long tedious nights I kept my\nwatch at the loophole, facing the sea\nwhere the Ice waB now lying thick\ntnd light on to the shore, but however much walrus blubber, seal flesh\nand sea-gull feathers I burned in oe\nthe oven, dishes that would be sure\nto tickle the nose of a hungry polar\nbear, no bear appeared. The wind\ndid not blow the right way. The\nJust thrown a new portion ot blubber into the oven tnd stood again\non the lookout in skin coat and hoots\nmlade of bladernose skin, when I noticed something big, heavy and\nclumsy steering right towards the\nhut. 'Pitch-dark it was. I could\nbarely see his orck ng trot towtrds\nblubber In the trap. My heart was\nthrobbing so that I thought it would\nburst. I almost fancied that my four\nmen in the berths inside could hear\nits throbbings. Cautiously I closed\nthe flap ot the loophole bo that only\nhalf of my right eye was on the bear,\nwhile the other half and the rest of\nstopped, put his forelegs wide apart\neagerly. Blubber and human flesh!\n1 saw him lift his paw and heard\nthe clicking of the trap, tnd firmly\ngrasp ng my rifle, I reached the hear\nin a few jumps. He stood on his\nhind legsand, hissing with fury, be\nswung the trap, with Iron chain and\nanchor, with his right paw. I placed\nmy rifle right aga nst him and pulled\nthe trigger. A flash! A report! A\nroar! And in a jiffy I was back in\nthe house, banging the door behind\nme and laaking eagerly through tbe\nloophole. The bear was lying quite\nstill\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dead. The pointed steel bullet had gone right through the\nbreast and out through the back and\nk lied him on the spot. I got the\nfleece without losing either hairs or\nnails. i\nHiB body measured almost four\nmeters.\nE\nconomize on\nYour Gasoline\nBY ERWIN GREER\nWEATHER AFFECTS\nAPPLE SALES\nCalgary, October 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Trade Is\ndull, due chiefly to the unsettled state\nof the weather. It ls still threatening and cloudy with occasional snow\nfalls.\nTheshlng ls being spasmodically\ndone and harvesters are suffering\nthrough loss of t me. No improve-..\nment will take place ln the apple\nmovement until settled weather arrives.\nINDEPENDENTS OFF8ET\nThe Associated Growers and the\nSales Service are cooperating ln\ngrand fashion ln an effort to regulate and feed tho market and are\nholding off winter and bulk stuff.\nThis influence is greatly null tied by\nseveral independents, outside of\nthese organizations, who are shipping everything they have ready in\nbulk and in crates. Today they are\ntaking for bids on crated Macs. The\nbulk stuff is be ng crated here by\nthe purchasers and sold at a price\nbelow the laid down cost of Bitish\nColumbia crated tpples..\nVery little damage to onions haa\nbeen done by the frost. All Sample\nGrade stuff examined has shown up\nwtell and the trade is pleased with\nthem.\nAPPLES DUMPED?\nFriday morning a report came ln\nthat two cars of American crated\napples are being sold tn Lethbridge\nand Cadston to the retail trade at\n$1.40 per crate. This price is below\nthe dump price set and the matter\nis being investigated.\nBuilding Activity\nand Politics\nShould two cars of the same year\nand model 'be driven over a hundred mile oourse each would show\nt totally different gasoline consumption at 'the end ot ihe trip.\nWhy? Because no two drivers\noperate a car alike. Jones, for instance, nurses his boat along at a\ncertain steady speed, while Brown\nlikes to cover ground in spurts. Naturally then, Jones gets more mile\ntge than Brown.\nBut driving a car economically is\njust one halt the dollar battle. The\ngood driver also sees that all gas\njoints are tight, that his engine ls\nsweet running and free from carbon\nand Chat the carburetor is economically adjusted. And you would be\nsurprised to learn how mnny dollars\na car owner saves a year by paying\nattention to these little details.\nGreat progress has been made tbe\nlast few years in carburetlon and intake manifold construction. It Is\nan actual fact that some cars today\nget a better gasoline mileage on low\ngrade gasoline than cars tchieved on\nhigh-test gasoline ten years ago.\nThe carburetlon system is not the\nonly location to look for fuel leaks.\nIf the ignition system Is not up to\nsnuff fuel yill be wasted. This also\nlnsludes the battery. There is little\nuse ln getting a correct .fuel mixture\nunless there is a good hot spark to\nfire it\nCarbon in the engine's cylinders\nwill waste more fuel than will be\nthought possible. By cutting down\nthe proper output ot the engine carbon compels the use of au excessive\namount of fuel.\nThe clutch, if slipping, may become a terrific waster ot fuel. Misaligned wheels are another source\nof power losses. When the wheels\nare out of correct alignment, a dragging motion ls set up and some of\nthe engine's power goes to produce\nthis drag which, by the way, is one I\nof ihe most potent causes of tire\nwear.\nDragging brakes waste power, yet\nbrake adjustment ls so simple that\nthere is little excuse for this condition.\nFinally, the car owner may conserve his fuel by the way in which\nhe drives his car. Long fueling\nperiods eat up a lot of zasoline, that\nhas performed no unusual function.\nThe driver should learn to set his\nthrottle and spark on long runs and\nplug along at a steady gait. i\nMotor sense is gasoline dollars\npoured into.the tank.\nFigures just issued show that British Columbia stands third in the list\nof provinces in respect of building\nactivity for the present year so far.\nEconomic experts point to any increase In the building of homes and\nIndustrial establishments as the sire\nsign of commercial progress. They\npoint out that the average taxpayer\ndoes not build a home until he is con\nvlnoed that local conditions promise\nhim Bteody employment and the\nwherewithal to pay the contractor.\nThe same argument applies to the\nmerchant and the manufacturer.\nThe enormous Increase In the\ntmfount of building in Vancouver and\nVictoria this year over the corresponding period of 1925 Is symtom-\natlc ot what has heen taking place\nattll over British Columbia. 'From\npracticallyevery settled area reports of proportionate advances of\nlast year\"s activity hare been received.\nThe reason for this satisfactory\ncondition haa been traced to two\ncauses. One ls the efficient manner\nin which the business of the province has been conducted by the provincial govrnment, which has\nstrengthened British Columbia credit\nto a point at which its bonds sell better than most of the provinces of the\nDominion, and the other is the beneficial effect which the policies of tho\nKing government have had throughout Canada, particularly ln the west,\nduring the last few years.\nThose in close touch with political\naffairs, moreover, declare that when\nthe provincial government goes to\nthe people it will be returned with a\nlarger majority, their investigations\nthroughout the province convincing\nthem that the m|iBtake made In the\nrecent federal election will not be\nrepeated.\nA negro cook came into a. northern Missouri .bank -with a check\nfrom the lady for whom she worked.\nAs Mandy, the cook, could notwirte,\nshe .always endorsed her checks\nwith a big X But on this- occasion\nshe made a circle on the baek ofthe\ncheck.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0e-!e**i:.v* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ndod bless the inconspicuous citizen\u00E2\u0080\u0094the man who quietly fulfills all\nobligations to his family and to his\nsommunlty as a matter of course,\nandd who does not consider himself\nentitled to preferment; political pull\nThe or tree puffs In the newspapers. - <\nThis crayon sketch of Viscount\nWillingdon, the pew Governor-General, was mado by Kathleen\nShackleton, well-known Canadian\nartist, on board tlie S.!5. Empress nf\nScotland, upon which tht) Vice-regal\nparty came to Canada. THE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BBITISH COLUMBIA\nKettle Kiver Assessment District\nNam* of Person Assessed\n8hort iDeteriptlbn of Property\nArrears -Interest Cost*\nof all and and\nTaxes. Penalty. Expenses. Total\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE that on WEDNESDAY, the 10th day of NOVEMBER, at the hour ot 11 a.m.\nat the Provincial Police Court, Penticton, B, C, 1 will sell at Public Auction tbe lands in the list hereinafter\nset out, of the persons in said list hereinafter set out, for delinquent taxes unpaid by said persons, on the' \u00C2\u00A3.' nA *p\"\u00E2\u0084\u00A2'\n30th day of June, 1926, and for interest, costs and expenses, including the cost of advertising said sale, if urown,\nthe total amount due for the period ending Deceiriber 31st\u00E2\u0080\u009E 1924, is not sooner paid.\nDier ft David-son, ..** Lots 30, 33, 34, Block 13,\nDler ft Davidson, Lots 36, 36, Block 14 _..\nFAIRVIEW TOWNSITE, iMAP 27\nMrs. R. H. Parkinson \u00E2\u0080\u009E Lot 19, Block 2. ... _,\nIan R. Brown, _ Lot -Is Block 3, \t\nMrs. R. H. Parkinson Lot 4, Block 3, \t\nMrs. M. Dalrymple Lots 14 to 16, Block_4, ...\ni R. H. Parkinson, ,. Lot 19, Block 4,\n$ -S-82 $ 1.07\n3.41 .64\n$12.76 $ 20.64\n12.76 16.70\nLI8T OF PROPERTIES.\nName of Person, Assessed\nShort Description of Property\nArrears Interest Costs\nof all and and\nTaxes. Penalty. Expenses. Total\nCROWN GRANTED LAND8 8. D. Y D.\nKeremeos Land Co., _ Lot 114, 1 acre, \t\nS. Itt Johnson, _ . Lot 166s, 312 acres except K. V. R.\nright of way, .... \t\nRobert Dibble Lot 382, 1 acre, _ _.\nWilliam Brown _ _ Lot 436s, 272.67 aores, \t\nWilliam Brown, _ _ _ Lot 437s, 303.46 acres, \t\nV. E. B. Robinson, _ Lot 580s \t\nS. M. Johnson & Tuzo Estate, Lot 622s, 117.54 acres, except Plan\nA 106,\t\nS. M. Johnson, _ Lot 624s, except Plan A-166, \t\nGreenwood City Water Works, Lot 821, except 10.01 acres D.D.\n116776, A and Plan B 1412 \t\nRock Creek Trading Co., Lot 862, Lot 8, Block 3, Hap 2033, ..\nWeat Kootenay Water Power &\nLight Co. Ltd Lot 971s, 4.36 acres, C. ot T. 13062 A\nWest Kootenay Water Power &\nLight Co., Ltd., _- Lots 972s, C of T 13062n \t\nAshbury F. .Johnson, _ Dot 1136s, Lot 2, Map 1832 \t\nS. M. Johnson ft Tuzo Estate, Lot 1274b, _\t\nS. M. Johnson ft TUzo Estate, . Lot 1276s, _\t\nS. M. Johnson ft R. McLeod, Lot 1418s, \u00E2\u0080\u009E _ \t\nJoseph A. Brown, Lot 1471s, \t\nSouth Kootenay Water Power &\nLight Oo - - Lot 1623, 9.76 acres _.\t\nJames L. Jaroell, _ _.Lot 8005, except Plan 79, \t\nMrs. E. G. Warren, \u00E2\u0080\u0094 .._...*Lot 2365, \t\nJ. A. Tuzo Estate _ Lot 2578, except K. V. R. right-of-way\nHoward D. Camjoron, Lot 2698, Sub Lot 4, \t\nWest Kootenay Powier ft Light Co.,..Lot 2701, 65.7 acres, C of T 23362 H\nHugh Leir _ Lot 2709, Sub Lot 3 \t\nWilliam Thomas, Lot 2710, Sub Lot 21, \t\nHugh Leir, - Lot 2710, Sub Lot 57 \t\nJohnson & Tuzo Estate, _ Lot 3638, Sub Lot 4, 78.87 acres\t\nJohnson & Tuzo Estate, - Lot 3638, Sub Lot 5,\t\nJohnson & Tuzo Estate, . Lot 3638, Sub Lot 6 \t\nW. H. Pefley, _ Lot 3639, Sub Lot 10, \t\nArthur M, Shaw, N%, NE%, Sec. 22, TP. 63, \t\nArthur Ml Shaw, N&, NWH.Sec. 23, Tp. 53, \t\nArthur M. Shaw SWA, NW>4, Sec. 28, Tp. 63, \t\nArthur M. Shaw, Sec. 29, Tp. 53, Part Lot 1007, \t\nArthur M. Shaw, NWU, Sec. 33, Tp. 63, Lot 1009,\t\nArthur M. Shaw, E%, SW*A, Sec 33, Tp. 63,\t\nSUB-DIVISION OF LOTS /-*\u00C2\u00BB ft 174, MAP 300, 8. D. Y. D.\n___________^^_J. Lot 1, 2, 11, BIock 6\t\nJR. -H. Parkinson, Lata l\u00C2\u00BB to 21, Blook 7.\n! White ft Parkinson, Lot 22, Block 7\t\n; Mrs. R. H. Parkinson, ....'_ Lot 1, Block 8 \u00E2\u0080\u009E..\nSteve Mangott, Lot 6, Block 13, \t\nIan R. Brown Lot 14, Block 18, \t\n' Mrs. R. H. Parkinson, Lot 14, Block 14\t\n| GLOSTER TOWN8ITE, MAP 323 ij Mfi, I\n! Wm. Towes Lot 2, Block 7 \u00E2\u0080\u0094.\n47.76\n3.20\n47.75\n15.49\n34.80\n6.71\n114.97\n10.32\n9.60\n3.41\n3.41\n10.63\n3.00\n19.28\n-50\n19.28\n1.88\n14.19\n.89\n47.28\n4.06\n3.69\n.64\n.64\n4.21\n.48\nKeremeos Land Co., ..\n..Block 59, Part,\nKeremeos Land Co Block 68, Part, _ .-.._ \t\nKeremeos Land Co _ 'Lots 4 to 13, 15, 17 to 21, 24 to\nBlock 70, ......\nKeremeos Land Co., _ Lot 1 to 14, and 27, Block 71,\nThomas Daly Estate, Lot 21, Block 71,\nKeremeos Land Co.;' Lots 4 to 12, 15 to 30, Block 73,\nKeremeos Land Co Block 74, Part,\nKeremeos Land Co Block 75, Part, \t\nKeremeos Land Co .Lots 1, 2, 4 to 26, 27 to 30, Block 76,..\nChong Kee, Lot 26, Block 77 \t\nKeremeos Land Co _ Lots 2, 4, 6, 6, 9, 10, 20 to 30, Block\n79 ____ _ _\nJ. D. ifrass _ _ lLot 8, Block 79, _ .....\nKeremeos Land Oo _ Lots 16, 17, 19 to 25, Block 80\t\nKeremeos Land Oo _ _ Lots 1 to 13, 18 to 30, Block 81\t\nKeremeos Land Oo _ _ Block 90 _ .._ ...\nKeremeos Land Oo., ..._ _ Block 92, _\t\nANACONDA TOWNSITE, MAP 24, \u00C2\u00BB. D. Y. D.\nS. M. Johnson, _ _ __ Lots 9 and 12, Block 2\t\n* H. O. Medlll Lots 1 to 6, Block 7\t\nH. C. Medlll, : _ -Lot 11, S%, and Lot 12, Part Block 9\nGeorge S. Walters, Lots 13 and 14, Block 10 _\t\nS. M. Johnson, Lots 11 and 12, Black 14, _\nS. M. Johnson Lots 8, 9, 10, Block 16, \u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\nANACONDA TOWNSITE, MAP 115,8. D. Y. D.\nS. M. Johnson & F. Keffer, Lots 1 to.6, Block 1 \t\nS. M. Johnson & F. Keffer, Lots 1 to 7, Block 2 _\t\nS. M. Johnson & F. Keffer, Lots 1 to 6, Block 3, .. \t\nS. M. Johnson & F. Keffer, Lots 1 to 4, 6 to 8, 21 ano 22. Block 4\nKef Her, Weir & Johnson, Lots 9 to 18, Block 4 '. _.\nBOUNDARY FALLS TOWNSITE, MAP 19, ,S. D. Y. D.\nMrs. Jennie Wake Lots 17 to 25, 29 to 30, Block 4, \t\nDavid G. Smpth, Lot 6, Block 6, _\t\nBOUNDARY FALLS TOWNSITE, MAP 136, S. D. Y. D.\nS. M. Johnson .Lot 12, Block \"B\" \t\nBEAVERDELL TOWNSITE, MAP 94, 8. D. Y. D.\nJ. A. Tuzo Estate Lots 79 and 80, Block 4 \t\nCARMI TOWN8ITE, MAP 109, 8. D.Y. D.\nE. Etchepare - Lot 9, Block 1,\n.Lot 6, Block 1,\nMrs. R. H. Parkinson _.\nE. Etchepare, Lots 8, 9, 12, 13, 15, 16, 20,\nBlock 2 *\t\nE. Etchepare ^.ots 1 and 3, Block 5,\t\nCharles Gilmore, Lots 1 and 2, Block 6\t\nB, Etchepare Lots 3 to 31, Block 6 \u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 24, Block 8\t\nE Etchepare 'Lots 1 to 24, Block 9\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 24, Block 10, \t\nE. Etchepare Lots 3 to 22, 26 ito 39, 41 to 44,\nBlock 16\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 18, Block 16, \t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 6, 10 to 24, Block 17\t\nE. Etchepare, Lots a to 4, 6 to 24, Block 19, \t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 24, Block 20,\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 4, 9, to 22, Block 25\t\nE Etchepare Lots 1 to 24, Block 27\t\nE. Etchepare , Lots 1 to 24, Block 28\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 24, Block 31\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 and 2, Block 35\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 6, Block 36 \t\nE. Etchepare, Lots 1 to 12, Block 37 .\t\nE. Etchepare, Lots 1 to 12, Block 38\t\nE. Etchepare Lots 1 to 21, Block 39\t\nE. Etchepare Lot 4, 14 to 17, Block 46\t\nRev. Jean Ferroux, ' Lots 6 to 8, Block 45 ;\t\nCASCADE TOWNSITE, MAP 8, 8. D. Y. D.\nKatherine Munro Lot 4, Block 10\t\nDominion Supply Co., Lots 5 and 6 (Part) Block 10\t\nHilda L. Bertois Lot 2 E%, Block 11 _\t\nHilda L. Bertois Lots 7 and 8, Block 12 \t\nJ. A. Bertois Lot 2, W%, Block 19, \t\nCHRISTINA TOWNSITE, MAP 60,8. D. Y. D.\nJ. R. Poole Lots 1, Block 8, \u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\nW. M. McKay Estate Lots 2 and 4, Block 11\t\nEHOLT TOWNSITE, ,MAP 71, 8. D.Y. D.\nSam McOrmond, .Lots 9, 10, Block 23, \t\nFAIRVIEW TOWN8ITE, MAP 26\nIsabella G. Russell I/Ot 1, Block 2, \t\nMrs. Ellen Dier Lots 20, 27, 28, 31, 33, Block 2, \t\nDier & Davidson, _ Lot 30, Block 2\t\nDier & Davidson .- Lots 11, 26, Block 3\t\nIsabella G. Russell, ._ -Lot 20, Block 3 \t\nW. A. Dier, Lot 24, Block 3, \t\nDier & Davidson ...Lots 14, I'i, 27, Block 4\t\nIsabella G. Russell Lots 31, 33, 34, 36, Block 4\t\nDier & Davidson Lots 10, 16 to 18, 24, Block 6,\nDler & Davidson,\nIsabella G. Russell,\nAnnie Davidson\t\nIsabella G. Russell,\nIsabella C. Elliott,\nDler & Davidson, ..\nIsabella G. Russell,\nIsabella G. Russell,\n Lots 7, 8, Block 7,\n Lots 1, 3, 5, Block 9 \t\n LotB 2, 4, Block 9,:\t\n Lot 4, Block 10\t\n Lot 6, Block 10, \t\n Lot 3, Block 11\t\n Lots 4, 7, Block 11\t\n- Lots 8, 33, Block 12\t\n..... OA GRAND IFORK8 TOWNSITE, MAP 38\nI 6.66 $ .89 |13.76 f 20.20 !,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,. .\n* l J. H. Slater _. Lot 1 and 2, Block 9,\n190.20\n12.91\n311.00\n106.50\n300.00\n336.00\n674.41\n704.00\n74.30\n3.00\n36.00\n6.00\n46.00\n60.00\n200.00\n80.00\n80.00\n20.00\n180.00\n240.00\n22.60\n19.60\n308.00\n53.60\n226.05\n85.00\n170.00\n169.00\n192.00\n12.00\n12.00\n6.00\n90.00\n24.00\n12.00\n80.10\n2.38\n48.96\n16.86\n48.00\n144.20\n238.69\n110.48\n12.87\n.48\n6.76\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A21.10\n16.00\n15.60\n75-20\n29.60\n4.80\n2.72\n28.80\n62.80\n3.60\n3.13\n130.16\n8.66\n102.63\n30.82\n61.64\n61.12\n30.72\n1.92\n1.92\n.96\n14.40\n3.84\n1.92\n16.68\n11.12\n68.41\n66.72\n38.92\n24.76\n13.91\n5.56\n23.35\n66.72\n201.56\n11.1(2\n25.03\n72.30\n6,56\n5.66\n29,17\n22.26\n7.34\n63.25\n16.83\n27.94\n25.38\n31.86\n30.88\n90.26\n7.02\n24.64\n8.81\n2.67\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A01.77\n9.33\n10,66\n6.21\n3.92\n2.22\n.89\n3.74\n10.66\n32.17\n1.77\n3.99\n11.66\n' -89\n.89\n13.36\n13.40\n1.12\n8106\n6.64\n1L81\n10.92\n13199\n13-J7\n38.77\n2.00\n3.86\nL37\n13.76\n18.76\n13.76\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76\nW.Vt>\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.78\n13.76\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 13.76\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76\n113.75\n13.76\nli.lb\n13.76\n13.75\n113.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n12.76\n12.75\n02.75\n12.76\n12.76\n14.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n121.75\n12.75\nla.-io\n12.75\n12.76\n12.76\n1&75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n12.76\n12.75\n1*2.75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n284.05'GRAND 1 FORKS TOWNSITE, MAP\n29.04'\n373.71\n86\n136.11\n361.76\n492.95\n826.85\n828.23\n100.92\n17.23\n56.61\n19.86\n73.75\n79.35\n288.95\n123.35\n48.55\n36.47\n222.55\n306.55\n39.85\n36.37\n461.91\n75.91\n341.43\n129.57\n245.39\n243.87\n236.47\n27.67\n27.67\n20.71\n118.16\n41,59\n27.67\nMrs. J. Stevens, .Lot 4, BM, Block 80\t\nGRAND FORK8 TOWNSITE, MAP 166\nG. C. Brown, _ Lots 1 to 4, Block 8\t\nG. C. Brown, a. Lots 1 to 9, Block 9 \u00E2\u0080\u009E...\nG. C. Brown Lots 8 end 9, Block 10 ,\nGRAND FORKS TOWNSITE, MAP 1254\nWin. Aitkin, \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lot 3, Block 7 \u00E2\u0080\u009E .\nR. E. SurteeB. _ Lots 9, 10, 11, Block 13 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nAnnie Boorman, Lot 1, Block 16, \t\nGRAND FORKS TOWNSITE, MAP 1467.\nAlex. Campbell \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lots 9, 10, .19, Block 4,\n37.21 16.26\n19.61 6.69\n12.76\n12.75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.76\n12.76\n12.76\n12.75\n12.75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.76\n79.78\n16.45\n79.78\n30.12\n61.74\n19.35\n174.96\n27.12\n26.04\n16.70\n16.70\n27.59\n16.23\n66.21\n38.95\nGeorge H. Brown, a Lot 3, Block 6\t\nGRAND FORKS TOWNSITE MAP 1466.\nW. C. Monro, Lota 7, 8, Block 6,\nKALEDEN TOWNSITE, MAP 763.\nMrs. O. E. Tomlln, \t\n19.93\n138.30\n13.20,\n6.93\n65.04\n4.67\n12.75\n12.75\n12.76\n39.61\n206.09\n30.62\n3.80\n35.69\n4.96\n.61\n15.42\n.93\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n17.16\n63.86\n18.63\n35.63\n14.49\n13.99\n6.63\n12.76\n12.75\n62.37\n32.87\n.Lot 10, Block 14, ...\n24.08 10.12\n6.97 2.16\n12.75\n12.76\n46.96\n21.87\nKEREMEOS UPPER TOWNSITE, MAP 66.\nMrs. W. B. Palmer Lota 11, 11A, 14. ISA, Blook 1\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nJohn M. lYoung,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Lots 11, 11A, Block 22,\n...Lota 9, 9A, 10, 10A, Block j\n..Lota 9,9A, 10,10A, 11,11A Block 27,\n..Lota 1, IA, 2, 2A, Blook 37,\t\nArthur Smltheram, .\nThomas Sm-Mheram, \t\nM. Baroelo Estate _ Lota 1, IA, 2, 2A, Block 29,\t\nL. Bullock-Webster \" *\" \" - - ****-*- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\nMIDWAY TOWN8ITE, MAP 3.\nWin Haegerman ,\nJ. A. Tuzo Estate,,\n-Lot 15, Block 9\t\n...Lota 19, 20, 21, Block 16,\n32.10\n25.64\n80.49\n90.13\n67.88\n41.43\n28.88\n19.20\n39.84\n90.13\n246.48\n25.64\n41.77\n96.60\n19.20\n19.20\n56.27\n38.40\n21.21\n75.06\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A235.12\n62.50\n49.05\n68.60\n67.00\n141.77\n81.77\n41.26\n22.93\nCanadian Bank of Commerce Lot 16, Block 33,\nMrs. E. W. Foulds, _. Lot 16, Block 33,\t\nSteve Mangott v\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lota 15, 16, Block 36,\nMay P. White Lot 16, Block 46, \t\nMrs. Jennie W. Wake Lot 16, Blook 58, \t\nMIDWAY TOWNSITE, MAP 42.\nSteve Mangott, Lot 4, Block 21,\nMrs, J. B. Wake ........ \u00E2\u0080\u009E\nNIAGARA TOWNSITE, MAP 53\nR. B. Jones \t\nOLALLA TOWN8ITE, MAP 86\n..Lot 1,' Block 22,\n7.66\n1.53\n12.75\n21.84\n6.00\n.96\n12.75\n19.71\n4.10\n.66\n12.75\n17.60\n6.16\n.98\n12.75\n19.89\n4.10\n.66\n12.75\n17.60\n61.18\n24.43\n12.75\n98.36\n6.00\n.96\n12.76\n19.71\n7.97\n1.34\n12.76\n22.06\n27.66\n4.29\n12.75\n44.70\n5.53\n.98\n12.76\n19.26\n9.22\n1.43\n12.75\n23.40\n6.00\n.96\n12.75\n19.71\n6.00\n.96\n12.75\n19,71\n4.61\n.73\n13.76\n18.09\n4.61\n.73\n12.75\n18.09\n.....Lot 6, Block 5,\n3.00\n.48\n12.75\n16.23\n-..Lots 12 to 16, Block 6,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094.Lota 6, 7, Block 8,\t\nLillian M, Chase,\nFrank Wedner. \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOKANAGAN FALL8 TOWNSITE, MAP 628 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,'. \u00C2\u00BB-*j\n -. Lota 1 to 12, 16 to 19, Block 6,\n Lota IS to 16, Block 5. \u00E2\u0084\u00A2.\t\nMrB Edith V. Elsey.\nA. A. Hamilton\t\n60.39 27.09\n12.00 6.04\n12.76 100.23\n12.76\n29.79\nOKANAGAN FALL8 TOWNSITE, MAP 4 i; \" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,*\u00C2\u00AB;\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"- S. Rior-dan, . . Lota 1 to 12, Block 2, _\nLots 23, 24, Block 16, ..\nLota 3 to 24, Block 17,\nC. A. C. Steward,\nReginald Hody,\n.-Lot 7, Block 50\n...Lot 7, Block 51,\nMrs. E. A. Ashcrort,\nMrs. E. A. Ashcroft,\nOKANAGAN FALLS TOWNSITE, MAP 1280 H\nLot 1, Block 3,\nH. L. Jackson,\nW. B. Hine, ...\nReginald Hody,\nReginald Hody,\nJ. P. McOuddy,\nReginald Hody,\nReginald Hody,\n...Lots 1, 2, (Pant of 3. *4, 5 8, 9,) 10 to\n14. Block 6 \t\n...Lot 9, Block 7, - \t\n....Block 11, .....\t\n....Lota 11, 12, Block 13, ..\t\n..Block 18 . ... .\t\n...-Block 19,\nOLIVER TOWN8ITE, SUB-DIVISIO N OF LOT 77, D.L. 2460S-S. D. Y. Bg^fffl i]\nJ. G- Curry, \t\nBablneau ft Deacon,\nLeslie Keith, \u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\nV. R. Crag-g, .......\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nW. Byers,\nWm. Dolyrmlple, \t\nPHOENIX TOWNSITE, MAP 68\nT. M. Ivens, \t\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 28, Block 4, ..........\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094lot 20, Block 7, \t\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 20, Block 15, \t\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 1, Block 17, \u00E2\u0080\u009E*\t\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 10, Block 17,\t\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 13, Block 17,\t\n13-36\n8.20\n2.27\n1.61\n12.75\n12.75\n28.38\n22.46\n76.00\n40.60\n12.05\n7.26\n12.76\n12.76\n100.80\n60.51\n119.60\n21.47\n52-86\n4.76\n4.76\n19.63\n7.37\n6.28\n.74\n.74\n12.76\n12.76\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n161.88\n41.69\n78.28\n-18.24\n18.24\n17.90\n6.91\n12.75\n87.56\n16.77\n4.76\n28.50\n9.60\n7.10\n7.16\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 1 ;1\n2.60\n.74\n4.62\n11.51\n1.12\n1.13\n12.75\n12.75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.76\n12.75\n32.12\n18.24\n46.77\n83.76\n20.97\n21.03\nH i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n12.98\n13.48\n23.36\n38.93\n11.88\n18.16 '\n2.67\n2.12\n3.67\n6.74\n8.12\n2.86\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n28.40\n28.36\n39.77\n68.42\n27.76\n33.76\nii-u.il\n..Lot 1, Block 8,\n.45\n.07\n12.75\n13.27\n10.00\n4.06\n12.75\n26.81\n3.60\n.'68\n12.75\n16.93\n.90\n.14\n12.75\n13.79\n18.00\n2.88\n12.75\n33.63\n8.65\n1.88\n12/.75\n22.68\n10.80\n1.73\n12.75\n126,28\n10.80\n1.73 -\n13.75\n25.28\n10.J80\n1.73\n12.76\n25.28\n17.10\n2.74\nia75\n' 32.69\n8.10\n1.30\n12.75\n22.15\n9.00\n1.44\n12.75\n23.19\n10.36\n1.66\n12176\n24.76\n10.80\n11.73\n12.75\n25.28\n7.20\n1.16\n12.76\n21.10\n10.80\n1.73\n12.75\n25.28\n10.80\n1.73\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 12.75\n25.28\n10.80\n1.73\n12.75\n25.28\n.90\n.14\n12.75\n13.79\n2.70\n.43\nia.75\n16.88\n5.40\n.86\n12.75\n19.01\n6.40\n.86\n12.75\n19.01\n9.45\n1.61\n12.76\n23.71\n2*25\n.36\n12.76\n15.36\n4.60\n.72\n12.76\n17.97\n6.21\n.93\n12.75\n18.88\n6.00\n.96\n12.75\n19.71\n3.70\n.63\nla.76\n17.08\n7.91\n1.39\n12.76\n22.05\n4.22\n.78\n1&76\n17.76\n3.69\n.63\n12.75\n17.07\n8.70\n.63\n12.76\n17.08\nPHOENIX TOWNSITE, MAP 60\nMartha Zucco, \u00E2\u0080\u009E_.....\n.ity.\n10 teet Lot 16, and E. 10 feet\n17, exo. N. 30 feet of W. 10 feel\nMatt Johnson,\n'!! i'i'\n(of Lot 16 and exe. N. 30 feet ofj&i\nE. 10 teet ot Lot 17, Block 8, ....\n,.N. 30 feet of W. 10 teet of Lot 16,\nand N. 30 feet ot E. 10 feet ot\nLot 17, Block 8, ,\n24.00 10.08\n6.98\n13.75 6.96\n12.76\n12.76\n12.75\n46.83\n32.63\n32.45\nSUB-DIVISION OF PART W/t OF DL. 107, PLAN B-1819\nPels. L and La,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nL. Bullock-Webster,\nHlne & Kerby, .....\nHine ft Kerby\t\nHlne ft Kerby, ......\n ...Pels. M and Ma,\n........ Pels. N and Na, .\n Pols. O and Oa, .,\n... Pels. P and Pa, .,\n Pels. Q and Qa, .\n \u00E2\u0080\u0094Pels. R and Ra, .\n - Pels, a and 6a, ...\n .....Pels. T and Ta, .\n Pels. U and Ua, .\n Pels, v and Va, .\n4.10\n.66\n12.75\n17.51\n2.50\n.70\n12.75\n15.96\n2.60\n.70\n12.75\n16.95\n2i60\n.70\n12.75\n15.96\n2.60\n.70\n12.75\n16.95\n2.60\n.70\n12.75\n16.95\n2.60\n.70\n12.76\n16.96\n2.60\n.70\n12.75\n15.95\n2.50\n.70\n12.76\n16.95\nauso\n.70\n12.75\n16.95\n2.60\n.70\n12.76\n16.95\n|Vj\nMrs. Lucy Barcelo,\nt-'-\n9.82 2.44\n86.20 13.94\n12.76\n24.51\nGRAND FORKS TOWNAITE, MAP 1363 ^^^^H\nAlfred Hatton, ., .- -.Lota 31, 82, Block S,\nSub-Division of Parts of Sections 3,9, 16, 16, 17, Tp. 62 and Part Lota666, 666, 113, 2766-Map 1476, S.D.Y.O,\nLots 15 to 21 (Pt) and PL Lot 23,\nBlock 8 Lying within D.L. 113,\n12.76 111.89\nMrB. Lucy Barcelo,\n..Lot 2, Part Lota 7 to 10, and Part\n Lot 11, Block 4 Lying w*thln D\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nK tf-'i 1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' L. 113 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMrs. Lucy Barcelo, Part Lota 14 to 22, Blocs 7, Lying\nwthuin D.L. 113,\nMrs. Lucy Barcelo,\n17.82 6.15\nDier &\nDavidson,' Lot 13, Block 12,\n3.41\n7.64\n3.41\n6.82\n3.41\n3.41\n6.82\n4.55\n4.92\n3.41\n5.72\n3.81\n3.41\n3.41\n3.41\n3.81\n3.82\n3.41\n.54\n1.19\n.64\n1.08\n.64\n' .54\n1.08\n.718\n.88\n.64\n.89\n.59\n.54\n.54\n.54\n.59\n.60\n.64\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.75\n12.75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n12.75\n12.76\n12.75\n.12.76\n12.76\n12.76\n12.76\n12.71)\n12.75\n12.75\n12.75\n36,72\nGRAND FORKS TOWNSITE\nH. J. Trimble, *..-\t\nAaron V. Anderson, _..:\t\nJohn B. Montgomery, .....\t\nJohn B. Montgomery, ..............\n..Lote\"(l to 47'p-L)\"Loti\"5 to 7, Block\n11, Lying -within D.L. 118,\t\n..Lota 1 to 4, Block 17, Map 88,\t\n..Lot 1, Blot* 16, Map 36, \t\n-Lots 1 to 8, Blook 6, Map 128, \t\n..(Lots 1 to 7, Block 7, Map 128,\t\n86.12 16.26 12.75 125.13\n147.94 26.26 . 12.76 185.94\n96.86 16.82 11.75 126.92\nMIDWAY TOWN8ITE, MAP 88 -\nHugh Maitr, Lots 1 to 12, Block 76, ...\nHugh Mair, ., ..-.Lota 1 to 6, Btock 76, _\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'%*'\" pi*riWr \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\n-Lot 1 (Part) Block 10,\nPHOENIX TOWNSITE, MAP 69\nB. Raymond,\n16.70\n21.58\n16.70\n20.66\n16.70\n16.70\n20.65\n18.08\n18.55\n16.70\n19.36\n17.15 _____\n16.70 ] R. Smailes,\n16.70, Wm. Rlchter Estate,\n16.70; M. Barcelo Estate, ...\n17.15 M. Barcelo Estate, ...\n17.17 j M. Barcelo Estate, ...\n16.70 ' Frank Rowell, \t\n-Lot 2 (Part) Block 10,\n..Lot 6, Block 10 _.\nMrs. Rosa Lachard, .\nStrachan & Smith .-\nCROWN GRANTED LAND8, 8. D. Y. D. ^^^^^^^^^B\n Sub. Lot f\ Block 1, of DjL. 2710,\n Lot 601, 1 : ika C ft D, Plan 8, ....\nMrs. Mary Ann Lee Lot 641 Pt. 8.8 acres,\t\nGerald T. Wilson,\niHugh Mair,\n....Lot 1466 Ft. 90.28 acres,\n...'Lot 41, Except Map 1835,\n Lot 257,\n Lot 289,\n ...Lot 290,\n Lot 347,\n14.21\n2.16\n12.78\n29.12\n3.96\n.65\n12.75\n17.35\n80.98\n6.98\n12.716\n49.71\nWaiter Rates and Interest ....\n 30.15\n20.80\n3.86\n12.75\n87.01\nWater Rates and Iutereat ....\n 30.15\n1-\n15.45\n3.42\n12.75\n81.62\n8.14\n2.31\n12.76\n23.20\n81.30\n16.08\n12.75\n69.13\n17.00\n7.64\n28.93\n12.76\n12.76\n37.39\n56.60\n97.58\n72.50\n23.22\n13.76\n109.47\n148.99\n51.66\n13.75\n214.40\n10.00\n2.80\n13.76\n26.56\n13.50\n2.16\n13.76\n29.41\n32.00\n7.04\n13.75\n62.79\n22.20\n4.89\n13.75\n40.84\n22.20\n4-89\n13.75\n40.84\n16.66\n3.67\n13.75\n34.07\n24.84\n6.06\n13.75\n44.65 THESUN: GBAND FORKS, BBITISH COLUMBIA\nName of Perton Assessed\nShort Description of Property\nArrears Interest Costa\nof all and and\nTaxes. Penalty. Expenses. Total\n, R. C. Johnston * Lot 352, (Part) except Plan B 378,\n;-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-.\u00E2\u0080\u009E,', , and Map 1622, and B. 348 143.33 $9.14 *13.75 8 66.22\nS. R. Almond \u00E2\u0080\u009E Lot 363 362.86 78.80 13.75 455.41\nWater Rates and Interest 5042.58\nName of Person Assessed\nShort Description of Property\nArrears Interest Costs n .\nof all and and\nTaxes. Penalty. Expenses. Total\nM. Barcelo Estate Lot 393, Part 289 acres, .\nWin. Thomias, Lot 465, (Part) 300 acres\t\nLouisa Shuttleworth Lot 466, 2-6 Interest\t\nJean & Michale Ferroux _. Lot 473s,\t\nMrs. Mary Ruckle, Lot 630 (Part) 20 acres, D.D. 7350 A,\nRobert Dibble Lot 636, Lot 1, Map 179\t\nMrs. Barbara McCurdy Lot 502, (Part) Map B 1799, 100 acs.\nHugh Mair, Lot 660 Part lying, N. and E. of Blk.\n\"H\" and Including Block \"H\"\t\nThomas Daly Estate Lot 669b i\t\nThomas Daly Estate Lot 670s\t\nThomas Daly Estate, Lot 67.1e _ _\nT. ft W. Clark - Lot 681 (Part) 4.72 acres, D. D. 6132\n-Mrs. Elsie L. Clement Lot 700 Part, Map 213, 61.43 acres,..\nS. O. Grey, , Lot 746 (Part) 8.5 acres, except Map\nB 1260 \u00E2\u0080\u009E\nChas. M. Randall Estate Lot 756\t\n: Beatrice V. Johnston, Lot 877\t\nJohn Rlchter i^ot 900, WV4 ...........\n' MrB. F. D. Willis Lot 940s,\t\nT. Daly Estate Lot 980s _ -\t\nJ. ft M. Ferroux, Lot 1078s, (Part) 313.06 acres, except Plan A 166, \t\nH. S. Pittendrigh \u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 1146s\t\nJ. H. Thompson \u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 1181s, exeept Plan B 1829 and\nPart 98.30 acres forfeited\t\nChas. E. Gilmore Lot 1209b, except K. V. R. Rt. of way\nF. Gachaln Lot 1269s, except Plan A 164\t\nM. Barcelo Estate, Lot 1474s\t\nMrB. E. G. Warren \u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 1549, Sub-Lots C ft D\t\nJoseph Caron \u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot 1660b : \t\nJohn Knudson Lot 1925s, \t\nCecil C. Allen, Lot 1973s\t\nJoseph Downing Estate Lot 1975b, - \t\nT. R. Preston, Lot 1996 N%\t\nH. A. Barcelo Estate, Lot 2035s, \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00BB\t\nReginald Vlck Estate Lot 2868s, -... , -., :\t\nH. D. Jory \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lot 2881b, - -\nJ. Marse! Estate -Lot 2991 \t\nJas. A. HarriB Lot 2733 \t\nH. F. Lockhart, Lot 2795s, ...;. -\t\n(W. J. McKolvitw XaH 3281 \t\nThomas Daly Estate _ Lot 3290\t\nR. J. Dinsmore Estate, .__ Lot 3673, '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\t\nJ. A. McDonald Lot 967b, \u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\n285.81\n155.92\n38.83\n32.00\n128.13\n23.63\n67.59\n34.97\n8.27\n13.28\n34.78\n6.16\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n357.15\n204.64\n60.85\n59.03\n176.66\n42.54\nWater Rates and Interest 116.23\n30.00 6.60\n186.28\n11.10\n22.20\n22.20\n9.80\n58.34\n66.66\n2.44\n4.90\n4.90\n2.14\n12.56\n66.32 14.47\n236.16 113.44\n64.00 19.84\nTOWN8HIP 81, S. D. Y. D.\nC. deB. Green Sec. 4, Fr. NWH4 10.338 acres, \t\nC. deB. Green Sec. 6, Fr. NE\u00C2\u00BB4, 29.28 acres, \t\nC. deB. Green, Sec. 8, Fr. SE\u00C2\u00BB4, 33 aores\t\nC. deB. Green Sec. 8, Fr. S% of SW %, 5.64 acres,\nTOWN8HIP 62, S. D. Y. D.\nM. Barcelo Estate Sec. 14, W-A NE>4 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nM. Barcelo Estate Sec. 14, l*TW*A, \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nM. Barcelo Estate Sec. 15, NE%\t\nM. Barcelo Estate Sec. 22, SW!>4 \u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\nM. Barcelo Estate Sec. 31, S% NBU -\t\nM. Barcelo Estate _ Sec. 31, SBS*A, \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nM. Barcelo Estate Sec. 32, SEW \t\nM. Barcelo Estate \u00E2\u0080\u009E Sec. 32 S% NH% \t\nM. Barcelo Estate Sec. 32 S% NW/% \t\nThos. Daly Estate Sec. 28, NWVi ....:\t\nThos. Daly Estate _ Sec. 88, B*$*A\nThos. Daly Estate Sec. 28, Vfr. NE% \t\nThos. Daly Estate _ Sec. 29, N% \t\nThos. Daly Estate - :..Sec. 30, NH14 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \t\nThos. Daly Estate Sec. 30, E% NW% \t\nThos. Daly Estate Sec. 30, NEU.SWi-i \t\nThos. Daly Estate .....'. Sec. 30, NM, SE% __....-\nThoB. Daly Estate Sec. 30, 8-.*., SE14, \u00E2\u0080\u0094*\nThos. Daly Estate Sec. 32,SW% \t\n.Frank Surprise Estate,, Sec. 31, SW?4 (Pt), 164 acres\t\nTOWNSHIP 64, \u00C2\u00AB. D. Y. D\t\nR. H. Parkinson \t\nR. IH. Parkinson \t\nR. H. Parkinson,\t\nTOWNSHIP 66, 8. D. Y. D.\nIda B. Parry \u00E2\u0080\u009E Sec. 5, NWU - '--. ,*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nIda B. Parry, Sec. 6, NE% -~\nH. T. 'LeibtB, Sec. 14, SH NWtt (\u00C2\u00AB.) 65:6 acres\nH. T. Letts, \u00E2\u0080\u009E Sec. 16, NE-xi ,1\u00E2\u0080\u0094...\u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\n.......Sec. 2, B% SE\u00C2\u00BB4\t\n.......Sec. 2, NB% (Ht), 109 acres\n Sec. 11, Bs-*A \t\n32.00\n29.09\n2.00\n156.00\n20.72\n80.00\n8.00\n8.00\n3.20\n17,60\n18,18\n21.20\n24.75\n9.63\n8.00\n9.63\n8.00\n8.00\n102.12\n26.67\n16.03\n108.20\n67.66\n90.00\n4-00\n2.00\n2.00\n2.00\n2.00\n8.88\n17.76\n17.76\n6.40\n6.63\n11.26\n11.26\n5.63\n6.63\n6.40\n6.40\n3.20\n22.13\n11.26\n6.63\n3.22\n5.63\n3.22\n11.26\n110.11\n19.84\n9.92\n19.84\n7.04\n6.43\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .44\n74.40\n4.41\n10.24\n1.76\n1.76\n.71\n3.91\n4.36\n4.74\n10.23\n2.10\n1.76\n2.10\n1.76\n1.76\n20.90\n5.84\n3.01\n39.96\n12.84\n42.60\n.44\n.44\n.44\n.44\n1.97\n3.92\n3.92\n1.41\n1.23\n2.46\n2.46\n1.23\n1,23\n1.41\n1.41\n.71\n4.87\n2.46\n1.23\n.70\n1.23\n.70\n2.46\n24.17\n6.77\n2.88\n6.77\n18,00\n4.01\n30.51\n6.86\n19.56\n4.10\n11.44\n2.42\nSUB-DIVISION OF PART LOT 600, MAP'77, 8. D. Y. D.\nC. W. Clark [ Block 2, (NH) \t\nC. W. Clark Block 3, (SH) \t\n8UB-DIVI8ION OF PART LOT 535, MAP 110, 8. D. Y. D.\nB. W. Biddlecomlbe, _ Block 2\t\nC. F. L. Morgan _ Block 3\t\nC. F. L. Morgan, J Block 6 \u00E2\u0080\u0094,\nB. W. Blddlecombe ...* Block 6. ,\u00E2\u0080\u0094,\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMrs. Myra A. A. Almas, \u00E2\u0080\u009E.. Block 10, :\t\n24.73\n49.67\n46.76\n31.24\n41.05\n20.52\n22.06\n5.21\n10.62\n10.28\n6.82\nv8.97\n4.48\n4.82\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76,\n13.75\n12.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76\n13.76\n13.7b\n60.35\n266.67\n27.29\n40.85\n40.85\n26.69\nSUBDIVISION of PART of SECTIONS 3, 9, 10, 16, Tp. 62, Lota 666,\u00C2\u00ABnd 258, MAP 1673, S. D. Y. p.\nSimilkameen Fruit Company Lots 1 to 6, 8 to 13, Block 18, \t\nSlmllltameen Fruit Company Lots 1 to 4, 6, 8, 15, 16, Block IS, ...\nSimilkameen Fruit Company, Lots 1 to 7, Block 20\nSimilkameen Fruit Company Lots 1 to 3, Block 22! \t\nSimilkameen Fruit Company, Lots 1 to 6, Block 23 \"\"\nSimilkameen Fruit Company Lots 4 to 11, 14, 15, Block'24, r~\nL .;. Hunt* ,Lota 12 an\u00C2\u00B0 13. Block 24\t\n-Blmflkmeen Fruit Lands Company, .Lots 1 to 4, Block 25,\nSimilkmeen Fruit Lands Company, ..Lots 1 to 11,'Block 26\t\nSimilkmeen Fruit Lands Company, .Block 27, (Part) 10.02 acres',\nSimilkmeen Fruit Lands Company, ..Block 28, \t\nSlmlllunleen iFrult Lands Company, ..Lot 3, Block 29,\nSimilkmeen (Fruit Lands Company, ..Lots 1 to 7, Block 30\t\nD. A. Rogers Lot 11, Block 30, ********-*.*\nSimilkmeen Fruit Lands Company, ..Lots 12 to 17, Block 30,\n...... , Similkmeen Fruit Lands Company, ,.Lots 1, 4 to 15, Block 31, \t\n84.65 I Similkmeen Fruit Lands Company, ..Lots 1 and 2, Block 32,\n1 Similkmeen Fruit Lands Company, ..Lot 2, Block 33, \" .., ...\n94.54 j Similkmeen Fruit Lands Company,..Lots 1, 2, 6. 7 to 12, Block 84, 174*46\n363.36 I Similkmeen Fruit Lands Company,..Lots 3 to 6, Block 35,\n97.59' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-'\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094-- * * \"\n62.79\n49.27\n16.19\n244.15\n38.88\n63.99\n23.61\n23.61\n17.60\n36.16\n36.28\n39.69\n48.73\n25.48\n23.51\n26.48\n23.51\n23.51\n136.77\n46.16\n31.79\n161.91\n84.14\n146.35\n18.63\n16.19\n16.19\n16.19\n16.19\n24.60\n35.43\n35.43\n21.56\n20.61\n27.47\n27.47\n20.61\n20.61\n21.56\n21.66\n17.66\n40.75\n27.47\n20.61\n17.67\n20.61\n17.67\n27.47\n148.03\n39.36\n26.55\n39.36\n35.76\n61.12\n87.41\n27.61\n43.69\n73.94\n70.74\n61.81\n63.77\n38.75\n40.63\nMrs. Myra. A. A. Almas u Block 11. :\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\n: ii \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nC. F. JU Morgan Blook 13\t\nSUB-DIVISION OF LOT8 749, 174, MAP 1628, 8. D. Y. D.\n'\nKeremeos lnnd Co Block 1 ,_, ..\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ~\t\nKeremeos Land Co., Block 2, .'.\t\nKeremeoB Land Oo Block 8, .\u00E2\u0080\u0094......\u00E2\u0080\u009E...\t\nKeremeos Land Co Block 4, ....._. \u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\nKeremeoB Land Co Block 6 -\t\nKeremeos Land Co., Block 6 --..'..............,\t\nKeremeos Laijd Oo Block 7, ,.,\t\nKeremeos Land Co., Block 8, ...:.......\t\nKeremeos Land Co., Block 9, -\t\nKeremeos Land Co., Block 12\t\nKeremeoB Land Co \u00E2\u0080\u009E Block 19 j\t\nKeremeos Land Co Block 20 ., ,\t\nKeremeos Land Co., Block 21,\t\nKeremeoB Land Co., I Block 22\t\nKeremeos Land Co., ....; Block 23\t\nKeremeos Land Co Block 24\t\nKeremeos Land Co Blook 26 .'.\t\nKeremeos Land Oo [ Block 26 .\t\nKeremeos Land Co i Block 27, : I\t\nKeremeos Land Company Block 28 _. -\t\nKeremeoB* Land Company, Block 29\t\nSUB-DIVISION OF LOT8 749 and 174, MAP 300, 8. D. Y. D.\nKeremeos 'Land Company, ......J. Block 45 ,\t\nKeremeoB Land Company J Block 46,\t\nKerempos Land Company, Block 47 ;\t\nKeremeos Land Oompany Block 56\t\nKeremeos Land Company Block 57, (Lots 1 to 13, Plan 1603).\nKeremeos Land Company Block 60 (Part) 2 acres,\t\nKertm-fsjos Land Company, Block 61 v\t\nKeremeos Land Company Block 82 ,\t\nKeremeos Land Company i Block 89 - -\t\nWater iRatefl and Interest 82.58\n27.81 8.92 13.75 48.48\nWater Rates and Interest 165.17\n41.80 9.18\n13.75\n10.07\n2.25\n13.75\n9.80\n2.19\n13.76\n6.63\n1.48\n13.75\n6.63\n1.48\n13.76\n6.68\n1.48\n13.75\n6.63\n1.48\n13.75\n6.63\n1.48\n13.75\n9.80-\n2.19\n13.75\n9.80\n2.19\n13.76\n14.8-1\n6J83\n81.31\n13.75\n1.30\n13.76\n9.01\n2.01\n13.76\n9.28\n12.07\n13.75\n8.28\n2.07\n13.75\n6.63\n1.48\n13.75\n6.63\n1.48\n13.75\n13.26\n2.96\n13.75\n13.26\n2.96\n13.76\n7.42\n1.64\n13.75\n6.89\n1.63\n13.75\n3.66\n.81\n13.75\n10.60\n2.37\n18.76\n6.30\n1.18\n13.75\n6.30\n1.18\n13.75\n3.66\n.81\n13.75\n8.18\n1.82\n13.75\n10.60\n2.37\n13.76\n6.30\n1.118\n13.76\n7.96\n1.77\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 13.75\n6.30\n1.18\n13.75\n64.68\n26.07\n25,74\n21.86\n21.86\n21.86\n21.86\n21.86\n25.74\n25.74\n31.90\n20.8S\n24.77\n25.10\n25.10\n21.86\n21.86\n29.96\n29.96\n22.81\n22.17\n18.21\n26.72\n20.23\n20.23\n18.21\n23.75\n26.72\n20.23\n23.47\n20.23\nSimilkmeen Fruit Lands Con-pany,..Lots 1 to 3, 7, Block' 36\t\nSimilkmeen Fruit Lands Corapany,..Lot 3, (W<%) and Lots 17, 18, Blk. 87\nCARSON TOWNSITE, Sub-Dlvlslon *f Lot 617, iMAP 39, S. D. Y. D.\nMrs. L. Parkinson Lots 1 to 15, Block 11,\nMrs. L. Parkinson, Lots 1 to 11, Block 20, ...\" '\"\"\"'\"\"'\"-\"\n$219.10\n$48.68\n$13.75\n$281.53\n204.39\n45.47\n13.75\n263.61\n98.12\n22.42\n13.75\n134.29\n33.14\n7.63\n13.75\n54.52\n45.04\n10.55\n13.75\n69.34\n80.07\n18.63\n13.75\n112.45\n35.48\n7.97\n13.75\n67.20\n43.05\n9.86\n13.76\n66.66\n163.99\n36.87\n13.75\n214.61\n60.00\n13.20\n13.75\n86.95\n73.00\n16.26\n13.75\n103.01\n24.22\n5.39\n13.75\n43.36\n156.72\n35.89\n13.76\n206.36\n16.65\n3.67\n13.75\n34.07\n72.67\n16.34\n13.75\n102.76\n191.17\n42.56\n13.75\n247.48\n13.87\n3.06\n13.75\n30.68\n26.75\n6.96\n13.75\n46.46\n174.46\n38.58\n13.75\n226.79\n65.10\n14.45\n13.75\n93.30\n93.12\n20.94\n13.75\n127.81\n64.10\n14.29\n13.75\n92.14\n9.02\n2.11\n12.75\n23.88\n4.86\n1.03\n12.76\n18.14\nSUB-DIVI8ION OF PART LOT 377,MAP 87, 8. D. Y. D. (MIDWAY)\nO. L. Gunderson, Lot 6, Block 4, \t\nCROWN GRANTED LANDS\nM. Barcelo Estate, Lot 2963 \t\n12.80 2.92\n.71\n12.76\n13.76\n28.47\n17.66\nSUBDIVISION OF LOTS 109,. 110, 222, 319, 323, MAP 301, 8. ,D. Y. D.\nMrs. O. Oallaghan Block 16 t, 100.85 23.22 13.75 137.82\nSUB-DIVISION OF LOTS 672s, 103s, 104s, 105s, 106s, 3757, Part B.B.%. of Seo. 24, Tp. 88, Map 719, S.D.Y.D.\n0. M. Watson, ....--,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E [j. Block 3, 1 1 L- 10.72 2.35 13.75 26.82\nSUB-DIVISION OF LOT 1475,\nH. F. Broad 'Estate, .......\nMAP817, S. Di Y. D.\n..Lot 8,; ...'\t\ntt. T. Luckw*ell, Lot 10\t\nH. T. Luckwell, . j.L\\ Lot 11,\t\n ; ; .... 141.01 61.73 13.75 206.49\nWater Rates and Interest 245.63\n .'. 37.05 7.73 13.75 68.63\nWater Rates and Interest 203,79\n j . 31.94 6.73 13.75 52.42\n;*'. .' Water Rates and Interest 101.89\nSUB-DIVISION OF PART OF SECT ION8 3, 9, 15, 16, 17, Tp. 62, Part of Lota 566, 686, 113, 2768, MAP 1479,\n8. D. Y. P,\nA. E. Johnson, i Lot 15, Block 2, .,..*,..\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nJean Cal7l|eron, .-\u00E2\u0080\u009E..' Lot 1, Block 3 \u00E2\u0080\u009E....'\nEdward H<*W>, L,i.....Lsks 7 and 8, Block 3, .\nR. L. Cawtston Estate, , L,.....ILotli 3 and 4. Block 4, .\nMm. Agns-js Monro, ...:i....v....:......I.'..i...Lot 5, Block 4 .....;\t\nWm. Lewtas Estate, .:..'..,J...:.....L_....Lot 6, Block 4, \t\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mre. Lucy Barcelo, t *-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-- Lot 12, Block 4,\t\nJ. H. Treleaven, .:..... ;...Lot 2, Block 7, ..**.\t\nJas. F. Stuart ...:..:....:....; L.Lot 9, Block 8, \t\nAndrew J. Swan '...; ...Lot 4, Block 12,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\nJ. 8. Sharp : : :....:.._.....;. Lot 4, > Block 13, ,\nErnest Gordon, ;...i...;...Lot 7, Block 13\t\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Fred M. Wright, I Lot 1, Block 14\t\nMm. M. Taylor, _: .*-*\u00E2\u0080\u0094*. Lots 2 and 8. Block 16,\n33.44\n25.97\n28.25\n66.86\n33.44\n33.44\n13.37\n37.86\n24.47\n33.94\n13.87\n21.70\ni 60.19\n70.65\n7.45\n5.67\n6.36\n14.90\n7.45\n7.45\n2.98\n8.41\n6.43\n7.53\n3.06\n4.83\n13.32\n16.67\n13.75\n13.76\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.765\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n13.75\n13.75\n13.76\n64.64\n45.39\n48.35\n95.51\n64.64\n64.64\n30.10\n60.01\n43.65\n55.22\n30.68\n40.28\n87.26\n100.07\nDated this 27th day of September, 1\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 3.20\nVT. R. DEWDNEY,\nProvincial Collector, Kettle River Assessment District\nThe sale of\nBeer by the\nglass Vindicated\n\u00C2\u00A37^? HE Government Control of beer sales to the\n\__) people of British Columbia in licensed\npremises has been vindicated by the orderly\nmanner in which these premises are conducted.\nThese quiet and comfortable establishments\nprove that the open and above-board sale of\npure beer has in great measure ended the evils\nattending the illicit sale of strong drink. They\nhave proved that the self respect and good\nbehavior of the people of British Columbia are\nmore to be depended on than the opinions of\nthose who wish to prevent the people from\nhaving any beer at all.\nYou may find citizens enjoying a healthful and\ninvigorating glass of beer in the quiet and ease\nthat the well-to-do have in their clubs. Licensed\npremises in the colder winter months are more\nthan ever the working man's club, where .he finds\nthe company and comfort that is his right.\nThe supervision and regulation of licensed premises\nby the Government is a guarantee that the\nexcellent conditions under which beer is sold shall\ncontinue. Efficient Government Inspectors see not\nonly that such licensed premises are operated in a\nstrictly sanitary manner. They look for a high\nstandard of conduct.\nThe purity and wholesomeness of all beers\nserved\u00E2\u0080\u0094supplied by the Amalgamated Breweries of British Columbia\u00E2\u0080\u0094is guaranteed by\nthe frequent and strict analyses to which they\nare subjected by the Government. Iri the\npresent administration of Beer Parlors the\ninterests of the public are completely protected.\nAmalgamated Breweries of Britlah Columhia, In Which are\nassociated Vancouver Breweries Ltd., Rainier Brewing Go. of\nCanada Ltd., Westminster Brewery Ltd., Sliver Spring Brewery Ltd.,\nVictoria Phoenli Brewing Co. Ltd.\ny\nThin advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nCit'zens of Grand Forks are asked to note the following extracts from the 1925 Amendments to the\nHospital Act:\n(4) Wbere tbere is, either within or without the limits of any\nmruoioipalit*-, a hospital which ia maintained by tbe municipality,\nor to tbe support of which the municipality is chief contributor\nwith the exception of the Crown, tbe muoicipility sball not be\nliable in respect of any patient treated in any other hospital, except\nin cases of emergency, or where the hospital so maintained or supported is not iu a position lo furnish tbe sppcial treatment npce-3*-\nsary for any certain patient, nnd authority fo' that patient to apply for admission to the other hospital hug bepn given by the\nMiyor or Reeve or some duly authorized officer ot the municipality, in which cases the tnonicipaliry shall he liable to te extent\nset out io subsections (1) and (2).\nJOHN A,, HUTTON.\nCity Clerk\nTIMBER SALE X819 5\nSF.ALBD TBNOKBSwIlI be received br tha\nDistrlot Forester. Nvlsoa, not later than\nnoon on the Itil, dajr of October, 1988, for\nthe purchase of Lleence X81H5, near Paulson,\nto eut 4,015 lineal feet of Cedar Poles.\nOne year will lie allowed for removal of\ntimber.\nFurther particulars of the District Forester, Nelson.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2HiOVBBNMBNT LIQUOR ACT.\"\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOB\nBEER LICENCE.\n1SJOTICE IS HKREBY GIVEN that on th*\n*~ . 10th day of November next tha undersigned Intends to apply to tbe Liqnor\nControl Hoard for a licenoe In respect of\npremises belnc part of the buiidinsr hisown\nas the \"B. 0.\" Hotol, situate at ''ssrade, il.C,\nupon the lands desorlbed as Lot No. One, Block\n20, Map No. 8. *'a*i-itde, B. **., Kismlntsps Land\nLand Registry Division In the Province of\nBritish Columbia, for thc sale of beer by tha\n**l*s* or by the open bottle for oonaumptlon\non the premises.\nDated this lltn day ol October. 1926.\nBAN j l-KTUR TllOMl'SON,\nApplicant.\nLAND BBGISTBY ACT\n(Section IM.) **-\nIN THB MATTER OF Lots 1, i, \u00C2\u00AB, 7. 8, *. 10,\n11. 12,18,1', 15. Block 1; Blook 2: Blook >;\nexeept Lot 5; Blook 4; Block fi; except Lots\n8 unit 12; Blook 6. except Lots 8 and 10; Lots\n1. 2 and 8, Blook 7; I. 'is 2, 8,4, 5. 6, 7, 8,10,\nU and 12 in Blook 8; Lots 1, 2,1,4, S. 8,\u00C2\u00BB a nd\n10, Block B; Lota 1, 8, 5,8, 7. 8, 9,10, Block 10;\nLsits 1,9 and 10; Block 11; Lots I, *, 7, 8 and\n9 Block 12; Lota 1 to 1, 10, 11 and 12, Block\n18; Block 14; Blook 16; Lose 1, 2,1, 4, 6,8,11\nand 12 Block 16; Lota 1, 2, 8,9,10, Block 17;\nLots 2,8,4,5, 8.1, 8, 9 and 10 Block 18, Block\n19; Block -0; Block 21: llloek IBS Blotk23;\nMap Fifty (50) Town of Christina, British\nColumbia. Lot (17 Uroup 1 exoept plan 60\nOsoyoos Division of Tale Dlatriet, British\nColumbia.\nPROOF having bean filed In my Offloa ot the\nloss ol Certificate of Title No. M684A to\nthe above-mentioned lands In the name of\nWilliam Marshall Wolverton and bearing\ndate the 22nd Oetober, 1908, I HERBBV OIVK\nNOTICB of my Intention at the aspiration of\none calendar month from the first publication hereof to Issue to the said William\nMarshall Wolverton a provisional certllleate\nat title ln lieu of such lost certificate. Any\nperson having any information with reference to such lost certificate of title Is requested to communicate with the under-\nsinned.\nDated at the Land Registry Offloe, Kamloops, B.C., this28th day af Sopten-rber, 1928.\nE. S.STOKJC8,\nRegistrar.\nDate of flrst publication October 8,1928.\nYOUNG AT 50\nDr. Ltntard't New Life Tablets\nImpart* to the Old and Middle-aged\nYouthfulneea, Energy and Fitness, retird* mental and physical\ndecay, thus promo-tin-* longevity,\nPreserves the arteries and tissues,\nSufferers irotn Dsafneis with its many\ndi'trn-'ing acoompanying ailment*,\naa II>vl ruiies, deriveal most immediate benefit. Calm refreshing sleep\nassured. Gloom, Depression and Ner\u00C2\u00AB\nvousnnss is banished under the influence of tli*-*, Lifu giving Tablets\nWrinklos, hard lines aud blemishes\ndisappear. The skin becomes clear,\nlight and elastic and the complexion\nbright aod smooth. Think of the\nblessings of perfect health, the possesion of few; the joyof a clear Youthful appearance and tingling blood, of\nlustrous hair, bright eyes aod health-\ntinted cheeks; the beauty of radiant\nlife and the realisation that Tims haa\nbeen put back Ten years to the envy\nand admiration of your friends, and\ntheunbounded satisfaction of your,\nself, Can you allow a golden opportunity like this to pass! Remember\nthere are no arduous rules to follow,\nno restriction on diet, not are there\nany ill effects after. On the contrary\nit gives the entire system a feeling of\nexhaltation with increased mental\nand bodily vigour. Why not look\nand feel 30 at 50? Do not delay,\ncommence the treatment at once,\nYou will never regret the slight cost\nIncurred for such incalculable benefits. The price of these Marvellous\nTablets including Mail Charges is\n3 Dollars per bottle, dispatched in\nplain wrapper on receipt of amount.\nObtainable from\nDr. Legard's Laboratories,\n106, Liverpool Ko*d,|]UnMbu-ry,\nLondon, Enftls-uid.\nThe actuality ot today seldom\nlooks as good as tho theory of yesterday, THE SUN: GBAND FOBKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n&\nNEWS OFTHE CITY\nP. 'M. Burns and J. A. Yardley, of\nVancouver, Inspector s of customs\nand exe se, were ln the city for a\ncouple of days this week.\nApple picking came to an end this\nweek tnd tbe orchards are now bare\nof fruit.\niMfrs. \"W. J. Cook returned on Wednesday from, Portland, where she\nhad been visiting her son Tack for a\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2few weeks.\nJoe Schnaveleyand family, old-\ntimers of the city, expect to move\nto Spokane next week.\nT. T. Walker came over from Trail\nthis week and visited w th his (ami\nly for a few days.\nThe Norris box factory has practi-\nctlly finished making this season's\nsupply of fruit boxes.\nthe\nH. E. Woodland returned from\ncaast the first of the wieek.\nFROM EVERYWHERE\nine recently organized egg sti.\npoultry pool in Saskatchewan has\n17,000 members. Egg production in\nthat province is 33,072,263 dozen\nyearly. Saskatchewan is now the\nsecond largest poultry producing\nprovince in Canada, Ontario being\nfirst\nSt. Catharine*\u00E2\u0080\u0094The North American celery championship has been\nawarded to James Little of this city\nby the American Vegetable Growers' Association, convening in Cleveland. The high quality of Canadian\ncelery has long been recognized and\nthis new triumph is expected to further stimulate production.\nThe Australian Cricket Team,\nheroes of five test matches against\nEngland this summer, arrived in\nCanada on the Canadian Pacific\nliner Montrose, October 8th. After\nvisiting some of the principal cities\nIn Canada and the United States,\nthe team proceeded to Vancouver\nwhere they sailed on M.S. Aorangi\nfor their homes in Australia, October 21st.\nFor the third year in succession\nthe McAdam First Aid Team from\nNew Brunswick carried off the\n\"Grand Challenge Trophy,\" emblematic of the eastern lines first\naid championship of the Canadian\nPacific Railway. The competition\nwas held recently at the Place Viger\nHotel in Montreal, four other teams\nfrom points east of Fort William\ncompeting.\nThe oldest employee of the Canadian Pacific Railway in point of\nservice, Isaac Gouverneur Ogden,\nvice-president in charge of finance,\ncelebrated his 82nd birthday October 10th. He has served the Company for 44 years and his business\nexperience goes back to the Civil\nWar days. Mr. Ogden was thc\nrecipient of felicitations from all\nparts of the Dominion.\nELECTRIC LIGHT TAKES\nPLACE OF MINE\nLAMPS\nFrom fourteen huts on the rim of a\ndeep craterlilce hole in South Africa,\nshafts of light stream out every\nnight to illuminate the diggings below where natives are toiling in the\nclay for diamonds. Thil lighting\nsystem has been in-tailed at the\nPremier mines, v\u00C2\u00BB-here the famous\nCullina** diamond was discovered,\nand consists ot batteries of 1,500and\n2,000-watt lamps with filaments of\nthe so-called \"monoplane\" type. In\nfront of each lam,p is a B 1-4-inch\nspherical mirror and each projector\nhas a si .iron-inch parabolic mlirror,\nThe liu-hls have a range of from 900\nto 1,600 feet lor sa'.islactory Illumination, ami arc considered a great\nadvance over the old type of arc\nsearchlights, which were constantly\nbeing damaged by the blasting operations. It is estimated that, at the\nend oi 1 .-..:, the mines had produced\n23,500,000 carats of diamonds. The\narea is the \"pipe\" or vent of a form\ner volcano, ooval in shape, about\n2.00U feet long and 1,500 feet wide.\nSomebody remarked: \"If wives\nonly knew what stenographers really think of their husbands, they\nwiould cease to worry.\"\n\"KEEP IT iOUT OF\nPAPER,\"\nIS THE CRY\ntbe\n\"Keep It out of the paper\" ls\ncrp We hetr every week.\nTo oblige often costs considerable\ntrouble and humiliation, but the\narty making the request thinks the\ngranting scarcely worth a \"thank\nyou.\"\nA newspaper ls a peculiar thing\nin the public's epe. The editor is\nstormled at because he gets one item\nand ls abused because he does not\nget another. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nYoung mien and poung women, as\nwell as older -persons, perform! acts\nwhich become logitimatefor publica\ntion and then 'beg the editor not to\nnotice their escapades.\nThe very next week they condemn\nthe same paper for not yrlting up\nanother partp doing the same thin*;.\nTbe discretion of an editor is trulp\na marvelous thing and manp are the\nstories upon which he turns his back\nbecause of a good wife or a mother\nwho would be grlevouslp hurt to see\nthe thing in print.\nDon't blame the editor for keeping\nsome things out of the paper, but be\nthankful that hie has a heart and is\nnot as indifferent to pour feelings as\nthe cold and calculating circulation\nbuilder who alts at the desk in the\nbig cltp papers.\nDONALDSON\nGROCERY\nPhone 30\nS\nTry our Special Tea\nat 65c per\nI\nlb\nShoes, Shirts, Overalls\nGood values for your\nmoney.\nCall and see\npurchasing.\n;\nus before\nJOHN DONALDSON\nGeneral Merchant\nFOR A SPECIAL CUP OF TKA TRY OUR\nCHALLENGE BRAND\nThi$ Tea we have had especially blended.\nCall in and ask foi\u00C2\u00BBa sample.\nCITY GROCERY\nPhone 25\n\"Service and Quality\"\nS. T. HULL\nEstablished 1910\nUealEstate and Insurance\nResident Agent Grnnd Fortes Townsite\n,, Company, l.imite'l\nCHEVROLET\nSt*e the new Superior Chevrolet betore you buy a\ncar. There are more cents in theCHOVROLKT\nDOLLAR than iu any other nutomobile dcllnr.\nCHEVROLET Tourini- \u00C2\u00BBSK5\n\" Roadster '.. 8S5\n\" Cosch uwn\n\" Coupee 1080\n\" Sedan 1200\n\" Linde-u 8ed\u00C2\u00BBn 1250\n\" One-ion Truck 935\nGRAND FORKS GARAGE\nProved safe bv millions and prescribed by physicians for\nNeuralgia Colds Neuritis Lumbago\nHeadache Pain Toothache Rheumatism\nDOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART\nParma JOrcharda City Property\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.(rents at Nelson, Calgary, Wlhnipeg and\nother Prairie points. Vanoosiver Ags-ms :\nPBNDEK IN\nBATTKNBU\nTMENT8\nLANDS LTI>,\nRstrbllshol In 1910. we are in a position to\nfurnish reliable information couoer'-.lng this\ndistrict.\nWrite lor tree literature\nA. E. MODOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR ANO BUILDER\nAgent\nIfuminioD Monumental Worka\nAabsratoa Products Co. Koofiii-}'\n*5W\nAccept only \"Bayer\" package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxen of 12 tableta\nAlso bottles of .24 and 100\u00E2\u0080\u0094Druggists.\nAspirin Is Use trmli- mark registered In Canada) of Barer Msrrafteture of Mcrooacetlc-\nad'eater of. Sallcyllc-icld (Acetyl Sslicyllc Acid, \"A. 8. A.\"). While It Is well known\nthat Aspirin means liayer manufacture, to assist the public sislnst Imitations, the Tablets\nof Bayer Company will be stamped with their general trade nark, the \"Bauer Onus.\"\nDUTCH BULBS\nAuction\nSale\nFarm stock and Implements\nThe undersigned has received instructions from\nJOE SCHNAVELEY\nTo. tell. by.. Public. Auction at his\nranch, hauf mile south of cemetery,\nstarting at 1 o'clock sharp, on\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27\nthe. following.. Farm. Stock,lmple-.\nments and Household Effects:\nCows and Horses\n2Helfers, rising 2 and 3 years\n1 Cow, 6 years, milking\n1 team Mules\n1 Cider Pres\n2 heavy Wagons\n1 light Wagon\n1 Buggy\n1 Cutter\n1 set light Bobsleighs\n1 two-horse international Engine,\nalmost new\n2 Cultivators\n1 Wagon Back\n1 Potato Planter\n1 set Steel Harrows\nB Scrapera\n1 Bone Grinder\n1 Blacksmith Forge. 1 Anvil.\n1 Stump Puller\nQuantity Pulley Blocks\n1 Garden Seeder\n7 tone Wheat Hay\n2 Bicycles\n1 Saddle\n2 sets Heavy Double Harness\n1 set Light Doublet Harness\n2 rolls Barbed Wire\n1 Sideboard\n1 DIningroom Extension Table\n1 Organ\n1 6-Hole Range with Reservoir\n2 Wood Heaters\n2 Rocking Chairs\n6 Kitchen Chairs\n2 Parlor Tables\n2 Washing Machines\n2 Dressers\n1 Churn. 3 Gas Lamps.\nQuantity Sealers and Dishes\n1 Kitchen Cabinet\n1 Drop-leaf Kitchen Table\n2 Shotguns and 2 Rifles\n1 Beehive\n3 dozen Hens and Chickens\nAnd other articles too numerous\nto enumerate\nTerm* of Sale:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cash.\n8, B. LAWRENCE, Auctioneer,\n8. T. HULL, Clerk.\nIf you wish to have early flowers in bloom\nin Spring\nPLANT THIS FALL-Hyacinths, Tulips\nand DaiTodils.\nVVe have the best varieties for this climate\nFRACHE\n. Florists\nRROS., LTD.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Grand Forks, B. C.\nESTIMATES FURNISHED\nBOX 33? BRAND FORKS, P. C\nK. SCHEER\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\nonler ia\nHavana Cigars* Pipe*\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nGRAND V KJvS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS 8 HANsSEN, Props\n<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00C2\u00BB<>- Bag&ifte'aiid (icncial\nTransfer\n|| Coal, Wood and\nfor Sale\nI\nPICTURES\nGiving Wings\nto Friendship\nThe long distance telephone gives wings\nto friendship. It enables the human\nvoice to be carried along wires at a\nspeed of thousands of miles per second\nwithout losing any of its cordiality. The\nspecial night rates after 8:30 p m. are\nadvantageous for social chats.\nBritish Columbia Telephone\nCompany\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Order,\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds,\nUpholstering Nejtly Done\nR. G. MoCUTCHBON\nWIN-tlPBOAVRIOI\nHobby\nis\nDON'T HESITATE!\nPHONE 101R\nFORFINE PRINTING\nA complete line of, colored bonds\nI in all shades for fancy letterheads\nand otber classes of commercial\nprinting. San Job Department.\nDid you ever notice that business\nI firms who think tbat they can reaob\n| The Sun's readers tbrongh other\npublications have a great deal of\nleisure time tha*. might be more\nprofitably employed) A number of\n| sucb firms bave involuntarily retired\nfrom business.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Good\n^Printing\nTHE value of wcll-\npi-Lited, neat appearing stationery as\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult us before going\nelse whore*\nWedding invitations\nBall programs\nBusiness cards\nVi::ting cards\nSh\"; ~ iug tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNoteheadi\nPamphlols\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNew Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nClassic blank cards for -lassy invitations and announcements Stin\nJob Department.\nTHE SUN\nCurable Arenae and\nLake Street\niiLEPHONK\nR101\nOffice at\nR. t. Petrie's\nPhone 64\nce\nStore\nYale liarber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specially*\nP. A. Z. PARE, Fioprietor\nYaw. Hotol, Kirst ikkkt\nSYNOPSIS OF\nUNO ACT AMENDMENTS\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nVacant unrtsserved, surveyed Orowa lauds\nmsy be preempted by Uriel b subjaota o'er\n18 years of us-c, aud by aliens on declaring\nmunition to beoome Hritish subjeots, ooudi-\ntional upon re\u00C2\u00ABl tenne. occupation aisd lm*\nprovemeutforagrtouDaral purposes.\nFull Information concerning re-illations\nregarding pre dilutions Is irlven |n Bulletin\nNo.l, Lun I Series \"How to Pie-esmst Laud,\"\ncopleaof which cau be obtained freo of chrsrge\nby addressing the Depurtineui of Lands,\nVictoria, B.C., or assy (lovernnieul Agent.\nRecords will bc made covering only land\nsuitable for agrlcuitnral purposes, and which\nIs not timberland. I e\u00E2\u0080\u009E carrying over 5.00\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0soard feet per aora west of tue Coast Range\nand 81X10 feel per acre cast of that range.\nApplications foi- pre-emptions are to be\naddressed to the Land Commissioner ot tha\nLaud KeoordingDivision, In wbich the land\nipplte\" for la situated.and are male on\nprinted forms, copies ol o sn be obtained\nfrom the Land Commissioner.\nPre-emptions must be oooiipled for Ave\nyearsaud Improvements made to value of 110\npor aore, including olearlng and cultivating\nat least live stores, beiore a Crown (irant ean\nbe received.\nFor more detailed iniunnaiinu tee the Bulletin \"How to Pre-empt Land,\"\nPUROHASE\nAppllcatlonsaro received for purohase of\nvaoant and unreserved Orown Lands, not be*\ning timberland, for agricultural purposes:\nminimum prloe of llrst-olass (arable) land Is\n|j per aore. and second-clan (graaing) land\n**.60 per aoro. Fnr. her Information regarding purchaaeor leases,f Crown lands Is given\nlu Bulletin No. 10, Land Series. \"Purchase and\nLease ol Crown Lands.\"\nHill, factory, or industrial sites on timber\nland, not exoeediug 40 aores, may be pur.\nchased or leased, on oondltions luolnding\npayment of stumpage.\nHOMESITE LEASES\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 20 aorea,\nmay be leased as homesitsss, conditional upon\na dwelling being e-eoted In the firat year.\ntitle being obtainable after residenoe and\nImprovement conditions sro fulfilled and land\nhaa been surveyed.;\nLEASES\nPor graaing and Industrial purposes area.,\nnot exoeedlng 640 aores may be leased by ona\nperson or aoompany.\nGRAZING.\nt'nder the Oraalng Aot the Province la\ndivided Into graaing dlstrlots and the range\nadministered under a Oraxlng Commissioner. Annual graaing permits are\nIssued baiad ou numbers ranged, priority being given to established owners. Stook-\nowners may form associations for range\nmanagement. Free, or partially free, permits\nare availablee for settler-, tampers nnd\ntravellers up to tea bead."@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_1926_10_22"@en . "10.14288/1.0341283"@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 .