"95c12419-3f28-4d16-89c6-7d7522ec0c55"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1927-08-05"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0341380/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " The happiest are those who have helped others to be happy\nPRINCE UNVEILS\nAddress oi Prime Min\nister W. X. Mackenzie King\nOTTAWA, August 4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Addrens by\ntke prime minister, Rt. Hon\nW. I*. Mackenzie- King, on the\noccasion of the unveiling of tbe\nstatue of Sir Wilfrid Laurier by his\nroyal highness the Prince of Wake,\nParliament Hill, August 3, 1927:\nTke statue which his royal highness the Prince of Wales has graciously consented to unveil this afternoon has been erected by authority\nof parliament to commemorate the\naame and memory of one whose lift\nla a part of the history of Canada,\nand a part ot the larger community\nof British nations of which his majesty Is king.\nIn the lights and sradows of history\nthere aro few events which present\nmore in the way of parallel and contrast than the ceremony of today and\na ceremony of thirty years ago which\nIt serves to recall. Thirty years ago,\nthe British emlpire was celebrating\nthe Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria's accession to the* throne. This\nyear, Canada is celebrating the Diamond Jubilee of the confederation of\nher provinces. Thirty years ago, at\nthe heart of the empire of which she\n\"was queen, the revqred and venerable Victoria wag bestowing, as a\nmark of royal favor, a knighthood on\nWilfrid Laurier, at the time the prime\nminister- of Canada. Today ln the\ncapital of Canada, the memory of Sir\nWilfrid is being honored by bhe illustrious great-grandson of her late ma\nJesty, his royal highness the Prince\not Wales, our future king, who is\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2bout to unveil the statue of -Sir Wilfrid in the distinguished presence,\namong others, of his royal highness\nPrince Oeorge, and the prime minister of Great Britain. Where in history will be found aught that speaks\nmore of the Inheritance which we of\nthe British communities share in\ncommon; or morel of its poetry and\nromance? It would almost seem as\nif Time, itself, had paused to pay a\ntribute, and to give to the occasion\nits- appropriate setting.\nI bavo. said that the life of Sir Wilfrid is a part of the history of Canada and of the British empire, tt ls in\nthe perspective of history that we\nmust seek to viujw lbe life of Laurier\ntoday. That ia not an easy task,\nfor the great figures of history are\nseen ln retrospect Thely emerge ln\ntheir true proportions only as \"the\npresent recedes Into the past. There\nli much, however, in the Laurier\nwhom they all knetfw, wbich his contemporaries, by common consent,\n-would have been quick to concede,\nand it is of this, more especially that\nI desire to speak.\nLaurier was, flrst and foremost, a\ngreat Canadian. I do not, I trust,\ntake from the greatness of other\nlives, some of them commemorated\non this hill, when I say that of all the\npersonalities In our history, his was\nmost distinctively Canadian. It embodied much of Canada's past as well\nas of ito present. It spokei to us of\nthe tWo great races that have shaped\nour destiny, and of a broader toleration In religions faiths.\nJn his ancestry, by direct descent,\nLaurier went back to thn beginnings\nof French colonisation ln Canada.\nAllied to the flrst enduring French\nsettle-aunt established by Cham-plain\nat Quebec in 1608 was the sister settlement at Montreal founded 'by Sieur\nde 'Malsoneuve in 1641. Among the\nnumber who, as soldier colonists\nwith Sieur del Maisonneuve, sought\nto gain a wider dominion for their\nsovereign and their faith, was Laurier's flrst Canadian ancestor. Others\nof his ancestors came ln tbe* years\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2immediately following*. 'Fob eight\ngetoerattons ln unbroken succession\nbis forefathers pioneered in the wilds\nof the Laurentlans, making for their\nchildren, and their cbild*-*en's .'children, homes on the shores of the St.\nLawrence.\nIt was exactly 200 years from the\ntime at wbich his flrst ancestor arrived in Canada, that Laurier was\nbom on November 20, 1841, at St\nLin, a French-Canadian village not\nmany miles distant from Montrel. In\nthat interval of 200 years, Canada\nhad passed from a French to a British |, possession. More rejmarkable\nstill, Cgnada.largely French-Canadian,\nhad, remMlned Britlah, when elsewhere, ln North America, British\ncolonies ln 1776 declared their independence. Within this period also,\nduring the war of 1812-14, 'French-\nCanadian loyalty oncti more aided In\npreserving Canada to the British\ncrown.\nt*_Ana KETTLE VALLEV ORCHARDIST\nTWENTY-SIXTH YEAR\u00E2\u0080\u0094No 40\nTell me what vou Know Is tru\u00C2\u00BB\nI can ton* as well as you.\"\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1927\nThe seventy-seven years which\nelapsed between tbe birth of Sir\nWilfrid Laurier In 1841 and his death\non February 17, 1919, contain the\nother epoch-marking events of our\nhistory\u00E2\u0080\u0094tbe establishment of r e-\nsponslble self-government, the , confederation of the province's, the expansion of the Dominion, and Canada's participation ln tbe Great war.\nIt was within this framework, which\nembraces Canada's development from\na group of small colonle usnlted by\nten St. Lawrence and the Great\nLakcd, to a nation extending /rom\nsea to sea, and holding its place\namong the nations of the world, that\nLaurier played his part as a leading,\nand, for., a considerable) time, the\nforemost figure In our public life.\nLaurier was elected to the legislature of the province of Quebec in\n1871. He entered the parliament of\nCanada in 1874. Three years later,\nhej became a minister of the crown\nin the administration of Alexander\nMackenzie, -fn 1887 he became the\nlender of the Liberal party, and leader of the opposition in the house of\ncommons. In 1896, he became prime\nminister. Tho oflice of prime minister be held continuously for fifteen\nyears. From 1911 to his death in\n1919, he continued the leader of his\nparty and the leader of the opposition. It was a great public career.\nIn period of time, alone, lt embraced\nmeembershl-p in the house of commons of within five year ofs half a\ncentury.\nAt a moment such as tbe. present\nit would be impossible, even were It\nappropriate, to attempt to sketch tbe\nIncidents of Laurier's career. At\nm/ost one can but seek to recall a\nvery few of Laurier's characteristics,\nqualities and guiding principles which\ngave to his leadership the commanding plac it never lacked. \"Nature.\"\nsays one of'tis biographers, \"was\nprodigal of her gifts to Wilfrid Laurier.' Inappcku-ance, he was marked-\nbearing spoke of the chivalry of his\nrace, and ln more partlcularsthan\none, hei gave to chivalry its highest\nexpression. 'His great natural endowments. were enrichcld by a nobility of character that made his personality one of rare dignity and serenity. Wherever he went he seemed to shed \"a constant influctnce.a\npeculiar grace.\" He was singularly\ndevoid of jealousies and pejudices,\nssingularly charitable in his estimates of others, and singularly for\ngiving. In all things, he was a great\ngentleman. His public and (private\nlife were sans peur et sans rejproche.\nHe was the type of leader who mmen\ndelight to follow, and whom a' nation\nis proud to honor.\nLaurier was a great parliamentarian. His life was centred ln tbe\nhouse of commons and ite associations. Neither law nor journalism\nclaimed more than the beginnings of\nhis caretjr. Once he became the\nleader of bis party, it was amid the\naffairs of state that his lite was\nwholly lived. It Is di cult to Bay\nwhether the gift of oratory, in which\nhe was unsurpassed, and which he\nexercised with a natural and equal\ngrace- in the French and Englig languages, brought him more of power\nand influence on the platform or in\nparliament. Wherever he spoke, men\nwere attracted by bis words, and\nabove all by the charm of their delivery and expression, Behind the gift\nof utterance- lay a mind keen ln Its\n-perceptions and richly stored in a\nknowledges of affairs, in history and\n\"literature; also a heart, tender and\nstrong in its emotions, and warmly\nresponsive to the Interests of other\nlive*.\n/Sir Wilfrid's political thought was\nlargely shaped by hiB study of British\nhistory and British politics, and by\nhis admiration of British parliamentary Institutions. He never ceased\nto speak of what he] felt he owed to\ntbe writings and example ot such\nmen as Macaulay and Burke, of Pitt\nand Fox, of Bright and Gladstone.\nTo him the British constitution was\na bulwark of freedom, and British\nparliamentary procedure and practice the palladium of liberty. He was\nan upholder ot constitutional monarchy and had a vary real concern\nfor the unity of the British empire of\nwhich he believed the crown to be\nthe great bond. There was, hei said,\nsomething which appealed strongly\nto the imagination, and which for\n1 (Continued on Pace 3)\nStory of The Colosseum\nSUN'S WEEKLY TRAVELOGUE\nN THE Colosseum at Rome where\nmany hundreds of early Christians were crunched by wild\nbeasts undi r the sanction of an an\ndent Roman government, Rome'-i\npresent-day government ff|cently replaced a huge wooden cross com\nmen-orating the martyrs. Thq cross,\noriginally (placed by Pope Benedict\nXIV in 1749, had been absent since\n1862. This great amtphitheater, shown\nln innumerable pictures, Is probably\nthe most familiar ruin in the world.\nThe Colosseum is a monument to\na highly civilized people's brutality\u00E2\u0080\u0094\na depth of brutality that ls hardly\nconceivable from the point of view\nof the twentieth century. The huge\nstructure was built deliberately io\nfurnish the best facilities for three\nclasses of spe/ctacles: fights to the\ndeath between armed men, fights between armed beasts, and fights between men and beasts.\nGladiatorial combats had developed from customs bf primitive Roman days whe-n on the death of a\nman of note, all his slaves slaugh't\nmost feel the air of swishing swords\nIN THE Colosseum at Rome where hacking at the heads of the gladla-\nmany hundreds of early Chris- tors- In tnese preferred positions\nsat the emperor on a slightly raised\ndais, and below and to the sides, senators, leading patricians and the Vestal virgins, the young -priestesses of\nthe Temple of Vesta, who were so\ncarefully nurtured and guarded by\nRome. Many a timte the thumbs of\nthose young women gave the flnal\nsignal which determined the death\nof a wounded gladiator.\nNext above the senators sat patricians and other citizens in a dwindling scale of importance. AH but the\ntopmost seats were numbered and\ntickets were provided. For places\nIn the unnumbered section the less\nfortunate had to wait In line, sometimes all night, as Is the case of\nworld-series fans ln America today.\nGrim and ghastly as the purpose\nof the Flavian amphitheater was, lt\nwas In no sense crude. It was a\nmlarvel of solid construction admirably fitted to the uses to which It waB\nto be put. Beneath the arena in\nchambers and passes were concealed\nered as human sacrifices Turing uie' inSeniou8 mechanisms by means of\nfuneral rites. It was really a stem' wlhich \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-ect-on-\u00C2\u00AB>f the 1\u00C2\u00B0or could be\nforward In a way, though a feeble1 raised or -owere--- Popping animals\none, when It was decided to have the' or men unexpectedly lnto view 0r\nBlaves fight so that only half would' ren-ovinS the\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 as quickly. Also the\nbe killed. These slave combats' entire space could be floodeM\u00C2\u00BBaps\nof Augustus, of stone and wood. In 57.' that mteht nave put !t in rulns mucn\nA. D. Nero built a wooden one which1 fooner had not Rome stm been \u00C2\u00BB *o-\nburned a decade or so later. In 7J! ,gn civWzat,on- \u00C2\u00AB was twice struck\nA. D. Vespasian began the greatest; by \"shining ln <*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB second century\nof amphitheaters, whicli the World* ***' tw*ca ,n-,ured *>* earthquakes in\nhas come to call \"the Colosseum.\",' the tnlTd'' but eacb tJme \" \"** re-\nNo short cuts were taken as in toe! 8tored' and tbe lone serles ot deaths\nbuilding of many other amphithea-' ln Jts arena grew even neater,\ntors, where mounds of earth are I . After Rome's faU- ,n the turbulent\ni Middle ages.\nbuilt from the ground up, and far below ground, out of. masonry. Few\nsingle structures, until the day of the\nsper-skyscraper of Ameicra, bave\nthis point. Take no chances when\ncrossing desert country with water\nholes possibly flfty miles apart, but\nHU your radiator every time you\nstop for oil or gas\u00E2\u0080\u0094and carry\nspare) five gallons of water either In\na can, Iceless refrigerator or water\nbag. CUnmblng mountains presents\nmuch the same| problems as crossing\ntbe deserts and the best cars cars\nwill be handicapped by boiling water\non long, bad grades, negotiated ln Intermediate or low gears. It helps a\nlot, of course, If you have had the\ncarbon removed betfore starting on\nthe trip; and don't forget that driving ln second gear with the spark\nfully advanced\u00E2\u0080\u0094provided your motor\nIs properly timed\u00E2\u0080\u0094will heat the motor less than driving ln high gear\nwith a retarded spark. The Becond\ngear was put in your transmission\nwith more than one purpose in view\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094use lt.\nIf a leak ln the! pump packing cannot be stopped by tightening the\nstuffing nuts, it is an easy matter to\nback off the pump collars and wrap\nthe shaft with a few incdes of common cotton string.\nCare of the storage battery is important. The action of the sulphuric\nacid in the cells oftem corrodes the\nterminals so badly that lt ls impossible to remove them. To prevent this\ncorrosion remove the terminals and\nscrape them perfectly clean before\nreplacing; draw the bolts up snugly\nand then apply a coat of cup grehse\nto the outside of -Lach\u00E2\u0080\u0094you can't put\nit on too thickly, especially on the\npositive conqctionl\nThe water le-Jsl in the battery\nshould be muiir, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.(>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:ii ,u icist a\nquarter of an Inch nbove thb '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* t'.ory\nplates, and ,u 1'iov *r*sl*> .:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2! iijrtng\nthis mtrjans -jsuaUiiuv. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 day\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nnot every other sV''' distilled water or put! rtiln ***iU*\nNEW GAME\nFOR 1927\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ni.n\nGorky Corel or\nGore of Apples\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0jvtii\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*,\nthrown np and faced with stone or' \"'\"\"\"\" BBB8' tne oId amphitheater,\nthen the Colosseum, was used as a\nfortress by one of the family factions Th,s ,B tlie Benilot ot lhe I*3 *Peti\not Rome, the Franglpanis. In these attention in being Irawn to .jorky\ntimes, too, it was robbed of the iron! core or brown core nf apples, 'ts se-\nclamps of the outer wall which held' veritjr vari'iS from Vear to yfi'u*, but\nMnteinVd\"aTeVeaVac\"uWc\"'volum7ofithe stone blocks Aether. The outer,\"8 Prevalence dutag the last few\ncontained as great a cubic volume of wa,lB that stand may are deeply' years has caused a -great deal of anx-\npitted because of these depredations. lety to aiari>r Grower.*. This tl'sease.\nIn 1349\" an earthquake shook down a is charasi tized hy ibe oecui-rence ot\nlarge pan of the weakened outer yellowtah-browii arias In the core\nstructure. There was no power able and 'sometimes in tilie outer fl-sh o\nor Interested to restore it, and the the aPPle< '\"***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 sbov* L0 external evl-\nrufn of the building then definitely dence on ,ho a'-P*9 fm*- u is oui' on\nget in, ! cutting that one cam bo oerjain of Its\nFor a long time after this the Presence.\nColosseum was a quarry. Thousands1 Jnveetiga tions on lhe cause of the\nof tons of travertine, marble, and disease have boen dnder way at the\nother materials were dug out of the fle'd laboratory of plant pathology,\nfallen pile or Btripped from the por- Summerland' is. C, for four years\ntion still standing, and carried off for and> whlle i1uj8U al'e \u00C2\u00AB\">< v*-!t by any\nuse In building many of the palaces\nand churches of Renaissance Rome.\nOnly a little more than half of tbe\noriginal structure now stands, con\nstone and brick and concrete as this\nelliptical grandstand of old Rome,\nbuilt for the, spectacular slaughtering of man and beast.\nBegun by Vespasian, work on the\nstructure was continued by his son,\nTitus. It was the latter wbo sacked\nJetrusalem. Twelve thousand of the\nmany Jews captured at that time\nwere set to work to complete the\ngre^t building. With its dedication\nln 80 began one of the goriest chapters in the story of Roman amusements. The celebration .of is opening lasted 100 days. Thousands of\nwild animals and hundreds of men\nwere slaughtered to make| this gigantic \"Roman holiday.\"\nThe Colosseum is not quite so\nlarge in area covered as the modern\nfootball amphitheater. The ellptlcal\narena (named from the sand that wan\nspread on its surface to absorb the\nblood of its victims) is In round numbers 280 fcjet long and 180 feet\nacross; while the rectangular playing\nspace of a football field ls 300 by 260\nteet. To enclose] sucb a playing\nfield, allowing a margin outside the\ngridiron, a football amphitheater\nmust be 360 fept or more long - and\nabout 250 feet wide, Inside dimensions.\nIn most modern athletic amphlthea\nters the seats rise on a relatively\ngentle slope and the highest are sei\ndom over 60 feet above the field. In\nthe Colosseum the slope was steep-\napproximately 46 degrees\u00E2\u0080\u0094and the\noutside wall of the structure towers\n160 feet above the ground, or approx-\nihately to the height of a 15 or 16-\nstorey office building, the outside wall\nwas built of great blocks of stone,\nwhile the interior was mostly of .brick\nand concrete. The outer wall was\nmhde up largely of arches ln three\ntiers, one above the other, and extending side by side entirely around\nthe building. The arches on the\nground level were numbered, and\nthrough them the Roman populace\npoured on the way to the spectacles.\nThe choice seats were those closest\nto tbe arena. From them one could\nI lean over to tease the tawny lions\nI who could leap almost but never\ni quite, to the top ot the protecting\nmeans complete, rjiauy r.- ot i concerning ibe Duuditiotis under wbich\nthe disease appears r.avi, beui. ascertained, a thorough! i nvestigation\nsideling the entire cubic contents of has, so far, mlled ti' show 'lie pres-\nthe masonry, But most of those who\nhave viewed It feel that the part ls\nmuch more majestic than the whole.\nThe Motor Car\nDriver s* Column\nBY ERWIN GREER\nTAKE CARE IN 8UMMER TOURING OR ELSE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe radiator should have been\ncleaned out wltb lye solution and\nwell rinsed with several changes of\nfresh water before you started. If\nyou have any rain water left over\nafter filling your quart bottle for use around thin the battery, use It to fill the radi- mer anti e-.rly fall.\nsencei of an} fiir.-juj' ur buctorla ln\nconnection witU tbl' disease. We\n>belleve that '.lie u*oul'<- in altogether\ncaused \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 un imnvorable growth\ncondition, id which tjn- trees suffering from ihe dl.-euM- have been subjected. TheJdtsease ftcurs r\u00C2\u00BBi trees\nwhich buve Buffered nom oivtnes in\nsoil mo; ; \"n 'njiidittfiiH during the\nlatter part of Um Irowini t-eason,\nthat is, wa fmtl it on tJ'-i*\" whicli have\ntoo much innlHluro nul \"Uso oui trees\nwhich h:ivo '.on litilo \u00C2\u00BB olsture during\nthis peiioii. -\"ritejn o: rentes appear\nto kill t ft' thu rootling system of the\ntree am then leault, iherctnim an\nunbalan. \" Oondltion i' tiie buds that\nare to b iar tho octet jx-ar'a crop.\nControl ror-oiiunen-lsstltiii:, ror the\ngrower ne: 'First, to-see thai there\nis no oxoess u-oJt-tu e ri malnlng\ntrues durinr the In'e sum-\nour Irrigated\nator. There is no lime, magnesia or section the Janger of/seapagi is al-\nother chemical salts ln rain water\nand consequently nothing to form\nscale within the radiator. Scale interferes considerably with the cooling efficiency and the hard water\nfound in some portions of the country deposits oodle os scalesf\u00E2\u0080\u0094enough\nsometimes to practically close the\nradiator circulating system.\nSee that the cells of tho radiator\nare not filled up with grasshoppers,\nbees, moths, butterflies and beef-les\nThe temporary Game Regulations\n.for 1927, gasetted 'May 19, have beon\nwithdrawn and retplacod with a com\nplete set, gazetted on June 30. In\npublishing tbe regulations so far\nahead of the opening of the shooting\nseason, the game board Is showing a\nmeasure of readiness ln meeting tho\nwishes of sportsmen. In 1925, the regulations did not appear ln the B. C.\nGazette until August 27. Publication\nwas made last year on July 29 and\nthis year a month earlier.\nThe principal change Is in the realignment of the garnet blstricte. The\nNorthern district has been abolished,\nand the province: is now divided Into\nEastern and Western districts only.\nThe Western district is defined ss\n\"all that section of the province situate and lying to the, west of the summit of the cascade mountains and\nsouth of the electoral district of Atlin.\" The Eastorn district includes\nall the remainder of the province.\nThe dates given of opening and\nclosing of seasons are Inclusive.\nways ptt-.K-nl and fht, gi-owr-r must\nmake certain tl at It ir not this condition that Is age'itttig the trees.\nSecond, wt 'fees alof growing on\nshallow, open eoilfc, to \ee that the\nIrrigation wuter it. npplied late\nenough In th\u00C2\u00AB year l> preve-ci too\nmuch drying rmt of tht .-\".11 hei ween\nthei tl \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 <; -.In11 u-o 1-frljwMon waler\nIs si. \"... mu when ;the iuu ralos\n13011*0.\nFurther details on this problem\ncaught on the fly'and see that the win be j-lndly fiiniished by the Sum-\nhose connections are tight. Replace merland laboratory.\nlepky hose at once and use white\t\nlead at the connections If tightening Good taste ls the flower ol good\nwall; and from them one could al- the clip doea not atop the leak at sense.\nEASTERN DISTRICT\u00E2\u0080\u0094BIG GAME\nMoose\nMoose, of all male sex, in that portion of the electoral district of Omineca situate and lying to the north of\ntoe main line of the Canadian National railway, formerly known as the\nGrand Trunk Pacific railway, and In\nthe electoral districts of Atlin, Fort\nGeorge and Cariboo, open season\nfrom Septevmber 1 to December 15.\nIn the electoral district of Columbia, except that portion t-neruof situate and lying west of the Ciolumbin.\nriver, opem Ren son fro.ii October I .\nto Oftober 81.\nCarlbei-\nCarlbou, of thf-male sex, In theEun-\ntern tSlrt-AX (epecept thr. electoral\ndistict tit Cariboo Btttlato and lying\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2o the west of the Fraser river, and\nUnit furthor portion nr he Eastern\ndistrict Bltuate and lying to the south\nof the main line of the Canadian Pacific railway), open season from September 1 to December 15.\nWapiti (Elk)\nWapiti (Elk), of the male Bex, ln\nthe electoral districts of Fernie.Cran-\nbrook and Columhia, except that portion of the Columbia electoral district\nsituate and lying to the west of the\nColumbia river, open season from October 1 to October 16.\nMountain Sheep\nMountain sheep, ot the male sex,\nthe Eastern district, in that portion\nthereof situate and lying to the north\nof toe main line of the Canadian National railway, formerly known as\nthe Grand Trunk Pacific railway, and\nIn those portions of the electoral districts of Cariboo and Lillooet situate\nand lying to tbe south of the 52n4W\nparallel of latitude and west of the\nFraser river, open season from September 1 to November 15.\nIn the electoral districts of Fernie,\nCranbrook and Columbia, open season from October I to October 31.\nMountain Goat\nMountain goat, ln the Eastern district, except tha portion thereof de-\nscriber as follows: \"Commencing at\na point on the International boundary\nwhere It Is Intersected by the center\nline of thn Columbia river; thence\nnortherly along the saitl center line\nof the Columbia river to the Arrow\nlakes: thence northerly along th\ncenter line of the Arrow lakes and\nColumbia river to the Canadian Pacific railway; thence westerly following the boundary of township 6,\nrange 96, west of the 6th meridian,\nbeing a point south of Yale; thence\neast along the north boundaries of\ntownship 6, ranges 26 and 25, to the\neasterly boundary of tbe watershett\nof the Fraser river; thence southerly\nalong the easterly boundary of tho\nsaid watershed to the international\nboundary line; tbence easterly along\nsaid International boundary to the\npoint of commencement,\" open season from September l to Decembsr\n16.\nBear\nBear (except White or Kermodet\nBear), ln thc Eastern district, opeu\nseason from September 1 to June 30,\n1928.\nProvided that no bear shall be\ntrapped ln the Eastern district.\nDeer\nUc-er (Mule, White-tall and Const),\nbur-lti- only, throughout the Eastern\ndistrict ipvs*s.>/ White-tall Deer In\nNorth and Bouts-i Okanagan and 81m-\nffltameen e'Io<*lt\u00C2\u00BB-.it distrli ts and In\nHit or,'1'\"' Pot'ks-'rt'nn-A'.'i.il electoral\ndluln it wi?.,: of '\" \"' ' am '''\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00B0f Uw\n(Ccotlnneti ,\"'\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB'\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00AB> U THE SUN: GBAND FOBKS, BBITISH COLUMBIA\nGJh? (granb 3farka \u00C2\u00A7\u00C2\u00ABn\nG.-A. EVANS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER\nSUBSCRIPTION RATc-i\u00E2\u0080\u0094 PAYAaLE IN ADVANCE\nOne Year (in Canada and Ureal Lintaiui SI.OO\nOne Ybar (in the United Statea) 1.50\nAdeliear \" Nations to\n.Thk Grand J*okk* Sun\nPho.-jic 101 Gb.vnd Forks, B. CJ\nOFFICE: COLUMBIA AVENUE AND LAKE STREET.\nFlilDAY. AUGU.ST 5, 1927\nMotes \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Motions \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Notables\nSO LONG as Uie Mosulc laws concerning food are adhered to, says Dr. I.yle Cameron in tho London Lancet, tli* Jews arc likely to be Immune to many bacterial\ndiseases to whicli other inhabitants ol' the same countries Bro prone. Ordinary septic infeotlona trouble1 them\nbut little, and tliey are the busi uuited of all whltei races\nto live in malarial districts. Of ihe factors whioh havo\npreservtld tlieir racial characteristics, health hah been\none of the moBt Important. On the other hand, the nervous system and mentality of the Jaw, although of a\nhigh order, is more likely to break down under stress,\na fact for whicli persecution may be. partly responsible,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 In research undertaken by Sicliel in the Frankfort (Germany) hospital for the insane, it was discoveired that\nthere were relatively more Jewish inmates than the\ncorresponding percentage of the Jewish population of\nFrankfort. This, however, only held for certain groups\nof nervous disorders. Tho Jewish nice is peculiarly hus-\nceptible to cerlain diseases an iiuiiiunu to others. Tuberculosis is rare and cancer is common among them,\nand they have always lufcii considered very prone to\ndiabetes.\ntrol is by an electrical device that starts thel machine I\nund runs it around and around a field in concentric fur-!\n1:0ws. properly spaced for accurate plowing.\nin\nWO thousand butterflies which have been collected\ntropical Fast Africa were recently shipped from\nLiverpool to America. Mounting of the specimenh had\ntaken 333 hours of spare-time work, according to the col\nlector, A Loveiring, of Clevedon, England. The collection, valued at $2500, also includes thousands of beetles,\ngrasshoppers and other insects gathered by Lovering.\nl IHE island, near Anchorage, Alaska, is the maternity\na. hospital for moose. Moose cows are now swimming\nfrom the mainland to give bith to their calve*. The\nisland is small ln size, but it harbors no wolves, and the\nyoung moose, when old enough to look out for them-\nselve-c, are escorted back to the mainland by their\nmothers.\n' I > HE deaths from heart disease ln this country have\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 doubled in tho last fifteen years.. This was revealed\nin a rece|nt report of a medical association which records all deaths irom heart disease. Twenty years ago,\niho report slated, the detatli rate from heart disease to\neach 100,000 population was 103.3, while ln 1926 it had\nrisen to 210,' un appalling advance.\nl,' OKMlill Empress Z a bah\nZita bah been asked by Hungary\ntor tho heart of the late and last emperor, Charles\nIV. The heart is at Lequeitlo, Spain, and lt is proposed\nlo place it in the cathedral of Stulilwuissenburg, Hungary, so that It may rest with the bodies of the old\nMagyar rulers.\n-m '\nYf ho\nw\nTte Spice of Life\nECONOMY\nIn the club they were talking ot\nmen who, though famous and\nwealthy, we're at the same time very\nmean.\n\"I once knew a man,\" said Butler,\n\"Who was so economical that he used\ncovtv** up his inkwell between dips\nln case any shoulk be lost by evaporation.\" |\n\"But I knew a man,\" observed Cutler, \"who stopped his clock eivery|\nnight to prevent the works wearing\nwhile he was asleep!\"\nBREAKING IT GENTLY\nMurphy had been careless ln handling tlie blasting powder in the,\nquarry, and Duffy had been deputed\nto . break toe ne-ws gently to the\nwidow.\n\"Mrs. Murphy,\" Bald he, \"isn't it\ntoday the fellow calls for the weekly\npayment fer 'Murphy's life Insurance?\"\n\"It is,\" answered Mrs. Murphy.\n\"Well, now, a word ln your ear,\"\nsaid Dugy. \"Surq ye can snap your\nlingers at the fellow today.\"\nI . :\"\nWILL change your watch into a twenty-four\n' hour watch in a few minutes,\" is toe wording of a\npoBtei* outside a watchmaker's store in tho Friedrich-\nstrasse station, write a Useriln correspondent of the\nChristian Selencd Monitor. The addition of an inner\ncircle on the dial, showing the figures from thirteen to\ntwenty-four for the hours from 1 p.m. until midnight, is\nnecessary, ha avers, since the twenty-four hour clock\nhas now been introduced by the railways, post and telegraph, street car and underground companies. Now,\nalso, the German army and navy have adopted this\nclock, which, it is believed, will be of advantage, since it\nwill prevent toe recurrence of errors in the naming of\ntime in military orders, lt cannot be said, however,\nthat the public is very enthusiastic about the new clock.\nIt cannot accustom itself to Baying 13 o'clock instead of\n1 o'clock, or 23 o'clock instead of 11 o'clock in the night.\n*P AltlS has a new garden. It is a pleasanet spot in the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*> landscape. This new garden has been made on the\neastern side of lhe island iu the Seine on which stands\natre Danie.Soiue old buildings have been cleared away\n* K i,p space has been employed to put the Gothic lines\nof the catituissal in better view. Yewh and box tr.-ms\nhave beeu plantea and ut tlie entrance venerable ste ie\ntplnnacles from ancient oJiflcfls have been erected. , a\nthe central lawn are some old -larved stone. Ivy is being grown to form a curtain over the DV1/1..5 tnx, apetTHsfe\ntween the garden and the rivtlr.\nILD ducks from the Oregon lakes have been feeding in the lowlands along the Columbia river, Washington. Farmers discover the| ducks have been living\non field mice which have multiplied there at an amazing\nrate in recent ye/ars. Ah spring hunting ls not allowed\nin that state, the ducks may clean up this field pest.\nEXPERIMENTS carried out iby an English naturalist\nindicate that a new nufhod of controlling the growth\nof hair may in the near future make it unnecessary for\nmen to shave. In the experiments a strin of mice was\nproduced whose heads became bald ln sixteen days. A\nfew days later they lost the fur on their backs.\nANEW anesthetic has been produced ln Germany\nwhich is said to be, more effective and more agreeable than chloroform or ether. The new method will\ndo away with the necessity for an anesthetic attendant\nat operations. ,\nB\nACK in 1880 \"Prof.\" (Ross Hall, who made hfh living\ntraveling about toe country demonstrating how electricity could produce light, was not allowed to show in\na building. Owners were afraid of fire or explosion, so\nids demonstrations wera all out of doors.\nO the New Canaan, Conn., police force, is a genuine \"cof-\nitse hound.\" Sunday must have ihis coffee in a cup, with\na little mdlk and a great deal of sugar, 'before he will consider even the most tempting bonel\nrj-i ORESTS produce timber much more/ rapidly under\nf forest management than in the wild, virgin state. A\ngood stand of Douglas flr in western Oregon or Washington under management will produce merchantable saw\ntimber in approximately 60 years .\nA GIRL, aged two, named Winnifred Tierney, of Lille,\nVTEW methods are being useid to measure the heat oth\n***** Kllauea, giant volcano of Hawaii. Under direction \\nof Dr. T. A. Jagger, director of the Hawaii volcano ob-8-^*- France, Is claimed to be the youngest child to speak\nservatory, borings teju feel deep dot the solid rock at fl four languages. Sho can answer questions in French,\nthe crater at intervals of 1000 feet. As soon ah the tem | English, German, and modern Greek.\nperatures within are takep and recorded, the holes are J \t\ncapped with metal rings to preserve (hem, so that thej I nr HE electrical industry in Americals a thing of htu-\ncan be used for future observations.\nEX-GUNNER JENKINS, who is said to have flred the\nfirst British shell in the drive against Von Kluck'\ntroops in the batlei of Mons, arrived recently at Aue-k\nland, New Zealand, to take up farming. Jenkins served\nwith E battery, Ii. 11. A. He took part ln many large\nengagilnents on the western front, and came through\nuninjured.\ntie\nt'S I\nGARBAGE of Berlin is to be made into artificial silk,\ngunctton and other products. Kert Geiarson has re-\n*8KJlly erected a large plant and announces that by hit\nMreess all cellulose matttSr will be sifted from the garbage and subjected to special treatment. He furthei\nsays tbat by distilling such matter as potato parings ami\npieces of wood, he can produce charcoal, tor and acetie\nacid.\npendous size. During 1926 it produced and sold\nnearly $6,000,000,000 worth of service and equipment.\nPoems From EasternLands\nARABIA\nTHERE are\nI\nfew growing things more attrctive than\nthat member tit toe lily family, tlie American helle-\niborei, known to tanners as \"cow-poison,'' because lis roots-\ndisagrees violently' with tlieir herds. Cow-poison seems\nto flourish in the northern states, amid bogs and swales;\nbut on the' tablelands ll extends iar stiullnvaidsinlo\nWest Virginia's virgin wilds.\nw\nhen Napoleon retreated irom Moscow,\nthe last time Ivan Shapkov, of Lahtl,\nlu 1X12, wus\nRussia, gut\ndrunk, lie told citosus takers recently when lie gave\nthem proof tbal lit) hail been born in 1782. As a young\nsoldier of 30 yeurs of age, he helped repel Napoleon's\nInvasion of Russia. Hu is now M.*, years oltl and enjoying life and good health with his sixth wife, who ls 88\nyears old.\nA cai.'PCiRNIA Inventor, busy on a light-projecting\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 apparatus for guiding aircraft during night flights,\ngave an amtithlng proof of Hie concentrative capacity of\n* his reflectors by turning tin*, reflector to the sun and\nand looking a joint of meat in the heat of the reflected\nrays. Incidentally, lie claims to ba able to throw a beam\nof mill that will be visible a distance ol 430 miles.\nTHANK Uod every morning when you get up that you\nhave something to tlo that day that must be don\nWhether you like it or not. Being forced to work antl\n'or-nil io tit, your best will breed in you temperanci!,\nself-control, diligence, strength of will, content antl n\nhttnJrod virtues w liU-li thc idle will never know.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Charles\nKingsley.\nA I LOW that ran be turned loose on a field and that\n- \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 will plow the whole thing without the touch of a\nman's hand has been perfected and put to work on a\nNebraska farm by F. L. Zlbach, of Orand Inland, Metr\nThe power is supplied by gasoline tractor, but l/r,i, con-\nDIALOGUE BY RAI8\nRail\nMaid of sorrow, tell us Why\nSad and drooping hangs thy head?\nIs it grief that bids thee sigh?\nIs it sleep that uieK thy (bed?\nLady\nAh! 1 mourn no fancied wound,\nPangs too true this heart have wrung,\nSince the snakes which curl aroun\nSelim's brows my bosom stung.\nDestin'd now to keener woes,\n1 must see the youth depart,\nHe must go, and as he goes\nHind at once my bursting heart.\nSlumber may desert my bed,\n'Tis not slumber's charms I\n'Tis the robe of beauty spread\nO'er my Selim's rosy cheek.\nc>4ncient History\"\n(COMPILED FROM TWENTY-YEAR OLD 8UN FILES.)\nA party of scientists, consisting of the commissioners\nippolntcd by the Canadian and United States governments in connection with tbe international boundary\nline survey, arrived in toe city Friday night.\nThe grading of Third street Ib at present being prosecuted with vigor by the Kettle Valley line, a temporary\ntrack having been put down between Winnipeg avenue\nand Bridge street to facilitate the work.\nQuite a number of Boundary peoplt havo invested in\nB. C. Copper company shares this year, and they feel\npretty good over it, with a 40 cent dividend announced.\nThe O.P.R. will probably place one or two switch engines permanently at Phoenix, assembling all orel trains\n-t Hartford Junction and despatching them direct from\nthere to the smelters.\nFred Russell made a trip to Franklin camp last Sunday. He came back with bronzed face and calloused\nhands merely from viewing the amount of work being\ndone in that camp at present.\nNO TROUBLE\n\"Having any trouble these days\nmeeting your expenses, BUI?\"\n\"Meeting 'em? Why, man I run\ninto 'em every time I move.\"\n\"YES, SIR\"\nTwo flappers were flapping\nOne warmf afternoon,\nIf skirts grow much shorter\nThey're bathing suits soon.\n/'\nSLY PSYCHOLOGY\n\"Why did you tell that man he\nlooks like a Greek god?\"\n\"As an Intelligence test,\" replied\nMiss Cayenne. \"If he begins to smirk\nand act as lf he believed lt, it will\nshow he Ib halt moron.\"\nA DIFFERENCE\nHank\u00E2\u0080\u0094Close that gate before the\nchickens get out\nJake\u00E2\u0080\u0094Aw, they will come back\nhome.\nHank\u00E2\u0080\u0094Come back nothing\u00E2\u0080\u0094they'll\ngo home.\nSALESMANSHIP\nMrs. Stouter\u00E2\u0080\u0094I want a live-pound\nbox of chocolates.\nClerk\u00E2\u0080\u0094YeB, madam. We are now\ngiving a reducing free tree with\nevery purchase.\nSilas, the plowman, was used to\neating eleven doughnuts at tea time,\nbut then it was usually after a hard\nday's work in the fields.\nOne morning, however, it rained\nheavily and Silas found it impossible\nto do as much work as was his custom. So as he passed through toe\nkitchen he called to the farmer's\nwife:\n\"I shan't be eatln' so mlany of them\nthings at tea, ma'am. Ten'll be\nenough\u00E2\u0080\u0094but make 'em bigger.\"\nHELP WANTED\nMan of the House\u00E2\u0080\u0094Don't say anything to your mistress, cook, but have\nyou a policeman calling on you to toe\nkitchen?\nCook\u00E2\u0080\u0094No, sir.\nMan of the House\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, try to get\none. We must have somebody to\nhelp eat up the] cold ham.\nSUBDIVIDING THE CLOUDS\nThe airship leaves the earth behind;\nAnd Fancy, growing bold,\nSays, \"catties In the air\" we'll find\nBy agents bought and told.\nEVER NOTICE?\nSimpson\u00E2\u0080\u0094The newspaper printed\nyour letter, didn't it? What makes\nyou think the editor didn't agree with\nthe statements you made?\nSamson\u00E2\u0080\u0094He didn't correct the\ngrammatical errors in it\u00E2\u0080\u0094or the mis\nspelled words.\nWHY HE WA8NT BOSS\n\"It I were you I'd 'be boss In my\nown home, or know the reason why,\"\nexclaimed the bachelor to hit married\nfriend. |*fj|\n\"Yes, exactly,\" said the married\nman. \"I know the reason why!\"\nIMPRESSIVE\nHobbs\u00E2\u0080\u0094What's the idea of a. small\nfirm like yours havlngsuch a massive\nsafe?\nDobbs\u00E2\u0080\u0094It helps the morale ot our\ncreditors.\nSLIGHTLY DIFFERENT\nHowl\u00E2\u0080\u0094You recommend the hotel,\nbut you say the owneris tacompe\ntent!\nHowell\u00E2\u0080\u0094No, I said\u00E2\u0080\u0094inexperienced\nGOOD REASON\nDiner\u00E2\u0080\u0094What's the matter with the\ncoffee? It looks like mud.\nWaiter\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, sh*, it was ground\nthis morning.\nTHE POOR WORM\n\"Man's a tyrant,\" declared Mrs.\nScrappington. \"Isn't he, John?\"\n\"Keally, my dear, I hardly\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"\n\"Ib he or ls he not?\"\n''He It.\"\n'0-U*\\nAspirin\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for\nColds Headache Neuritis Lumbago\nPain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism\nDOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART\nSW^*\nAccept only \"Bayer\"\nwhich contains proven d\n package\ni proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" boxes of 12 tableta\nAlto bottles of 24 and 100\u00E2\u0080\u0094Druggists.\nAspirin la tbt trails Bark IweH-tntt la Canada) nf Stytt Uarrafsetur* af Ueattem*-*.\nacMaattr et Ssllc/llcscld (Aeatrl Bsltcjllc Add, \"A. B. A.\"). Walls It U mil bam\ntbat Aapirln nwana Bsjsr manafacturs, to assist tM public a-ratast InsitaUoaa, tba Tablets\net Barar Oompaa/ win ba stanpsd wltb tlwlr isotral trada \u00E2\u0096\u00A0art. tb \"\t\nr\nCITY REAL ESTATE\nFOR SALE\nApplications lor immediate purchase of Lots\nand Acreage owned by the City, wit)*' Um\nMunicipality, are invited.\nPriciest--From $25.01) per lot upwards.\nTermsi\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cash and approved payments.\nList of Lots and prices may he seen at liu\nCity! Office.\nJOHN \-\n1IUTTON.\nCity Clerk\nSometimes the informality\nof the spoken word\nis more effective\nthan a letter.\n'LONG DISTANCE, PLEASE\"\nBritish Columbia Telephone\nCompany\nii\nTHE SUN prints all the loeal news\nand carries a number of. interesting\nfeatures found in no other Boundary\npaper $1.00 per year\nmS\nas*** THE SUN: GRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nV\nCROWN COLONY\nDAYS\nAway back in tho sixties thousands of\nacres of British Columbia's timber wore\nsold lor one cont per acre, which looked\nlike a fair price\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094tben. To-day similar\ntimber is worth from 8150 to $200 un\nacre, so tremendously has timber appreciated in value, within thc scope of an\naverage lifetime.\nWhat the young growth of to-day will\nbe worth sixty y< ars from now is beyond\ncomputation if it is protected from fire\nand allowed to reach maturity.\nThe m :ral is obvious.\n. i\nPREVENT FOREST FIRES\nYOU CAN HELP\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST SERVICE\nLA1IER STATU\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I.\nUnity and liberty, he believed, could\nonly be attained through counsels of\nmoderation and tolefration. For this\nreason he sought, in all that pertained to differences ot opinion, to\navoid coercion and to practice) conciliation. Unity and liberty were\nequally essential as underlying principles in the national and iiiiiperial\npolicies. Appreciating\" to the full the\nsignificance of the differences in origin of the Canadian people, Sir Wilfrid believe-d with all his heardt that\nonly by a profound regard for each\nother's point of view ln racial, re-\ncould the unity of Canada be maintained; and Canadian unity was Laurier's supreme aim. In the liberty\nof worship, oflanguage and custom\nguaranteed to his compatrots by the\npolicy of the Quelbec act of 1774, and\nconfirmed ln the Constitutional act\nof 1791, he won his flrst confidence\nin the breadth ot vision of British\nstatesmanship. In thet autonomy ot\nthe proovinces of our Dominion, he\ncame to feel a security in the larger\nproject of confederation. In national autonomy, he believed, lay the secret of imperial'unity. Self-govern\nment, expanding in area as lt deveil-\n(Contlnued from Page 1)\nhim had a great attraction ln an agglomeration of continents under the\nBritish crown. The firm basis of\nthe British empire, next to the Brit-*\nish crown, he believed to lie in the\nconYplete autonomy of the self-goV-\n(trning units. Addressing the then\nPrince ot Wales,' now his majesty\nKing George, on the occasion of the\nTercentenary celebration at Quebec\nln 1908, Sir Wilfrid said: \"As I advance in years I appreciate the more\nthe wisdom of that British constitution undijr which I was born and\nbrought up, and under which I have\ngrown old, which has given to the\nvarious portions of the empire their\nseparate) free governments. It is our\nproud boast that. Canada is the- freest\ncountry in the world. It is our boast\nthat in thiB country liberty of all,\nkinds, civil and religious liberty, I \u00C2\u00B0^ *lth time\u00C2\u00AB,uch was his vision\nflourish to the higheet degree.\" To!'* ,un**-*\u00C2\u00AB* b* \"frtJ' and \"\"\nthose of hla own race, he never failed. v,s'01- <* Ub*-*t-*' \"\"--\"tamed by unity.\nto extol the degree to which he beloved Justice to be secured and rights\nto lbe protected under the British\nflag. Nor did he) hesitate heartily to\ncommend the tree 1 nstitutlons ot\nBritain to those of other parts. It\nIs an open secret that in the* framing\nand acceptance of the 'South African\nconstitution,-General Botha was not\na'little influenced by the counsel and\nadvice of Laurier. In a letter written to tSir Wilfrid, and read by htm\nat the Tercentenary celebration to\nwhich l have Just referred. General\nBotha said: \"It ls our Intention to\nfollow in the. footsteps ot Canada.\"\nMore than one part of the empire has\nlooked to Canada in the development\nof free government.\nThe rights of mlnoritlqs were to\nSir Wilfrid a sacred cause. Frequently I have heard him say that to\nbe ot the minority In both race) and\nreligion was, in his public life, the\ncross that had been given him to'bear\nAt the) time he became the leader of\nhis party, he Is known to have asserted that it would mean much of sacrifice in the end.. Hie was thinking\nof how the, real significance of larger\nissues ls often lost In appeals that\nara made to prejudice and passion.\nBut here kt us seek th perspective\nof History. We know so little of the\nreal significance of crosses and sacrifice. To havei been of the minority\ntn raoe and religion, as Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier was, and to have enjoyed, as\nhe did, so great a confidence on the\n-part of all will, I believe, come to be\nrecognized as the; crowning glory of\nhis career. Not only ln Canada did\nIt help to Inspire in the breasts ot\nminorities a confidence ln his advocacy of Britlah traditions and laws,\nbut in the larger arena ot empire, lt\ngave to men of other raccjs a faith In\nthe Justice and freedom ot British institutions which, with less In the way\nof spam-pie, they might have found it\ndiflltult to possess.\nA\u00C2\u00A7\"i seek for the guiding principle! In Laurier's leadership, 1 find\nthem ln the; words unity and liberty.\nTo his mind the one was indispensable to the other. There could be. no\ntrue unity where boubts existed aB to\nliberty; and there .could be no true\nliberty without a conscious unity.\nThe imperial conference of 1926\nhas declared the British empire; to\nbe a group of self-governing common\nities, equal in status and ln no way\nsubordinate! one to another in any\naspect of their domestic or external\naffairs. Here and now, lt is interesting to rcjcall that as early as 1897, in\nLondon, at the time of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, Laurier\nspoke of the British empire as \"a\ngalaxy of nations.\" Jf, as is now generally accepted, \"a community of\nfree nations\" united by acommon al;\nletgiance to the crown is an accurate\ndescription of the British empire, lt\nmay, I think, truthfully be said that\nfew, if any, entertained this conception earlier or. In its entiretyof outline, more/ clearly than Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier; and that working towards\nits r ealization as he did, through\ngood report and Ul, no man ln his day\nor generation contributed more to\nwhat wd believe will prove to be the\nenduring foundation of that great\nstructure.\nAll-Important, however, as is a\nright development .dn inter-imptjjrial\nrelations, it was not on the place he\nwould hold ln the building of empire,\nthat Sir Wilfrid's thoughts were cent\ntred. If he gave thought to the matter at all, it was of the! place he would\nbold in the harts of the people, ln the\nhearts of the peoplei in the land that\ngave him birth, and in the humble\nhomes with which, in his boyhood, he\nwas so familiar. Therq was much\nabout him that made one think of\nAbraham Lincoln. He gave more\nstudy to the life of Lincoln than to\nthe life of ay other man. \"With firmness ln the right, as God gives us to\nsee the right\" were the; words he was\nfondest of quoting; and more tha?\nonce he madrj them words ot counsel\nand advice to the rising generation.\nTo the young sculptor who has made\nthe \u00C2\u00A9portrait about to' be unveiled;\nwe are indebted for an interpretation\nof Laurier that would most have accorded with his own wish. II Is not\nthe Laurier ln the early your; of his\npremiership, receiving a Vuighthood\nfrom the| world's most illustrious\nqueen; nor the maturer Laurier, at.\nthe zenith of his power; but the Lau-\nrierr of years, the Laurier of the people, fighting for the right as God\ngave him to see the right.\nThat his spirit already has inspired the youth of our land is evidenced by what we shall see In a few\nmoments. In a competition open to\nthe sculptors of the world, the flrst\nplace waB won by the author of the\nportrait in bronze about to be un-\nvetiled. It was only after the award-\nwas made that it was discovered the\nsuccessful competitor was a young\nFrench-Canadian, and in his twenty\nseventh year, J. Emile Brunet, born\nnot many miles from where Sir Wilfrid him-Belf was born. I am free to\nconfess that it was not without some\nmisgivings, bcicause ot his youth,\nthat Mr. Brunet was commissioned\nby the government to execute the\nwork. On behalf of the government,\nI should likcpublicly to expess t o\nhim today our satisfaction with the\nmanner in which his task has been\nperformed, and our high admiration\nof thel statue itself. As Canadians,\nwe share his pride, that the honor of\nexecuting the statue of Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier now erected on Parliament\nHill should have fallen to one of\nwhom Sir Wilfrid himself would have\nbeen more than proud, and who has\ngiven to his country one more notable\nexample of the artistic genius of the\npeople of the province of Quebec.\nIn conclusion, as a resident of Ottawa, may 1 be permitted to say .with\nwhat pride we of this capital city behold this statue, In the place which\nhas been accorded on Parliament Hill\nHow befitting are the the surroundings! Here are the houses of 'parliament with which Sir Wilfrid's lite\nwas so intimately associated; yonder\nare the Laurentian hills that he so\ndearly loved; antl there the gate\nthrough which he was wont to pass.\nThis city was identified with his public life more closely than any other.\nIt contains Innumerable associations\nwith his name. It was here that, for\nmany years, he and Lady Laurier\nhad their home, jit was his great\nambition to make it a capital of\nwhicb all Canada would be proud\nTo me there ls something deeply\nimpressive in this bronze figure stand\ning where it is. I have watched little children play about its base. How\nSir Wilfrid would bave loved tbat\nI have seen men and women of all\nwalks of life come in the quiet of\nevening to pay it reverence. Today,\nit is given unto princes to do it hou\nor. There ls something, however,\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ii .'; ore impressive than all thiB.\nIt. iii what is left \"when the captains\nand thr; kings depart.\" It is what tutu iu generations will see, when. w\\nwho knew him shall have passed\naway, and others gather where we\ntoday are assembled. It is the old\nmail, with his bare head and his\nWhite hair, standing alone, fighting\nfor the right as God gave him to see.\nthu right.\nWHY 8HE BOUGHT A BA3KET\nAddressing a Philadelphia Sunday\nschool, Dr. J. M. Buckley, the emi\nnent editor and divine, related an incident that greatly interested the\nchildren. He told of meeting\nragged, hungry-looking child on the\nstreet one day and upon questioning\nher found that sho, had an Invalid\n-mother and younger brothers and sis\nters who were without food. He gave\nher a sliver dollar and thep followed\nher to see what she would do with It.\n\"Now, children,\" he said, \"what do\nyou think was the flrst thing she\nbought with that money? Hands up,\nMany children guessed, but no answer proved to be correct. Finally\nGreat Pier Dedicated to Empire Service\none boy at the back of the room ventured to put his hand up. The doctor asked for his answer.\n\"A basket,\" said the boy.\n\"Correct!\" cried the doctor, delighted. \"Here's a boy that thinks!\nNow, my lad, would you be willing\nto go up on the platform and tell us\nwhy you think it was a basket \"\nAfter a great deal of coaxing the\nboy went up, but he was reluctant to\ntalk.\n\"Go on,\" urged the doctor. \"I'll\ngive you this silver coin if you'll tell\nme why you think she bought a basket flrst.\"\n\"H e - b e c a use,\" stammered the\nyoungster at last, \"because I was in\nCanmden last Sunday and heard you\ntell the same story there.\"\n. Mew C.P.R. Her at Vancouver. 2. Bronte plaque uoseUed by Mayor Taylor of Vancouver.\n3. Tho C.P.R. Docks aa they appeared In the early day* of thia port.\nOn? notable feature ot Greater\nVancouver's celebration of the\nDiamond Jubilee ot Confederation\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand one that no other city in the\nDominion can boast of duplicating\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwas the dedication and official opening of the new $6,000,000 Canadian\nPacific Pier B-C.\nThe new mammoth pier is the\nsecond longest in the world, and was\nplanned with an eye to a prosperous\nfuture when Vancouver will be one\nof, if not the biggest, port on the\nPacific coast, and designed to accommodate at least two of the greatest\nliners built.\nIt is a far cry from the first wooded\npile ocean docks built by the Canadian Pacific in the early spring of\n1887 when Vancouver was a city of\nstumps and possibilities to the present pier with nearly 3,000 feet of\nberthing space available and accommodation for the cargoes of a dozen\nof even the most modern ocean grey\nhounds. Representing the last word\nin modern machine construction, the\nnew pier is also notable for the\npleasing manner in which the practical has been combined with the\nartistic.\nThe Canadian Pacific is interested\nchiefly in the trade with the Orient,\nAustralia and New Zealand. Although imports and exports are of a\nmixed character, the most valuable\nsingle article is silk. Silk shipments\nmust be transferred from boat to rail\nwith the least -possible delay. Facilities embodied n the construction of\nthis pier ensure the rapid and careful\nhandling of all cargoes.\nWhile designed primarily for the\nuse of its own ships, the C.P.R. will\nallow pier B-C to be used by the ships\nof other lines. Its length of 1,140 feet\npermits the docking on either side, of\nthe largest of the present day trans-\nPacific boats\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Empress of Canada, 640 feet m length\u00E2\u0080\u0094-with a\nsmaller vessel. Its width of 331 feet\npermits a moderate sized boat to be\ndocked at the off-shore end at the\nsame time that either or both sides of\nthe pier are in use.\nA special feature of the construction\nof the pier is that a promenade ia\nconstructed down each side of the ].ier\nleading from the head-house over\nthe roofs of the freight shetls. Con\nnections are made from this pro.i*x'\nnade to the ships by a long gangway\nso that passengers may en-bark or\ndisembark without hindering the\nfreight handling on the lower deck\nIn officially opening the r'cr V ayor\nTaylor unveiled a magnificent bronze\nplaque, a gift of private citizens of\nVancouver, which bears the following\ninscription: \"Piers B and C. Formally\nOpened and Dedicated to the Canadian Pacific Empire Service during\nGreater Vancouver's Cele! rut!..n of\nCanada's Diamond Jubilee of Confederation by Louis D.Taylor, I' \u00E2\u0080\u0094or\nof Vancouver.\"\nCRIPPLED INDUSTRY\n\"Jedge,\" a very large and determined colored woman announced as\nshe ushered a frightened ex-husband\nInto his honor's chamber, \"dis nigger\nain't paid me one cent ob alimony\nfor sebben months.\"\n\"What s the matter,\nInquired the judge,\nbeen worklnk lately?\"\n\"Nosuh,\" was the response,\nain't bin able to find mah dice.'\nWHY TAX REFUNDS AIDS PROSPERITY\nSunday\u00E2\u0080\u0094John Jones reads in paper\nthat tax refund checks are being\nmailed. Drops paper with howl of\ndelight, dasheh from apartment, buys\nself three 50-cent cigars and blows\n$1.40 on box of candy for wife.\nMonday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Throws away radio batteries and pays$ 65r for A and B\ntllminators. Wishes he could afford\na new set. Grumbles about cor looking shabby too.\nTuesday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Trades ln old radio for $6\non $275 Snooper Nootrodyne. Asks\nwife how she fkeh that raldator cap\non the new Flipflop Eiht.\nWednesday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pays $80 for new\novercoat. Detours eight blocks going\nto office to pass Flipflop agency.\nThursday\u00E2\u0080\u0094GIveB wife $165 to buy\nmotoring costume. Calls up Flipflop\nagencg and asks for demontratlon.\nFriday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Swaps ln old car for $75\non new Flipfllop Eight at $2260.\nSaturday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Receives tax refund of\n, 27 cents.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lift.\n\Q\nSam \" sternly\n\"Haven't you\n\"Ah\nTurning to his wife, the husband\nremarked, \"Relatives of yours, I suppose?\"\n\"Yes, said his wife sweetly, \"by\nmarriage.'\nDO YOU WANT\nTHE PEOPLE\nTO READ YOUR\nADVERTISEMENT\nPeople take The Sun\nbecause they believe\nit is worth the price we\ncharge for it. It is\ntherefore reasonable 1 a\nsuppose that they r-\nits contents, include g\nadvert is nients. ?\nis not always the\nwifh newspapers th\nare offered as premiums with chromos or\nlottery tickets\nWE DO NOT\nWANT CHARITY\nADVERTISING-\nAdvertising \"to help\nthe editor.\" But we do\nwant businessadvertis-\ning by progressive business men who, know\nthat sensible advertising brings results and\npay. If you have something to offer (he public that will ^ benefit\nthem and you as well,\nthe newspaper reaches\nmore people than a bill\nboard\nSUN READERS\nKNOW WHAT\nTHEY WANT\nand if you have the\ngoods you can do business with them\nJ THE SUN: GRAND FOBKS, BBHISH COLUMBIA\nScientifically Pacfed\nws\nAs free from dust as tea can be.\nNEWS0FTHLCI1YNEWGAME\nThe residence owned by A. VV.\nSmith, Great NortheTii conductor, ln\nthe West end, was completely destroyed by fire on night Tli\u00C2\u00AB build-\nand Is said to havo heen Insured for\n$1000.\nA grass fire, saitl to have been\nstarted by a C.Pslt. freight engine at\nGilpin on Wednesday, appeared to be\nstill burning last nlgt.\nMiss marie Dobry, who has been\nyisitig her mother ln this city for a\nshort time, returned to Seattlct last\nSaturday.\nMrs. P. T. McCallum and daughtw\nBuphy returned yesterday morning\nfrom a trip to the springs near Nakusp, B. 0,\n(Continued from Page 1.).\nMidway mountains), open season\nfrom September 1 to December 15.\nRev. and Mrs Beattie and daughter returned on Wednesday evening\nfrom their vacation trip to the coast.\nJames Berry, of this city, this week\npurchased Mrs. G. A. S. Bcill's ranch\nqroijerty in the North Fork district.\nMr. and Mrs. Chas. Mitchell and\nfamily re-turday from a two weeks'\nvacation trip to the coast.\nMiss Pauline Sloan, of Seattle, Ib\nVisiting hc,r mother Inthis city.\nOF\nDICTION PRICES\nComtalttee of Direction prices, f.\nO.b. shipping point:\nPlums, Peach, layered $ 1.25\nApricots, No. 1, per 4-bskt 1.75\nApples, wraipped, per box ..Ct*j\nIn crateis 1.75\nCookers 1.50\nTomatoes, Semi, No. 1 1.25\n#ditto, NO. 2 1.00\nCucumbers, per box 50\nCelery, washed, per lb Ofi\nCelery, unwashtfd, per lb 05\nPeppers and Eggplant, per lb 15\nOnions, Bermuda,crates.per ton 55.00\nSets, In sacks, per ton 40.00\nSilverskin, por peach box 1.25\nCa'bbage, standards, per ton.... 30.00\nPonies, per ton 35.00\nCarrots, per ton 30.00\nBeets, per ton 45.00\nTurnips, Squash and Marrow,\nper ton 40.00\nPotatoes, strlaght off mixed cars,\nper ton 28.00\n'W-ishington\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPent-he\"-, Dewey, per box 1.10\nAprirots, per 4-bsltt crate 1.50\nPlums, Peach, 4-bskt cratci 1.30\nTomatoes, 28-Ib lug 1.00\nOnions, Walla Walla, per cwt.... 1.20\nApples, Wealthy and Duchess,\nUnwrapped, $1.50 to 1.75\n/California\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPears, 180 antl largor 2.50\nPlums, per box 1,40\nCantaloupes, 'Standards 1.78\nCantaloupes, Flats 75\nTHE ART OF MAKING TEA\nSpalding Black, on the staff of tin\nSalada Tim company, reoantly prepared an Interesting leaflej entitled\n\"The Art of Correct Ton Maldng.\"\nApproximately 20,000,000 cups of ten\nart! consumed every day In Canada,\nantl yet It Is doubtful If one-tenth of\nthis number Is prepared witli the necessary care to bring out the full flavor of thi' toa leaf so lhat this stimulating anil refreshing drink may be\nthoroughly enjoyed. Tha following\nis from \"The Art of Correct Tea Making\":\nTea Is on- of the kindliest blesa.\nIngs of nature. In Its comforting Indulgence ono con lost-l tho worries\nof tho day and forget the fatigue of\neffort.\nThe full of a cup of this gracious\nbevcr g ( can only be reached whon\nfine f.iialily tea is used and ceremonial tai-j exercised In Its preparation,\nto drav/ each tiny leaf thc essence\nof bavor and relrtishment with which\nit has been endowed by nature.\n'How to prepare tea:\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0In the countries or tha Kant, where\nthe drinking of tea has been enjoyed\nFUR-BEARING ANIMALS\nIn the Eastern district, all fur-bearing animals (except Beaver and\nMuskrats), open season from November 15 to April 30, 1928.\n'In the Eastern district, Muskrats\nand Beaver, open season from March\n16 1928, to April 36, 192.8\nGAME BIRDS\nDucks\nDucks (except wood and Eider\nDucks), Wilson Snipe, Coots, Geese\nand Brant, throughout the Eastern\ndistrict, , open season from Septeu>\nber 15 to December 31.\nGrouse and Ptarmigan\nBlue Grouse only, in the Eastern\ndistrict, in that portion thereof\nknown as the (irand Forks-Greenwood electoral^ district and that portion of the Sinilkameen electoral\ndistrict situate anl lying east of Allison creek, the South Similkameen\nriver and the Pa-ayton river, open\nseason from September 15 to October 15.\nGrouse (Blue and Willow) and\nptarmigan (except Prairie Chicken\nor (Sharp-tailed Grouse), in the Eastern district, in that portion thereof\nknown as the Cariboo electoral district, open seaso i from September\n15 to November 15. In the remainder of the Easter;*, district (except\nthe electoral districts of Omineca,\nSkeena, Fort George, .Atlin, North\nandSnuth Okanagan, open season\nfrom September Ji to October 15.\nPtarmigan, in tlio Eastern district,\nin that portion tboreof known as the\nelectoral districts of Omineca.Skeena\nFort George and- Atlin, open season\nfrom September 15 to November 15.\nPrairie Chicken or Sharp-tailed\nGrouse, in the 1.'astern district, in\nthat portion thereof known as the\nelectoral district of Fort George,\nsituate and lyin-; to the north and\neast of the Rocky mountains, open\nseason from Sei '.emlber 1 to October 15. In the Ei.'Lern district, in\nthose portions of ,he electoral dis?\ntricts of Cariboo a id Lillooet. situate\nand lying to the couth of the 53rd\nparallel ot latitude, open season from\nOctober 15 to October 31.\nQuail\nQuail, in the Eastern district, in\nthat portion thereof known as the\nelectoral district of Similkameen and\nSouth Okanagan, open season from\nOctober 15 to November 15.\nPheasants\nPheasants, cock birds only, ln the\nEastern district; in the electoral district of South Okanagan; that portion of the Similkameen electoral\ndistrict situate and lying to the east\nof Allison creek, tbe South Similkameen river and the Pasayton river;\nln the electoral district of North\nOkanagan (except that portion situate and lying to the east of the Coldstream municipality), and ln the municipality and district municipality\nof Salmon Arm, open season from\nOctober 15 to November 16.\nCock birds only, ln the Eastern district, ln the North Okanagan electoral district, comprising that certain\nparcel or tract of land lying within\nthe drainage area of Duteau, Harris\nand Bessette creeks, and being\nbounded on the north by the Creigh\nton valley Vernon road, on the west\nby the eastern boundary of Coldstream municipality, and on the\nsouth by the south boundary of the\nNorth Okanagan electoral district,\nopen season from October 15,to October 31.\nCock birds only, ln the Eastern\ndistrict, in thatportion of tbe electoral distric of Creston situate and lying to the west Kootenay Landing,\nopen season from October 15 to October 16.\nCock birds only, tn the Eastern\ndistrict,' in that portion of the electoral district of Lillooet along the\nFraser river from Big Bar creek on\nthe north to Texas creek on the\nsouth, extending a, distance of ten\nmiles on the west side of the Fraser\nriver and for a distance of thirty-five\nmiles on tbe east side of the said\nriver, open season from October IS\nto October 31.\nEuropean Partridge\nEuropean Partridge, ln the Eastern district, in the electoral districts\nof Similkameen and North and South\nOkanagan, open season from October\n15 to November 15.\nIn tbe -Eastern district, in that portion thereof known as the municipality of Salmon Arm, open season\nfrom November 1 to November 15.\ntotal\ntotal\ntotal\nDaily bag limit, 3; total bag limit, 12.\nEuropean Partridge.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dally bag\nlimit, 4; total bag limit, 15.\nDucks.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dally bag limit, 20;\nbag limit, 150.\nGeese.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dally bag limSt, 10;\nbag limit, 60.\nBrant\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dally bag limit, 10;\nbag limit, 50.\nWilson Snipe.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Daily bag limit, 25;\ntotal bag limit, 150.\nCoots.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Daily bag limit, 25; total\nbag limit, 160.\nEvery person, upon the request of\nanyy constable or game warden,\nshall furniah satisfactory proof to\nhim of the locality and dates on\nwbich any game was by him killed\nor taken.\nThe open season declared by the\nregulations do not apply to tbe hunting, taking or having ln possession\nof quail, pheasants, prairie chicken\n(sharp-tailed grouse) or partridges\nwhen snow is on the ground,\nfor a thousand yea .71 or more, the sub\njefct of preparinc the leaf for consumption has beet 'ie a fine art and\na ceremony, but tha full delicious refreshment and healthful stimulation\nmay bt( extracted irom the fragrant\ntea-leaves if the f--Mowing rules are\nfollowed eyactly:\nRule No. 1\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thr best quality of\nVia must be used. The tea also must\nbe fresh, to yield 1'ie full goodness.\nRule No. 2\u00E2\u0080\u0094The quality of the waler used will affet tha bavor of the\nleverage ln the cup. Draw fresh\ncold water and brln ? It to a hard bubbly boll. Never u I i water that has\nbeen boiled before. Sometimes chlo-\nIne put in water to iiurlfy It will commit tely change the flavor of the tea.\nThe water Is lo biine, however, and\nnot tho ten.\nRule No. 3\u00E2\u0080\u0094It i. proper that only\na crockery or china teapot be used,\nnever one of metal or any other substance if the pure and delicious flavor of tht| tea is lo be drawn out. Tea\nlikewise should ne ar be enclosed In\na lii'tal tea-ball.\nRule No. 4\u00E2\u0080\u0094The tc-apot must be\nscalded out with boiling water and\nwhile It is warm, p: ice in it one level\nteaspoonful of tea for each cup required.\nRule No. 5\u00E2\u0080\u0094Nov pour the boiling\nwater on the leave >. Allow to steep\nin a warm plac for we minutes.\nStir just sufficiently to diffuse the\nfull' strength of Ih ;tea. Then pour\nihe llpuid off thejiaves intoanother\nheated vessel, unit' s served Immediately. If ipburod o:' in this way, the\ntea will not taku on bitter taste,which\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ven lhe finest tea wil! do unless\nprevented from over-steeping. Tea\nmade according to these rules will be\nfragrant, di Melons and completely\nsatisfying.\nAN EPHEMERAL LOT\nThe little shop-girl was reading\nthe newspaper on her way down\ntown in the subway.\ni\"What are, nonagenarians?\" she\nasked ber friend who sat beside\nher.\"\n\"I don't know,\" was the reply.\n\"Why, What about it?\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'Well, they must be a sickly lot\nWhenever I read about them they\nare almost always dying.\"\nPRECOCIOU8 LOGIC\nThe active mind of youth often\nfinds a nugget of wisdom ln a matrix\nof misunderstanding. That was the\ncase with the little girl referred to\nin J. U. H.'s Weekly. She Jumped\nhastily at a wrong conclusion, but\nlanded on a bed rock of fact!\"\n\"Papa, pro and con mean opposltes,\ndon't thep \" she Inquired\n\"Right,\" said the parent.\n\"That must be whp thep speak of\nprogress and congress,' she concluded.\nCHILDHOOD'S FAVORITE TREat\nEarly one morning last winter when\nthe thermometer was near zero, a\nman who directs the operation of a\nscore of newsboys considered it a\ngood idea to give the boys some food\nto help them combat the cold. He\ninvited them all into a restaurant.\n\"Now order what you want\" he said\nto them, \"so you'll be able to keep\nwarm when you go out on the street.\"\nAnd every mothers son ot them\nordered Ice cream.\nAND NOW VOU KNOW\n\"Ah, you are the young man ln\nquestion. What's your name?\"\n\"Ivan AuBzelchmmugencugtekt.\"\n\"How do you spell it?\"\n\"As it is pronounced!\" -\n\u00C2\u00ABr: i.\" f-i>\n,-'i9i\t8'* --,\nrj\u00C2\u00AB>4J***A\nCANCELLATION DF RE8ERVE.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2NTOTICKISHI-UKY -ilVENIIiat thr- reserve\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* cnvi-rtnir J.\u00E2\u0080\u009Ets 8'K*6\u00E2\u0080\u009E, !to07\u00C2\u00BB, sons, and\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Sttl'-, Kiinilianicui Hivlsitm uf Vnle Distrlot,\nla cs needed.\nG.E. NADEN,\nDeputy Miuister of Lands.\nDvpirtsneiit of Lunds,\ns'ieturin. R.C.\nUOt Jul*-, 1M7.\n'S\nBAG LIMITS\nBig Game\nDeer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094No person anywhere ln the\nEastern district shall kill or take or\nhave ln their possession during the\nopen season more than two deer, all\nof which must be of the male sex.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Bear.\u00E2\u0080\u0094No person anywhere ln the\nprovince shall at any tbne kill or\nake or have in their possession during the open season more than two\ngrizzly bear and three bear of any\nother species.\nMountain Sheep.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-In that portion\nof tbe province north of the main\nline of the Canadian National railway, formerly known as the Orand\nTrunk Pacific railway, no person\nshall at any time ktll or take or have\ntn their possession more than two\nmountain sheep. In the electoral\ndistricts of Fernie, Cranbrook and\nColumbia, and in those portions of\nthe Cariboo and Lillooet electoral\ndistricts situate and lying to the\nsouth of the 52nd parallel of latitude\nand west of the Fraser river, no person shall at any time kill or take or\nhave in their possession more than\none mountain sheep.\nCaribou.\u00E2\u0080\u0094'In that portion of the\nEastern district lying to the north of\ntbe main line of the Canadian National railway, formerly known as\nthe Orand Trunk Pacific railway, no\nperson shall at any time kill or take\nor have In their possession during\nthe open season more than two\ncaribou, and In those portions of the\nEastern district lying to the south\nof the Canadian National railway,\nformerly known as the Grand Trunk\nPacific railway, no person shall at\nany time kill or take or have ln their\npossession during the open season\nmore than one caribou.\nWapiti (Blk), Moose and Mountain\nGoat.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Throughout the province no\nperson -shall at any time kill or take\nor \" have in their possession during\nthe open season more than one wapiti (elk), one moose and two mountain goat.\nGame Birds\nPheasants (cock birds only).\u00E2\u0080\u0094Except in the electoral district of Creston: Dally bag limit, 44; total bag\nlimit, 15. In the electoral district of\nCreston: Daily bag limit, 3; total\nbag limit, 6.\nQuail.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dally bag limit, 10; total\nbag limit, 100.\nGrouse and Ptarmigan (except Prai\nrie Chicken or Sharp-tailed Grouse.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDaily bag limit, 6 of one species or\n12 of all species; total bag limit, 50\nin tbe aggregate.\nPrairie Chicken or Sharp-tailed\nGrouse.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In the electoral district of\nFort George: Daily bag limit, 6;\ntotal bag limit, 50. In the electoral! OfflM alt Rs F. PstCto's Store\ndistricts of Cariboo and Lillooet:' Pkoae 64\nDONALDSON\n{GROCERY\nPhone SO\nTry our Special Tea\noiat 65c per lb\nShoes, Shirts, Overalls\nGood,- values for your\nmoney.\nCall and see Jus before\npurchasing.\nJOHN DONALDSON\nGeneral Merchant\nGRAND F RKS\nTransfer Co.\nDAVIS fiHANSBN, Prop.\n'/\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Gity Baggage and General\nTransfer\nCoal, Wood and\nfor Sale\nIce\nGet Your\nGroceries\nat the\nCITY GROCERY\n1\nPhone 25\n'Service and Quality\"\nE.C, Henniger Co.\nSYNOPSIS OF\nIliNDACTAMENDMENTS\nGrain, Hay\nFlour and Peed\nLime and Salt\nCenent and Plaster\nPoultry Supplies\nGrand Forks, It. C.\n/\u00E2\u0096\u00A0MUi vuluc of well-\n-*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 pn.Aited,iu-ut appearing stationery us\na means of getting and\nholding desirable business has been amply\ndemonstrated. Consult u'i before going\nolsflvrnre.\nWedding invitations\nBail ['l'ogi'ums\nBush 3es cards\nVi ' ng cards\nSIT ' ing tags\nLetterheads\nStatements\nNotehcnd-i-\nPamphlol3\nPrice lists\nEnvelopes\nBillheads\nCirculars\nDodgers\nPosters\nMenus\nNew Type\nLatest Style\nFaces\nI\nTHE SUN\nColombia A-renue suit\nUkeSte-Mt\nTELEPHONE\nB101\nPRK-EMPTIONS\n; Volant iiurb.\u00C2\u00ABrv-,l, surveyed (Jruw,i lauds\nmay beiiM-einpteil by Uriel I, ssibjs.ni. orar\n18 years ol am', ami liy alien. \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E UiHilarlii-i\nluteullutito Ueouie Hi Iti.h subjeols, oun.||.\ntissual ui'iiii rtj.t Ion\u00E2\u0080\u0094 iKftlil-satliiii anil Im-\nprsivasfscsit fur asrl'luslliaml pin,,,,...\nFull Inform;,ll ,,i com el'U ni! re -ulnllon.\nrigHrdliigpreeiiiulionslaglreu In Hnlli-tlu\nNo. I, Uu i --arias. \"How to Pre-mnui i.uihI.\"\ncopies.,* wl.lch tun be obtained freu of .liurge\nby ail.lrasslusr Use Uep.srtiiiatit or Units,\n| Victoria, IS.... oranyUtiveruuieiu Agent.\nKeeords will be niuilo m-verlng only laml\nsuitable I or aif t Icnllnrai pu -. -.ises, ami \u00E2\u0080\u009Ehi, b\nIs uot tlmbjrla.ij. I ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E c\u00C2\u00BBnr\u00C2\u00BBlss,r ovi-r u.t-uu\nhoard l\u00C2\u00BBat i*r slurs) weat ul sue Uoast 'lunge\nanil 8 WW fuel per aure ia\u00C2\u00BBl t-l tbat '\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E**\nSapplictitioiis fur ps-o-einptloris are to be\naildressi'il tu -be Uud U'in inlisiuiier ol the\nUudllsKuruliia-u'ivislon.in wblib the land\napplied for is situated.und are male oo\nprinted forms ouples a: ,,,,, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0,, obtained\nfrom th i Land UTMlDiSilo'ler..\nPre-emptions must b\u00C2\u00BB uooiitileil for Hv,\nyearsand 1 \u00E2\u0080\u009E i>r\u00E2\u0080\u009Eve.,i-.iit. ,ue l\u00E2\u0080\u009E , \u00E2\u0080\u009E v\u00C2\u00BBiue \u00E2\u0080\u009E/ ,u\npor aore, Ihalu 11 y olj.ri.i., \u00E2\u0080\u009E,d uulUvaHl,,,,\nat least live sores, before is Uruwu Oruut emi\nbe received..*\nFor more dctatieu tiitorius,iioii sue tlu llnl.\nletlu'-Huw tol're-impt h-iud.\"\nPURCHAtea.\nApplication-are received fur pun-Use of\nmount and unreserved Urnwn Unds,.i9\u00C2\u00BBu.\nIng tiuiberlHiid, for agricultural purposes'\nminimum price of ilr.t-oiuss (arable) land la\n\u00C2\u00BB per acre, uud mo\"ml-e.a.. (,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,!,,,) laud\ntt.-) per acre. Kur.lier Information .egsrd-\nugpurithawor l.a,, uf Crown l\u00C2\u00BBudal,,|\u00E2\u0080\u009E,M\nlu Hulletli. K\u00E2\u0080\u009E. io. u,sd Series. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u009E,chaw \u00E2\u0080\u009E,d\nLease of Crowu Lands.',\nMill, factory, or industrial sites \u00E2\u0080\u009Eu tlml\u00E2\u0080\u009Er\nlaud, not exceeding to aores, may be pur.\nsussed or loa.ed, on oonditlous Including\npu) incut ur .-iiiuinajre, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nHUMttctire \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 t-JASK-vsuy\nUnsurveyed areas, uot excee-lluif T373J5,\nmay be leased as hniuealtiw, couuliloual upou\nu dwelling being . ected lu lhe firat year,\ntitle being ebtaluablc after residenoe and\nImprovement eoudltious sre fuimied aud laud\nhaa beeu surveyed.-;\nLIASES I 1\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Tgraaing and Industrial puipoMtTaraas\nnot exceeding \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABtlacres may be loused by oue\nperson or aoompauy,\nn GRAZING.\nl-udof the (SMtliig Act the Province la\ndivided Into graaing districts and Ihe range\nadministered under a Oraxlng Com*\nmissioner. annual graaing iiennlts ara\nissued based on uumbers ranged, priority being given to establish tl ownera. Stook\nowners mar form associations for rassge\nmanagement. Freo, ur purtlally tree, permits\naiu availablee lor settler., tampers and\ntravellers up to ten head.\nkTscheek\nWholesale and Retail\nTOBACCONIST\no^lar ia\nHavana Cigars, Pipes\nConfectionery\nImperial Billiard Parlor\nGrand Forks, B. C\nPalaceBarber Shop\nRazor Honing a Specialty\"\n'i*i\nP. A. Z. PARE, Proorietor\n..FIRST ST, NEXT P. BURNS'\nJI. E. MCDOUGALL\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER S\nAfts-Mlt\nbunlnion Mo.iuuiental Worka Q\nLAab-ratoa Vt otitic La Co. Hoofina,!\n\" ESTIMATES FURNISNEDS 7\nBOX 33} BRAND FORKS, B. C\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE FRAMING\nFurniture Made to Qrder.\nAlso Repairing of all Kind*.\nUpholstering Neatly Dona\nR. G. HoCOTGHBON\nwuturacuTUOi"@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_1927_08_05"@en . "10.14288/1.0341380"@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 .