"bebb61a9-2479-48e8-8939-2385e97843fd"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1904-12-13"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0341525/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " 0^/S^\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0v^CTOR^^'\n\\no-\nSun.\nn\nFourth Year.--No. 13\nGrand Forks, B. C, Tuesday, December 13, 1904\nISSUED TWICE A WEEK\nAdjoining Hanna Glaim Pur-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0$ chased to Develop Big\nNorth Fork Mine,\nGeorge McLeod Transacted\nThis Important Deal\nLast Saturday.\nThe North Fork mining district,\ntributary to Grand Forks, is gradually though surely pushing itself\n' forward as a factor in the mining industry of British Columbia, and by\nthe time one of the many prospected\nI railways is built into Franklin camp,\nwhich will almost certainly be done\nduring the coming year, that railway\n'.will find a large dre tonnage waiting\nits arrival by many valuable and\nwell-developed mines in that future\ncopper camp.\nAnother important deal in North\nFork mining property was made last\nSaturday, when George A. McLeod,\non behalf of the McKinley Mining\ncompany, purchased from William\nBruin the Hanna mining claim,\nWhioh adjoins the McKinley mine, in\nFranklin camp. The price paid has\nnot been made public, but it iB understood to be a good figure. The\nlirst payment of $1,000 wu made on\nSaturday.\nTho Hanna was Bccured by the\nMcKinley company primarily for\nthe purpose of obtaining more room\nfor| unneling work on the McKinley,\nalthough there are two good ledges\nof copper-gold oro already exposed\non the former property.\nwould guarantee to complete tie\nreport by January 5th. The motion\nwns lust, Aid. Clements, McCalluin\nand Martin voting against it, and the\nmover and seconder in favor6f.it.\nOn motion ol Aid. Clements and\nMcCallum. the application for free\nlight for the skating link from Taylor & Fisher was referred to the\nwater and light committee.\nOn motion of Aid. Martin and\nHutton, the council adjourcd until\nWednesday evening next, when the\nmatter of appointing an auditor will\nlie finally settled.\nrn\nTOPICS OF THE TOWN\nTHE CITY COUNCIL\nThe regular weekly meeting of the\ncity council was held in the council\nchamber last night Mayor Hammar, Aid. Hutton, Clements, McCal-\nlum.Martin and McNee*were present.\nThe following accounts were ordered paid : Yale transfer, 87.40 ;\nLequime & Powers, 85.28 ; E. P.\nKnape, 18.00 i G. F. Transfer Co.,\n$17.00 ; A. M. Templeman, $37.50 ;\n1). C. Tel. Co., $9.45 ; ft. C. Mc-\nCutcheon, $5.40; G. C. Brown,\n$1.50 ; The Sun, $1.00 ; Boundary\nIron works, $111.25 ; A. E. Savage,\n(3.00 ; Jno. Hutchinson, 830.00.\nMr. McAllister's offer (\u00C2\u00AB $25 for\nthe city's sleigh was accepted.\nThe chairman of the water and\nlight committee reported that Mr.\nMiller had been asked to pay 5 cents\nper foot for the 4H0 feet of pipe taken\nup, with the option to take up the\nbalance of the pipe, or tho committee was willing to accept one-half the\npipe taken up, the other half to be\nheld by Mr. Miller for his labor.\nOn motion of Aid. McCallum and\nMcNeo, the mayor and Aid. Clements were appointed a committee\nto interview tho Granby smelter people in reference to the high charges\nfor light.\nMr. Hodges informed the committee that he would not undertake to\naudit the city books in fifteen dnys,\nand asked for an extension of time\nand increase of salary.\nAid. Hutton moved, seconded by\nAid. McNee, that Mr. Campbell's\noffer to audit the city books at $10\nper day bo accepted, providing he\nWhile the life-boat service is one\nwith which we arc intensely sympathetic and deeply interested in, yet\nhow few have heard in earnest the\ncry of \"Man the Life Boat,\" and\nhow very rarely has the average individual had the opportunity of seeing tho life boat at work ? These\nrealistic and thrilling incidents have\nnow been faithfully recorded on the\nBioscope, and will be reproduced,\nalong with an altogether new program of Canadian and other scenes\nat the London Bioscope company's\nentertainment, which opens at the\nGrand Forks opera house on Saturday evening, December 24th, for one\nperformance.\nRev. Ralph Trotter, formerly of\nGrand Forks, is doing some traveling since he left this city. Recently\nhe was residing in Nova Scotia, but\nThe Detroit Free Press, of the 4th\ninst., says : \"Rev. Ralph Trotter, of\nAylmer, Ont., will conduct both services in the Bruce Avenue Baptist\nchurch today.\"\nW. E. McDaniels, |who has been\nwith the Great Northern company in\nthis city for over three years, latterly\nin the capacity of station agent, has\nbeen transferred to Republic, and\nhas moved his family to that place.\nMr. McDaniel was very popular in\nGrand ForkB, and his numerous\nfriends will regret to learn of his re-\nmoval.\nReturn! from the third class car of\noro shipped from the Skylark mine\nrecently wero S40 per ton, it being\ntreated at the Granby smelter. 'I'he\ncar of first class ore which will be\nshipped about the 15th inst,, will be\ntreated at the Nelson smelter, ou account of the ore reduced at the\nGranbv being self-lhixing.\nThe Canadian Pacific, tho Spokane Falls and Northern and the\nKettle Valley lines have issued joint\nore rates from Ymir, B.C., and Che-\nwclah, Wash., to the Boundary smelters. The rate on $15 ore from either\npoint is 81.75 per ton: The rate on\n.510 ore from Ymir is 81.50 per ton,\nand on 825 ore $2.50 per ton.\nTwo carloads of machinery arrived\nat Phoenix Inst week for thc Granby\nmines. It comprised the parts for\nthe new giant ore crusher which is\nto be installed at thc No. .') ore bins,\nnow rapidly nearing completion.\nThe crusher will have a capacity of\n1,500 tons iu one shift, the ore from\nthese bins being loaded into Great\nNorthern cars.\nTables, balls, cues in perfect order,\nat Yale Billiard Parlors.\nMusical Comedy to Be Given\nat the Opera House on\nThursday Nieht,\nLadies of the Maccabees to\nConduct Very Attractive Bazaar.\nThe celebrated musical comedy,\n\"Pretty Polly,\" in which the dainty\ncomedienne, Miss Ada Palmer-Walker, who was for a long time the\nleading star in Whitney's \"Dolly\nVarden,\" the great sensation in the\nlargest cities, appears, is one of the\nmost laughable presentations before\nthe public. From the rise of the\ncurtain until the close it is one constant stream of ludicrous, though\nnatural, situations, splendid musical\nnumbers, good acting and gorgeous\ncostumes. Miss Palmer is supported\nby a strong company of artists and\nmusicians, and is giving one of the\nblist and most amusing comic operas\non the road today. The Helena\nRecord of Nov. 2, 1904, .ays of this\ncompany : \"Pretty Polly,\" which\nwas presented at the opera house on\nWednesday and Thursday evenings,\nwas a decided hit. It is a splendid\nmusical comedy, with plenty of high\nclass fun, the very 'best singing and\ngood acting. Every member of the\ncompany is good, while Miss Walker\nis simply unsurpassed. It is the best\nshow in its lino of the season.\" And\nthis paper's is but one of the many\nfavorable notices which the largest\ndailies have given. \"Pretty Polly\"\nis the nickname of the Princess Polly\nvon Steinberg, who is a genuine\nmadcap, and the character is fully\ncarried out by Miss Walker. At Helena, Butte, Anaconda and Spokane\nthey were so much the hit of tht\nseason, and so great was the enthusiasm, that they were finally\nurged to play a return engagement,\nwhich they will do early in January.\nThey will be at thc Grand Forks\nopera house this Thursday evening,\nDec. 15, when everyone who likes a\ngood time should not fail to see them\nThe Bazaar to be given by the\nlocal hive of the Ladies of the Mac\ncabees, in the Addison block, nppo\nsite the postoffice, next Friday evening, December HI, at present shows\nevery evidence of being a huge success. Every conceivable preparation\nhas been made for thc event. Ton\nand cuke will be served in real Japanese style, nnd nil kinds of homemade goods, including sweets, fancy\nneedle work, etc., will be offered for\nsale by pretty and persuasive saleswomen. A hand-painted picture\nwill also be disposed of.\nMr. Sheedy, Great Northern station agent in this city, who has been\nlaid up in a Spokane hospital with\na severe case of typhoid fever during\nthe past four months, hns recovered\nand is again on duty at the Great\nNorthern depot here.\nThe Great Northern passenger\ntrain due here at 4 p.m. Sunday did\nnotitrrivc until 1 a.m. Monday. Thc\ndelay was the result of the engine\nand three cars getting ofl the track\neleven miles north of Marcus. No\nserious damage resulted, but thc (ire-\nman received a few scratches. A\nboulder lying on the track throw thc\ntrucks off while the train was running fifteen miles an hour. The\ntrainmen do not understand how the\nboulder got on thc track, as it could\nnot have rolled there.\nLast Saturday E. C. Henniger &\nCo. purchased thc commission business of Mr. Folger, on Second street,\nand will conduct that business in the\nfuture at thc old stand. In addition\nto the line carried by Mr. Folger,\nthe new linn will handle a large\nstock of Hour, hay, grain and feed.\nThey arc also the sole dealers in this\ncity in Crow's Nest Pass eoal, which\nthey sell at $7.50 per ton, delivered,\nMr. Henniger was formerly in the\ntransfer business in this city, and is\nwell and favorably known as a business man of integrity. The Sun\nwishes the new firm success.\nIt is rumored that local, curlers\nwill get stones from the cast to play\nthe game here this winter. It is not\nlikely, however, as it would prove a\nvery expensive job to keep keen ice\nin an open-air rink on the necessarily\nlarge sheet required for the few followers of the game here, who showed\nthemselves very backward in helping the movement for a covered rink\nwhen the subscription lists were circulated a while ago. Two years ago\na large space was prepared for the\ncurlers in the open-air rink on Victoria avenue, but they never made\nuse of it.\nMr. and Mrs. Patrick Welch and\nMiss Mabel Welch entertained about\n200 friends at Elks' temple in Spokane last Thursday evening. Behind a bulwark of potted plants, the\nstage in front was filled with neat\nlittle tea tables, where dainty refresh\nnients were served throughout the\nevening. The dresses worn by the\nwomen were among the most elaborate that have graced a Spokane ball\nroom in times past. Mrs. Welch\nwore real lace, and her daugl.ter\nMabel wns gowned in pink cliiffon\nover taffeta silk and carried a bouquet of violets.\nA novelty in the way of traveling\nis psomised in the early spring. J\nF. Royer, who has been maintaining\na daily stage service between Grand\nForks and Greenwood, is arranging\nto give a double daily service between Phoenix and Greenwood as\nsoon as(iicat Northern trains begin\nrunning into the former place. Mr.\nRoyer aims to be up to date, uud.\nanticipating a heavy irafUo, has ordered un automobile wilh it seating\ncapacity of twelve persons, lo be delivered April 1st. The machine is\nguaranteed to climb the switchback\ngrade at a satisfactory rate.\n'I'he city council of Phoenix is considering a by-law abolishing the roail\nlax within the limits of that corporation.\nIt is probable Fred W. Grant will\nmanage the sknting rink this winter\nfor Messrs. Taylor and Fisher. His\nWell-known abilities ns a skater und\nhockeyist should make the appointment a popular one.\nThe recognized linesl indoor game\n(or gentle exorcis/: Billiards, Yale\nParlors.\nSimilkameen Coal Company\nWants Charter for Line\nFrom the Coast-\nProposed to Make Connections at Grand Forks\nand Midway.\nAccording to advices from Victoria, tho Nicola, Kamloops and\nSimilkameen Coal and Railway company will apply to the Dominion\nparliament at its next session, in\nJanuary, for a charter for a railroad\nfrom Osoyoos lake to a point near\nGrand Forks,, with power to connect\nwith thc Vancouver, Victoria and\nEastern railway near Grand Forks,\nand with the Columbia and Western\nrailway near Midway.\nAt the same time thc Vancouver,\nWestminster and Yukon company\nseeks to increase its capitalization\nfrom S2,000,000 to $12,000,000.\nThis is believed to indicate that the\nGreat Northern, which controls what\nis built of the line, will build along\nthc route already surveyed from\nVancouver to Quesnelle. By means\nof the New Westminster bridge over\nthe Fraser river, northern British\nColumbia would then be made tributary to the Great Northern main line\nand shipping points on Puget sound.\nSUNSET SAUNTERINGS\nGus Parker, C. E. Lane, W. N.\nLane and A. E. Savage returned last\nSaturday from a ten days' hunting\ntrip up in the Nortli Fork country.\nThey brought back two deer, a large\nnumber of grouse and a few jack-\nrabbits. Since their return the guests\nat Thc lCvening Sun hotel have been\nfeasting on venison. As intimated\nby this paper a couple of weeks ago,\nthc party didn't take two wugonlouds\nof firearms and ammunition into the\nwilderness merely for fun.\n' No time is being lost in getting\nthe skating rink in shape, The fence\nposts arc now being erected, and the\nlumber W08 delivered yesterday. 'I'he\nwork of putting up tho structure will\nbe pushed ahead as fast ns possible,\nboth fences already being beilt.\nII. W. Warrington, superintendent of tho Kettle Vulley railway', was\nin Nelson on a business trip on Saturday List.\nNo decision has yet been reached\nin regard toseouringn larger hospital\nfor tho city, but if Fa'.Wactory arrangements are not soon made with\nMiss Rhoads, tl wnerof the present hosoilnl, the'promoters will proceed tn build a new one.\nTreasurer (!. W. Wooster, of the\nGranby company's olliee here, paid\nhis customary business visit to Pboe\nnix last week.\nMt. nml Mrs. F. M. Holland, of\nToronto, are visiting in the coy this\nweek.\nL. A. Manly made a business trip\nto Nelson yesterday.\nEnglish Pyramid Pool, Life Pool\nanil Billiards. Yale Billiard Parlors. The happj fellow\nwho will hr\nRing=ing the\nChristmas Belle\nmust looll In ut Miirrl.iiu'i\nto h-iii-ii wlutt's what\nin proper fiiniliio-i' for theuear irlrl'i\nhand.\nMorrison's proieitt .took nf\nRings\n\u00C2\u00ABu* navar onualeO h.vimy previous show-\ntrie Iti Grand f-'i>rlts.\nli isn'i that the QUANTITY of his\nRings\nis si 'ga, and Ine VARIETY so extensive\nlis tlmt the i'ATTKKNS lire sn sllPiiass-\ninirly line.\nThese\nRinp;s\nuf Morrison's speiili the lust word\nof Art iii Ormotieiit.\nAnd tlu, prices \"re as varied\nus thn\nRings\nmi., evory shtf-Te\nRing\nwill \u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0in to' you'to be worth\nmore than Mormon will nsk\nyou to I'uy for it.\nA.D. MORRISON\nJeweler unci Optician\nORAND FORKS, B.C.\nSllfi? Eimting \u00C2\u00A3>mt\nnever \"backetl up\" on bis convictions, no matter how strong or tin\nexpected the opposition.\nVice-President Fairbanks, who is\nthe chief American member of the\nHigh Joinl commission, announces\nthnt he is anxious for n reciprocity\ntreaty with Canada, and is trying in\nbring about an- \t\nother meeting of ' \"\nthe commission.\nCanadians, bow-\never, have not ns\nyet sufficiently\nrecovered from\ntheir disappointment over, the\ndecision regarding the Alaska\nboundary,, and\nnre not yet ready\nto accede to the\nrequest for another try at adjusting a'fair reciprocity agreement. Thc fact is\nthat the business of the country is\nnow in such a prosperous shape that\nat present Canadians do not sec how\nthey can better themselves by entering into any sort of deal with the\nUnited States.\nFigures have been compiled showing in detail the tonnage output of\nthe several low grade mines in the\nBoundary for the month of November, with a totai of 72,000 tons, or\nabout .'1,000 tons in access of the record for the month of October. No-\nvombar's total is also said to be tbe\nlargest of any month since ore began\nProvincial Constable Dinsmore\nwas up in Phoenix on a business\nvisit last week.\nAid. M. B. Feeney is on a business\ntrip to the llellingham Bay cities.\nThc Royal (lame:\nBilliard Parlors.\nat the Yale\nCot Class Gifts\nare the popular\nideal nowadavs.\nThey used to lie\nbeyond the means\nof most gift-buyers, hut not any\nlonger. We are\nnow showing a\nline of beautiful\npieces at n figure\nGlass\nGifts\nthat suits the\naverage p u rse.\nThev look three\ntimes the price,\nand will be appreciated accordingly by the recipient, A great\nvariety to make\nA.D.Morrison Cr solection8\nTHE JEWELER\nOre is coining\nill over the Great\nNorthern to the\nGranby Smelter\nfrom the LeRoi\nNo. 2, White\nBear and Jumbo,\nat Rossland; Hunter V, at Ymir,\nand Copper Key\nand Mountain\nLion, at Repuli-\nlic, etc.\nPUBLISH!-:!) EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY\nEVENINGS AT OI1AND FOHKS, II.C, BY\nG. A. EVANS.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES'.\nOne year....$2.00 | Three months. .50\nSix months .. 1.00 \ One month 2C\nAdvertising rates furnished on application.\nLegal notices, 10 and 5 Ots. per line.\nAddress all coininunications to\nThe Evenino Sun,\nPhone 55. grand forks, n. c.\nTUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1904\nThe backbone of winter is getting\nstiffer every day.\nThis shomd be a busy week with\nthe wise shoppers.\nIt is quite proper to buy everything now except the Christmas tree\nand the turkey.\nIt would not be a bad idea to begin practicing writing \"1905\" now,\nand thus avoid mistakes later on.\nGreenwood's city fathers are proposing to pay the mayor So and the\naldermen $3 for each session of the\ncouncil which they attend.\nReturning Officer O'Hara held the\nofficial count of votes cast in the recent Yale-Cariboo election at Kamloops on Saturday, but the figures\nhave not yet been announced.\nTurkey is so high this year that\nthe family man who wants the national bird for his Christmas dinner\nwill have to draw very heavily upon\nhis imagination or his bank account.\nBritish Columbia has one telephone for every 38 of her population, as against 66 for the whole\nDominion. But that don't prove\nthat talk is cheaper in the West than\nin the effete East.\nOne great improvement is already\nnoticeable as a result of the work of\ncleaning out McCallum's slough, for\nquite a large tract of land at the\neastern extremity is now high and\ndry, which formerly was covered\nwith a couple of feet of sluggish,\nfever-breeding water.\nJohn Houston and Dr. Kose are\nalready enjoying a spirited campaign\nfor mayoralty honors in Nelson.\nWithout knowing anything of his\nopponent, wc pick John to win, for\nhe has done great service in promoting the interests of Nelson, and\nThere are few who can resist the\ncharm of the exquisite pieces of\n.crystal glass comprised in our assortment. The designs are new, the\ncuttings are rich and deep, and the\nprices are extrefnely reasonable. A\nMorrison.\nHis honor Judge Leamy, and Mrs.\nLeamy are Nelson visitors. Judge\nLeamy went to that citv to confer\nwith Judge Form upon comity court\nbusiness that has accumulated during\nthe hitter's absence from Ne[son.\nAt the Greenwood smelter the bri\nquettiug building is nearly completed,\nand the machinery is about to be installed.\nHURRIED AND WORRIED ALL DAY\nAnd the worst of it is you are a\nlittle run down and have mighty little chance to catch up. Everything\nseems like a grindstone wearing down\nyour nerves. You are irritable and\nget less sleep than is absolutely* neces-\n,ry. Better stop before things get\nworse. Your beat plan is to use Frrro-\nzone for a while and give your nerves\nand brain a chance to pick up. Ferrozone is tho finest tonic v busy man can\ntake. It make new blood, nourishes\nthe body, strengthens the nerves, improves the appetite and rehabilitates\nthe whole system. Try Ferrozone.\nPrice 50c. H. E. Woodland, druggist.\nOne might as well have no watch as\none that's fast or slow. An accurate\nwatch isn't necessarily an expensive\none\u00E2\u0080\u0094we havea variety of styles at\ncomparatively low prices that are\nguaranteed to keep good time. A. D.\nMorrison.\nTables, balls, cues in perfect order,\nat Yale Billiard Parlors.\nChristmas\nShopping\nShopping is a Delight\nat This Store.\nWe are showing on\nevery side a great\nvariety of usefuliir- >\ntides. A visit cannot fail to> offer\nmany suggestions\nof value. We make\na specialty of Silver-\nMounted Ebony\nGoods and High.\nClass Perfumes.\nThe Early Shopper\nGets the Pick.\nWoodland's\nDug Store\ngoing out of the Boundary mines to\nloeal smelters. At nn average vulu-\nation of $6 per ton, this would mean\na total value for the month's output\nof about 8350,000. For the eleven\nmonths of 1904, up to December 1,\nthe total output of the Boundary\nmines is a little short of 750,000\ntons, and as the month of December\n.promises to lie the largest yet, the\ntotal for the calendar year will no\ndoubt be close to 830,000 tons, or 20\nper cent more than 1003. Following\nare the figures in detail for Decern\nber: Granby mines, 45,089 tons\nMother Lode, 15,370; Brooklyn\nStemwinder, 7,050 ; Emma, 2,650\nAthelstan-Jack Pot, 720; Senator,\n415 ; Mouniain Rose, 152 ; Oro Denoro, 99 ; Miscellaneous, 175. Total,\n72,306 tons. All but a small part\nof this ore was treated at the three\ndistrict smelters, at Grand Forks,\nGreenwood and Boundary Falls. The\nsmelters at Trail and Nelson reduced the rest.\nIT'S HWAT IT LEADS TO\nThat makes catarrh such a dreaded\ndisease. If you have catarrh taint,\ndropping in the throat; if you hawk\nand spit and have a stuft'ed-tip feeling\nin your nostrils, you should usa fragrant, healing Catarrhozone at once\nand get cured. Thousands have been\nsaved from consumption and completely cured by Catarrhozone, so there\nis no reason why you shouldn't stamp\nout your catarrh also. Catiurhozone\nwill really cure you and prevent the\ndisease from returning. It's very pleasant, jnst balsamic modicated vapor-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nno nauseous drugs. Absolute cure\nguaranteed to users of Catiurbozone;\nit can't fail. Try it. Complete outfit\n81.00; sample size 25c. H. E. Woodland, druggist.\nClaims and Accomplishments\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWe do more than just promise you\ngood printing\u00E2\u0080\u0094we do the printing\nthat's up to our promises. Any office\ncub can promise\u00E2\u0080\u0094wc execute. No\ndisappointment\u00E2\u0080\u0094if we promise work\non a date, it's done at that time.\nWHY GO EAST\nOver the sun-burned, sage brush\nnnd alkali plains, when you may\njust ns well take a delightful, cool\nand comfortable ride through the\nheart of the Rocky Mountains in\nview of the grandest scenery on the\nAmerican continent?\nThis you enn do by traveling on,\nthc Rio Grande system, the far-\nfamed \"Scenic Line of the World,\"\nIhe only transcontinental line passing through Salt Lake City, Glon-\nwuod Springs, Leadville, Colorado\nSprings nnd Jlcnver enroute to eastern points.\n'Three daily express trains make\nclose connections with all trains east\nnnd west, and afford a choice of live\ndistinct routes of travel. The equipment of these trains is the best, including free reclining chair cars.\nstandard nnd tourist sleepers, n perfect dining car service, and also\npersonally Conducted excursion cars,\neach in charge of a competent guide,\nwhose business is to look after the\ncomfort of his guesls. No more\npleasant and inexpensive means of\ncrossing thc continent can be found\nthan is provided by those excursions.\nFor additional details address .1.\nI). Mansfield, Gen, Agt., RiaGrande\nLines, No. 124 Third Street, Port-\nund, Ore.\nEight men are\nnow employed at\nthe Oro Denoro,\nin Summit camp, and ifc is intended to\nincrease the shipments of ore shortly.\nDiamond drill operations are\nin progress at the Granby mines.\nstill\nThe Theatre\nIs one 0 per annum for\nan individual, and from $50 to $100 per annum for a company according to capital.\nA free miner, having discovered coal in\nplace, may locate a claim 1500x1600 feet by\nmarking out the same with two legal posts,\nbearing location notices, one at each end on\nthe lode or vein.\nThe claim shall be recorded within fifteen\ndays if located within ten miles of a mining\nrecorder's office, one additional day allowed\nfor each additional ten miles or fraction.\n* e fee for recording a claim is $5.00.\nAt least $100 must be expended on the claim\neach year or paid to the mining recorder In\nlieu thereof. When $500 ha*, been oxpended\nor paid, the locator may, upon having a survey made, uud upon complying with tbe\nother requirements, purchase tiie land at\n$1.01) an acre.\nPermission may be grented by the Minister\nof the Interior to locate claims containing\niron and mica, also copper, iu the Yukon\nTerritory, of mi area nut exceeding 160acres.\nThe patent for a mining location shull provide for the payment of royulty on the sales\nuot exceeding live per cent.\nThe lesoe'a right it- eoullned to the submerged beds or bars in tin* river helow low\nwater water murk, that boundury to be fixed\nby its position ou the 1st duy of August iu the\nyear of the dute of the lease.\nThe lessee shall huve one dredge in operation within two years from the dute of the\nlease, und one dredge for each live miles\nwittiiu six year* from Midi date, Kent it. I\n$100 per mllB for first year, and ***<\u00C2\u00AB' per mile\nloreacli subsequent year. Koyaity, same us\npliirur mining.\nPlacet miniug in the Yukon Territory.\u00E2\u0080\u0094,\nCreek, gulch, river and hill claims shuli uot\nexceed ''\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" feet Hi length, measured ou the\nbase line or genera) direction ofthecr reek\nor gulch, tbe width being 1000 to 20uo' All\nother placer claims shall be 200 feot xquare.\nClaims uro marked by two legal posts, one\nat each end, hearing notices, butty must be\nobtulued within ten dnys. if the claim is\nwithin ten miles of mining recorder's olliee.\nUue additional day allowed for euch additional ten miles or fruition.\nThe person or company staking a claim\nmust hold a free miner's certificate.\nThe discoverer of u new mine is entitled lo\nu claim of mmi iff t In length, uud il the party\nconsists of two l-'MiO feet altogether, uu the\noutput of which no royalty will be charged;\nthe rest of the party ordinary cluiius only.\ntin try feu $10, Koyaity at the rate of 8Jj per\ncent ou the value of the gold shipped trom\nthe X ilkon Territory, to be paid to Ihe Comptroller.\nNo free uilnershall receive a grant of more\nthan one mining cluim on eaeh separate\nriver, creek or gulch, but the same miner\nmay bold un) number of claims by purchase,\nantl free miners muy work their Dlalmi io\npurtnersliip hy filing notice uud paying fee\nof $2. A claim may bu abandoned uud uti-\nni her obtulued on tin* same creek, gulch or\nriver, by giving notice and paying a fee.\nWork m ii fit |>e done ou a claim euch year to\nt fie value of at IflMt *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA certificate that work has bee i done must\nhe ubtuiued each year. If not, ttiu claim\nsnail be deemed to he -thuuduiied, and open\nto occupation and entry hy a free miner.\ni lie boundaries of u cluim muy be defined\nabsolutely by buviug a survey made and publishing notices iu the Yukon Official dczette,\nPbthoi-bum.\u00E2\u0080\u0094All unappropriated Dominion lauds in Manitoba, Hie North- ff est Territories and within the Yukon Territory are\nopen to prospecting for petroleum, and the\nMinister may reserve for an Individual or\ncoinpuuy having machinery on the land to be\nprospected, uu area of MO acres. Should the\nprospector discover oil iti paying quantified,\nand satisfactorily establish such discovery,\nan area nut exceeding tUU ueres, Including tlio\noil well and such other laud as may bedetert\nmined, will be sold to the discoverer nt the\nrate of $1.00 an BOM- subject to royalty ut\nsuoh rase as muy be sj,\u00C2\u00BBecl\u00C2\u00ABed by order-in*\nmm'il JAMES A SMART,\nDeputy \"f the Minister of Che Interior,\njjupurtmetd -\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*' the liituriiir, Oltunu.\nm\nNION HOTEL AND MUSIC HALL\nBar Supplied With the Finest Lines of Wines, Liquorn\nand Cigars. LUNCH COUNTER MEALS Served at\nAll Hours. Finely Furnished Kooms in Connection.\nPETER SANTURE, Proprietor\nTHE\nGrand Forks Sun\nToronto Weekly\nMail and\nEmpire\n$2.10\nper year\nToronto Daily\nNews\n$2.2$\nper year\nSubscribe Now,\nGEO. CHAPPLE\nPRACTICAL PLUMBER\nI Carry n Complete Line\nof Pluiftbing Specialties.\nUP-TO-DATE PLUMBING.\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nW. II 1\n. ' I.KMKST JOHN D, HI-KNOB\np\nl?MI?K!T /fi QPWiVrii1\nI\nMM \ (S oiwm\nH-trrlMtern, Hollcftorn,\nNutm-ii-H. i\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nItideu Blook I'oruer Winnipeg Avenue aud\nPlftf Street,\nORAND forks, B. C.\nWANT\u00C2\u00A3D\nA LOCAL SALESMAN\nFor Grand Forks and surrounding territory to represent\nCNAADA'S GREATEST NURSERIES\nNewest varieties and special*\nties in Manly Fruits- Small\nFruits, Shrubs, Ornamentals,\nand Roses, A permanent\nsituation, and territory reserved for the right man,\nPay weekly, Handsomeout-\nAt free. Write for portion-\nlarsand-send 25 cents for our\npocket microscope, just the\ntiling to use in examlng trees\nand plunis for insects.\nST0NB& wkixinoton,\nFootjuu. NritHKitiKH,\n(Over 800 AerCH)\nTORONTO, - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ONTARIO W.K.C.MANLY\nShelf and Heavy Hardware\nGent's Furnishings\nBoots and Shoes\nGroceries\nc\nPHONE 6\nBRIDGE STREET V\nBOUNDARY\nSHIPMENTS\nFIRST-CLASS INE TERV |\nRESPECT.\nSAMPI.K ROOMS TOR\nCOMMERCIAL\nTRAVELLERS |\nPacific Hotel\nC. V. 8LOGCY, Proprietor\nBar in Connection:\nFinest Brands Wines, OPPOSITE O.P,B, station,\nLiquors and Cigars, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nJ. W.Jones\nFurniture Dealer\nA large consignment of Lounges, Dining-room Chairs,\nTables and Sofas just arrived. Cull and inspect them.\nAlso a stock of Blankets, Quilts, Pillows, etc., to be sold\nat greatly reduced prices. See our display of Pictures\nfor Christmas.\nRIVERSIDE AVENUE, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nGranby Hotel\nMost Conveniently Located Hotel |\nIN THE ClTT. . ,\nJOHN TEMPLE. Prop.\nBar Supplied with the\nFinest Brands of\nWINES, LIQUORS\nAND CIGARS.\nFIRST STREET.\nFIRST-CLASS BOARD.\nCOMMODIOUS, WELL\nFURNISHED ROOMS.\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.J\nHarness Shop\nWe have opened up in the I\nHARNNESSANDSAD-I\nDLERY business on\nBottlingWorks\nRepairing of All Kinds a Specialty. Our Stock is the most\ncomplete in the Boundary dirtrict, and is being constantly\nadded to by the aarival of new goods from the east.\nA. A. Frechette \u00C2\u00A3& Co.\nGrand 'Forks. B. C.\nN. D. McINTOSH\nF1RBX STREET, ORAND TORK9\nA Complete Line of Furniture; Hardware and Cutlery Always\nCarried in Stock and Sold Bed-Rock Prices. Largest Variety of\nGoods in the City.\n'I New and Second-Hand Goods\nBought and Sold. Call and Inspect My Goods. A Great Variety]\nof New Articles Constantly Kept in Stock.\nStoves a Specialty\nSee Mac for Bargains |\nFLOUR\nIN ANY\nQUANTITYl\nHay, Grain and Feed.\nN. McLELLAN & CO. I\nWhite Bros.\nJewelers and\nOpticians\nCareful attention\ngiven to\nWatch Repairing.\nEngraving a Specialty,\nBRIDGE STREET (,\-Un I ORKS, B. C.\n650\n665\n\"350\n1902.\n309,858\n20,800\n141,826\n7,455\n14,811\n8,530\n785\n625\n\"482\n2,175\n21il\nTotal, tons 09,730\nGranby Smelter treated 62,387\n6,861\n390,000\n230,828\n325\n1903\n393,181\n74,212\n138,079\n15,731\n3,339\n19,365\n22,937\n368\n15,537\n2,435\n6,646\n993\n400\n167\n1904 Past Week\n510,110 11,820\nThe following table gives the ore shipments of Boundary mines for 1900, 1901, 1903,\n1903, 1904, and for the past week:\n7,900\nGranbv Mines,Phoenix 64,533\nSnowshoe, I'hoenix 297\nBrooklyn, Phoenix\t\nMother Lode, Deadwod. 5,340\nSunset, Deadwood \t\nMorrison, Deadwood\t\nB. 0. Mine, Summit 19,494\nKnniia, Summit\t\nSenator, Summit Camp\t\nOro Denoro, Summit Camp\t\nIlrey Pogle, Summit Camp\t\nNo. 37, Summit Camp\t\nMountain Hose....'\t\nWinnipeg, Wellington 1,070\nGoldenCrown,Wellington 2,250\nAthelstan, Wellington ' 1,200\nNo. 7 Mine, Central\t\nCity of Paris, Central 2,000\nJewel, Long Lake 160\nProvidence, Providence\t\nElkhorn, Greenwood\t\nE. P. U. and Goldfinch \t\nMiscellaneous 3,380\n1901.\n231,762\n1,721\n150\n99,034\n801\n150\n17,105\n650\n1,040\n18,583\n188,940\n1,983\n36,637\n2,986\n15,191\n222\n354\n1,191\n4,552\n661\n305\n266\n2,460\n3,136\n4 80\n957\n264'\n66\n66\n507,515\n312,340\n684,426\n401,921\n763,880\n545,215\nSANTA CLAUS'\nHEADQUARTERS\nW. I ITTER & CO.\nSANTA GLAUS'\nHEADQUARTERS\nEvery N 00k and Corner of Our Store is Filled With Xmas\nGoods, Including All Kinds of Toys.\n-^Mechanical Toys\nIt would make your hair\nstand on end tosee what\nour Mechanical Toys\nwill do. They require\nwatching.otherwhip they\nwould be making a rough\nhouse of it.\nGames\nOhl say, talk about\ngames. In the first place\nPing-Pong is a dead\nissue, and the new game\nof KAN U KATCH is\nat fever heat. They have\ngone crazy over it. We\nhave also PIT alias\nPANIC, Sherlock\nHolmes, Flinch, Pillow\nDex, Nationalises and\ndozens of other games.\nRattles\nOther years there has\nbeen \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 scarcity in this\nline, but this year we\nhavo a very large stock\n0* swell rattles \u00E2\u0080\u0094 celluloid, bone, leather and\ncloth covered.\nChild's Tea Sets\nWhy they are simply\nbeautiful. We have all\nsites.\nBovs' Tools\nWe have enough sets to\nsupply every boy in town\nMake a Piesent to your\nwife or daughter of a\nMason & Risen Piano,\na Singer Sewing Machine or a Coluhbi\na Grapiiaphone.\nLadies, when you come to\nour store for a STANDARD PATTERN\nyou can sit' down and\nenjoy a Cup of Tea.\nOur Chinaware\nDiscount*) anything in the city.\nAnd we still have a large quantity on the way, which wo expect\nto display about December 1st.\nSleighs and Sleds\nOld Santa lietter lie ordering\nsome winter, as he has sent us\nabout 101) Steal Sleighs and Sleds\nOur Doll Display\"\nis worth four bits to see, but we\ndon't charge anything.\nOur Picture Books\nNever in the history of Grand\nForks has there been displayed\nanything to equal our stock in\nthis department. It eonsislw of\nFoxV Grandpa \\nHunter BROW}) | Series and\nFather Goosk (Extra.\nMother Goosk J\nPicture Post Cards\nJust ill, some new views. We can\ngive you your choice of 7 scenes.\nBooks for Boys and Girls\nWe have great rafts of these, all\nnew, consisting of\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBlur, Giikkn, Yellow, Silver,\nGold and Red Faiiiv Talks.\nGiiijim's Fairy Talks,\nAnderson's Fairy Talks,\nOne Syllable History of\nEngland, RUSSIA and Japan,\nnicely illustrated,\nThen we have\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThk English Chattkkiiox,\nBoys' Own Annual, and\nGirls' Own Annual.\nIn Mark Twain's Hooks\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTom Sawyer\nHoughing It\nA TllA.MP AllllOAl)\nHuoKi.KiiKiniv Fi n, Etc.\nFur Animals\nWe have them, all sizes. Some\ncan hardly see, they are so hairy,\nXmas Cards\nWe have the prettiest and most\nreasonable you ever saw or\nheard of.\nW. H. ITTER <& CO.,\nBRIDGE ST.,\nPhone A115"@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 . "Evening_Sun_1904-12-13"@en . "10.14288/1.0341525"@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 Evening Sun"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .