"38059a8d-0e5e-4d0b-a0c3-564b927df1c1"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1905-09-22"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0341576/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " ZTfoe\nSun-;\n*p***\u00C2\u00BB\n[f(\n*=\u00E2\u0096\u00A0?\n33\nFourth Year-No. 94\nOrand Forks, B. C, Friday, September 22,1905\nIssued Twice a Week\nProvincial Government Will\nConstruct the Unfinished\nPortion This Fall\nSuccessful Test of Furnaces\nat the Granby Reduction Works\nhome is in Cleveland, Ohio, came\nwest with Mr. Keffer for a visit.\nMrs. Keffer and son Robort, tho\neditor of the Anaconda News, met\nthe party in Spokane, the last two\ngoing on to Portland to visit the fair.\nA telegram received today by A. D.\nMcPhee from Geo. A. McLeod, manager of the McKinley mine, who is\nnow in Victoria, states that the\ngovernment has decided to complete\nthe Franklin camp wagon road this\nfall. This means that the north fork\nproperties will be able to get in supplies and machinery more cheaply,\nund that a mining boom is in sight for\nthe camps up the river.\nA number of satisfactory teste have\nbeen made with one of the new furnaces at the Granby smelter this week.\nAs soon as the charge car has been\nproperly adjusted it will be placed in\ncommission. No. 1 furnace hae been\nallowed to go cold on account of lack\nof power.\nBoyles Brothers have moved one\nof their diamond drills from the\n400 foot level of tbe Old Ironsides\nmine, and are now putting down\nholes from a point near the northeast corner of Old Ironsides avenue\nand Second street, Phoenix, thereby\ncrosscutting some of the bores made\nfrom the lower levels of the Granby\nmines.\nA small force of men is working\non the Brooklyn and Rawhide in\nI'hoenix camp. This week ore is\nreported to have been struck in the\nraise being made from the long drift\non the 350 foot level of the Brooklyn\nthe work now being in Idaho ground.\nThe raise will come to the surface.\nFred Whitwell states that he has\narranged to install a boiler and pump\n,at his Maori groug iu Providenc\ncamp; and will shortly resume development w6rk on the property.\nThe shaft on the Maori is now down\nabout 05 feet, with a most cncotirag\ning showing of ore.\nSeeing the West\nM. J. Haney, one of the leading\nengineers of the Dominion; J. C.\nWalsh, the brilliant editor of the\nMontreal Herald, and Cawthra\nMulock, one of Canada's wealthiest\nand most ambitious young men,\npassed through the city today over\nthe C. P. R. in their private car\nOlivette. M. J. Haney has been\nidentified for thirty years with groat\nengineering enterprises, chiefly in\nconnection with railways. First on\nthe Intercolonial, then on the C. P.\nR. between Fort William and Winnipeg, and later on the Onderdonk\nconstruction in the Cascades. He\nwas the first superintendent of the\nC. P. R. before incorporation. In\ntbis district he is best known as the\nbuilder of the Crow's Nest Pass\nrailroad, where during 1897 and\n1898 the talisman that moved freight\nand laid steel was the large placard\nbearing the magic words, \"Rush\nHaney.\" Since then he has been\nengaged in large enterprises in P. E.\nI. and hag establisned the first locomotive works in Canada. M. J.\nHaney is a man of great capacity,\nwho has done great work, and who\nyet has a great future before him.\nJ. C. Walsh is a great man, on\nthe sunny side of thirty, who edits\nthe best Liberal daily in Canada,\nand hag made economics and trade\nconditiong a specialty. When he\nspeaks the capital of Montreal and\nToronto listen. He is a free trader\nunder going a process of conversion\nthrough assimilation, and has al\nmost reached the stage when he regards some measure of protection\njustifiable\u00E2\u0080\u0094at any rate for \"infant\nj'indusUies,\" At present, his sun\nrises and sets east of the Rockies,\nbut he ia young and will leav\nBritish Columbia wiaer than he entered it.\nMr. Cawthra Mulock is a young\nman of wealth who is sincerely\ndesirious of doing his duty and con\ntributing his share to the upbuilding\nof Canada. Hig. ambition, his intelligence, his urbanity and bis zea\nwill carry him far. He is getting\nhis Western baptism.\nReports from Dividend mountain\nnear Osoyoos, where the Granby\ncompany is working some properties\nunder bond, are to the effect that\nsonic good ore has been struck in\nout* of tbe new tunnels that are being\ndriven.\nTiie latest assay from a rich pay-\nstreak on thc Rambler, up the West\nPork, gave 342 ounces of silver to\nthe ton, orto26.60.\nOn Tuesday, October 3rd, tbe\nfifth annual meeting of the Granby\nConsolidated will be held at the company's New York olliee.\nAn ore body ten feet wide has\nbeen reached in tho new workings\nin the Emma mine, Summit camp.\nManager Frederick Keffer, of the\nBritish Columbia Copper Co., has\nreturned from a trip to the company's headquarters in New York.\nHis brother, John C. Keffer, whose\nCHURCH SERVICES\nKnox Presbyterian Church, Rev\nJ. R. Robertson, Pastor.\u00E2\u0080\u0094At tho\nmorning service the annual Sunday\nSchool Rally and Children's Day exercise will be observed. The children\nof the congregation are all specially\ninvited to be present. The children's\nottering will be devoted to special missionary purposes, The usual evening\nservice at 7:110.\nMethodist C.iureli \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Services on\nSunday at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nMorning subject, \"The Light Burden.\"\nEvening theme, \"Heredity and Religion.\" Everybody welcome. E,\nManuel, pastor.\nTracklaying is going on slowly on\nthe Curlew-Midway extension of the\nGreat Northern, the steel, which\ncomes from the mam line near Wen-\natchee, being slow to arrive.\nGeorge C. Rose, customs officer at\nLaurier, has gone on a trip to the\nPortland fair. ' Angus Cameron will\niook after thc duties of the office in\nMr. Rose's absence^\nNEWS OF THE CITY\nKettle Valley Fruit Capture\nNumerous Prizes at\nNelson\nA Big Grizzly Bear Makes a\nMeal Off Mr. Burrell's\nGrapes\nMartin Burrell left for Nelson last\nWednesday to superintent his fruit exhibit at the fair. It is reported that\nhe has been awarded eight first, five\nsecond and three third prizes.\nA bear got into M. Burrell's orchard one night this week and devoured all the grapes on the place.\nThe next day a party of dead-shot\nhunters from this city started in pursuit of the bear, but bruin evidently\nknew when he had had enough grapes.\nE. A. Rainey has contracted the\nfruit-raising fever, and has announced\nhis intention of planting an orchard.\nTh\u00C2\u00AB scheme will be a severe test of his\nhonesty. If can summon enough courage to condemn his own fruit, he will\nbe a promising candidate for wings.\nE. I., were married at Nelson lust\nweek by Rev. T. J. Ferguson. The\nhappy couple arrived in Phoenix Wednesday, and have taken up house,\nkeeping in Mr. Carson's residence on\nOld Ironsides avenue.\nHopes are entertained that the\nwaterworks extension will be completed before the end of the year, but no\ndate has yet been set for turning Lind\ncreek water into the pipes. The system was to have been completed by\nthe first of August, but as usual in all\ngreat undertakings some of the minor\ndetails were omitted.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Greenwood\nTimes.\nPrevention is better than cure.\nSave your eyesight by consulting Dr.\nMecklenburg, the celebrated oculist\nand optician, who will be 'at White's\njewelry store, Grand Forks, October\n18-20.\nMrs. M. Burrell left for the Nelson\nFair yesterday.\nPatrick Welch, the Oncent Northern\nrailway contractor, came down from\nMidway with the tariff commissioners\nWednesday ovening. In his conversation with Hon. W. S. Fielding, he\nexploded the theory that there is competition between the Canadian and\nAmerican powder manufacturers.\nMrs. J. A. Buckley this week received a telegram from Wadena, Minn.,\nstating that a daughter of hers had\ndied in that city last Sunday. Earlier\nin the week Mrs. Buckley was advised of ber daughter's critical illness,\nand she and Mrs. Geo. Chappie had\nintended to leave for Minnesota next\nSunday, but tbey have now decided\nthat the trip will be unnecessary.\nA special meeting of the Presbytery of Kootenay will be held in Knox\nchurch on Tuesday evening, Sept. 26,\nat 8 o'clock, to consider the call from\nKnox church, Revelstoke, to Rev. J.\nR. Robertson. The congregation is\ninvited to be present.\nG. M. Fripp, manager of the British American Trust company, and\nbride, nee Miss Wood, of Payette,\nIda,, returned to the city on Wednesday from their wedding tour. They\nwill take up their residence in the\nhouse recently vacated by It. It. Gilpin, on Winnipeg avenue.\nCity Solicitor Miller left for Victoria last Wednesday. It is reported\nthat he was called te the coast in connection with the muddle created by\ntbe Boundary creek license commissioners.\nC. F. Packard, an old-timer of Grand\nForks, arrived in the city last night\nfrom Hedley. He left this morning\nfor Spokane, where lie will meet bis\nfamily, who arc returning from a trip\nto Seattle.\nRobert Crabb Carson, of Phoenix,\nan employee of the Hunter-Kendrick\nCo., Ltd., and Miss Laura Jane Macduff, both formerly of Brooklield, P,\nThe Nelson fair is proving a bigger\nsuccess this year than any previous\nyear.\nJud Sears brought in a load of 100\nboxes of peaches from tha American\nOkanagan last Wednesday.\nMidway's new provincial constable is C. W. Young, formerly of\nNelson.\nTbe Royer stage line now makes\nthe trip to Hedley via Fairview. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe Boundary Creek licensing\nboard, which should have met Tuesday evening, was again adjourned\nuntil the 26th inst. The object of\nthis meeting is to consider the application of B. Lequime for a\nlicense at Midway, to which there is\nstrong opposition! \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nGeorge Taylor, who has a contract\non the Bonnington Falls power line,\narrived in the city Tuesday. He\nsays that the poles are all erected\nfor 14 miles on each side of Rossland\nThe work is being rushed with all\npossible dispatch, with a view to\nsupplying power in the Boundary\ndistrict early in February.\nE. Spraggett, provincial road supervisor, bas completed building the\nbridge at the power house at Cascade.\nThe half-yearly meeting of Presbytery of Kootenay was held at\nGreenwood on Tuesday and Wednesday of last week. Among those present were the following: Rev. Fortune, ('riinbrook, moderator; Rev.\nDunn, Trail, recording secretary;\nRev. Grant, Rossland) Rev. Brown,\nSandon; Revs. Robertson and Ross,\n(irand Forks; Rev. McKee, Greenwood; Rtv. Farrar, Kaslo; Isaac\nCrawford and Peter McCurrach,\nI'hoenix. Tuesday evening a long\ndiscussion took place relative to\nsupplying a minister for S,t. An\ndrews church, I'hoenix, nnd it was\nfinally decided to send an ordained\nmissionary to tbis charge. A man\nwho is said to be particularly adapted to the west is being approached\non the subject.\nThc citizens ol Greenwood have\nsubscribed $000 toward's an ambu\nlance, the city council agreeing lo\nmake up tbe balance.\nSAW THHALLEY\nCabinet Ministers Watch the\nProduction of 98 p.c. Pure\nBlister Copper\nThen Take a Drive Out to Covert's Far-Famed Fruit\nRanch\nA party of distinguished politians\nand statesmen composed of Hon. W.\nS. Fielding, minister of finance; Hon.\nLouis Philippe Brodeur, minister of\ninland revenue; Senator Templeman, of Victoria; and Duncan Ross,\nof Greenwood, arrived in the city\nlast Wednesday at about 8 o'clock\nby special train over the Great\nNorthern from Phoenix. They tyer.\nmet by the Mayor and a party of\nleading citizens, who escorted them\nin carriage to the Yale hotel, where\nan, informal reception, lasting a\ncouple of hours, was held that evening.\nOn Thursday morning the visitors\nwere driven to the Granby smelter,\nand Superintendent Hodges spared\nno pains showing them the different\nprocesses of the big reduction plant.\nAfter luncheon the party was taken\non a carriage drive out to Covert's\nfruit ranch. Mayor Hammar, Geo.\nClark, C. H. Hanington, Al. Traunweiser and other prominent citizens\nacting as escorts. They were highly\npleased with what they saw during\ntheir brief drive. Mr. Fielding remarked that the highest compliment\nthat could be paid British Columbia\nas a fruit growing country was that\nMr. Burrell, after leaving thc hest\nfruit district in Ontario, had decided\nto locate here. No session of the\ntarriff commisioners, of which Mr.\nFielding is a member, was held here,\nas the grievances of this section had\nbeen preaented at the Nelson and\nGreenwood meetings.\nThe commissioners left on the\nregular C. P. R. passenger Thursday\nevening for Arrowhead. From tnat\nplace they will proceed to Banff,\nthence through the Okanagan and\nSimilkameen districts to the coast.\nAn Elaborate Production.\nMr. Harold Nelson the eminent\nCanadian actor, who, under the\ndirection of Mr. C. P, Walker has\ngiven Western Canada the most\ncomplete dramatic productions possible, will be sceiihereagainSaturday,\nSept. 28, In Mr. Otis Skinner's great\nplay, Prince Otto, a dramatization\nof Robert Louis Stevenson's novel.\nThis play is one of the recent metropolitan successes, and will be presented with the same careful attention to detail that marked its New\nVork management. Mr. Nelson\nwill have in Prince Otto a role\npeculiarly suited to his temperament\nand one in which bis finished art\nshould show to great advantage.\nMr. Walker has furnished his star\nwith a production complete in every\nway, the scenery being new and\nelaborate. The costumes have been\ndesigned with considerable care, and\nshould add largely to the beauty of\nthe performance. In selecting his\ncompany Mr. Nelson has taken great\npains to get only capable actors, and\nlias reengaged Mr. Clifford Lane\nBruce, the talented and popular\nyoung leading man. uHl*? -Ehimmg %>vm\nPUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY\nEVENIXOS AT GRAND FORKS, B.C., BY\nG. A. EVANS.\nSUBSCRIPTION HATES:\nOne year....$2.00 I Threemonths. .50\nSixmonths.. 1.00 \ One, month 20\nAdvertising rates furnished on application.\nLegal notices, 10 and 5 Cts. per line.\nAddress all communications to\nThe Evening Sun,\nPhone B74. grand forks, n. c.\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER22, 1905\nThe ranchers at Carson and southeast of the city are indignant at the\nintolerable delay of the provincial government in constructing the Carson\nand First street bridges. For the\nformer structure an appropriation of\n$5000, available on the 1st of July,\nwas made last winter, and the latter\nwas condemned by the government\nollieials about two months ago. In the\ncase of the First street bridge, there\nis now no other way for the ranchers\nsouth of here to reach the city except\nto take a five-mile round-about route\nor ford the river, and as soon as the\nfall rains set in the latter method will\nbe cut off. Farmers living a mile\nfrom here will then have to make a\nten-mile trip to reach the city. It is\nto be hoped that the government authorities will get the Boundary creek\nlicense commission tangle straightened\nout before'long, so that they can turn\ntheir attention to the absolute needs\nof the country.\nThe Greenwood Times remarks:\n\"If Grand Forks is considered the\nmost suitable location, the new Dominion Copper company's smelter will\nbe built there whether a bonus is offered or not.\" It is quite apparent\nthat our neighbor is afraid of that\nbonus by-law.\nLowery's Claim has been relocated,\nand will hereafter be published monthly in Nelson at $1 per year. The October number has just reached this\noffloe. It better than the Claim that\nfell asleep twenty-three months ago.\nThe Pioneer thinks that Phoenix\nmay get the Dominion Copper company's new smelter. May is a very\nindefinite word. But that is about as\nclose as Phoenix will ever come to\ngetting the smelter.\nTHE MINING RECORDS\nFollowing nre the locations, certificates of work, bills of sale, etc.,\nrecorded in the Government office at\nGrand Forks, B. C., of the Grand\nForks mining division, from Sept.\n8 to 51, inclusive:\nRECORD OF LOCATIONS.\nThunder Hill fraction, headwaters\nof North Fork of Kettle river, Frank\nFritz, Adam Scaoia and Geo. A. McLeod; Spelter King, McKinley camp,\nrelocation of Combination, John Donaldson; Blue Belle, Gloucester camp,\nN. D. Mcintosh; Sunset, Gloucester\neamp, relocation of Last Chance, A.\nD. McPhee; Wonderful Gloucester\ncamp, Wm. Minion; Arcade fraction,\nFranklin camp, A. D. McPhee and\nA. J. Stewart; Alert, Gloucester\ncamp, Forbes M. Kerby; Allan fraction, Franklin camp, Ida Kerby; Alto\nfraction, Franklin camp, Forbes M.\nKerby; Anchor fraction, Franklin\ncamp, Forbes M. Kerby; Antelope\nfraction, Franklin camp, Ida Kerby;\nArgus fraction, Franklin camp,Harold\nJ. Birnie; Atlanta fraction, Franklin\ncamp, Forbes M. Kerby; Grande fraction, Franklin camp, Frank McFarlane.\nCERTIFICATES OF WORK.\nBlue Boy, Knight's camp, Ernest\nKnight; Fairview and Coppe*, Monarch, Knight's camp, Knight \u00C2\u00ABt al.;\nDiamond Drill, Worcester camp. Win.\nMinion; Silver King, Gloucester camp,\nHill and Minion; Ida, Gloucester\ncamp, Newby et al; Miners' Home,\nPass Creek camp, D. R. McElmon;\nLucky Jack, Franklin camp, Hemy\nWatlin; White Bear, Franklin camp,\nWatlin et al.\nCONVEYANCES, AGREEMENTS, ETC.\nEclipse, 1-5, Franklin camp, Thos.\nJ. McPhee to Geo. A. McLeod;\nEclipse, 1-5, Franklin camp, Thos. J.\nMcPhee to B. Lauder; Tiger and\nWren, all, Summit camp, J. F. Brown\nto Joseph Buron.\nPat Mitchell left this week for Coleman, Alta., where he will spend a\ncouple of weeks.\nTen dollars is offered by Dr. Meek\nlenburg, the expert eye specialist, to\nany person that he fails to adopt tho\ncorrect glasses for after all others\nhave failed; satisfaction guaranteed.\nHe will be at White's jewelry store,\nGrand Forks, from Wednesday to Friday, October 18-20. Hearing appliances and artificial eyes fitted.\nSynopHJrtnfRemilntionB.OoVerninu\nthe Disposal of Dominion L,rt ntls\nwithin the Railway Belt In\nthe Hrovlnce of British\nColumbia.\nA LICENSE to out timher oan be acquired\nn only ot publio competition. A rental of\n$5 Iier square mile isehnrjred for all timber\nberths excepting those situated West of Yale,\nfor which the rental is at the rate of 5 cents\nper acre per annum. I\nIn addition to the rental, dues at the following rates are ohanced;\u00E2\u0080\u0094 -\nSawn lumber. 50 cents per thousand feet\nB.M.\nRailway ties, eight and nine feet long, J %\naud \% cents each.\nShinglt! bolts, 25 cents a cord.\nAll other'products, fi per cent, on the sales.\nA license is Issued so soon as a berth is\nEranted, but In unsurveyed territory no timer can be cut on a berth until the licensee\nhas made a survey thereof.\nPermits to out timher are also granted at\npublio competition, except In the case of\nactual settlers, who require the timber for\ntheir own use.\nSettlers and others m?y also obtain permits\nto out up to NKl cords of wood for sale without competition.\nThe dues payable under a permit are $1.50\nper thousand feet B.M., for square timber\nand sawlogB of any wood except oak; from %\nto W4 earitsper lineal foot for buildingIorr;\nfrom \2% to 2ft cents per cord for wood; 1 cent\nfor fence posts; Scents for railway ties; and\n50 cents per cord on shingle bolts.\nLeases'for grazing purposes are Issued\nfor a term of twenty-one years at a rental of\ntwo cents an aore per annum.\nCoal lands may be purchased at $10 per acre\nfor soft ooal and $20 for anthracite. Not more\nthan 820 aores may be acquired by one individual or company,\nRoyalty at tne rate of 10 cents per ton of\n2,000 pounds Is collected on the gross output.\nEntries for land for agricultural purposes\nmay he made pers-anally at the local land\noffice forthe district in which the land to be\ntaketi is situated, or If the homesteader desires, he may, on application to the Minister\nof the Interior at Ottawa, the Commissioner\nof Immigration at Winnipeg, or the local\nagent for the district within wblob the land\nIs situated, receive authority for some one\nto make entry for him.' **\nA fee of $10 li charged for a homestead\nentry.\nA settler who has received an entry for a\nhomestead, is required to perform the conditions connected therewith under one of the\nfollowing plans:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n(1) A* least six months'residence upon and\ncultivation of the land to eaeh year during\nthe term of three years.\nIt is the practice of the Department to re*\nquire a settler to bring 15 aores under cultivation, but if he prefers he may substitute\nstock; and 20 head of cattle, to be actually\nhis own property, with buildings for tlieir\naccommodation, will be accepted instead of\nthe cultivation.\n(2) If father (or mother, if the father is deceased) of any person who is eligible to make\na homestead entry under the provisions of\nthe Act, resides upon a farm In the vicinity\nof the laud entered for by suoh persons as a\nhomestead, the requirements of the Act as to\nresidence prior to obtaining patent may be\nHitti .tic-l by such person residing with the\nfather or mother.\n(8) If the settler has his permanent residence upon farming land owned by him in\nthe vicinity of his homestead, the requirements of the Act as to residence may be satis-\nfled by residence upon the said land.\nApplication for u patent should be made at\nthe end of three years before the local agent,\nsub-agent or a homestead inspector.\nHefore making uu application fur a patent,\nthe settler must give six months'notice in\nwriting to the Commissioner of Dominion\nLauds at Ottawa, of Ills intention to do so,\nistW. W. CORY,\nDeputy of the Min, er of the Interior.\nOttawa, February 4th 1905\nBOOKKEEPERS AND STENOGRAPHERS\nAre in dem and as never before.\nThe place to learn is at\nTHE BLAIR BUSINESS COLLEGE\nSPOKANE. WASHINGTON\nThe Greatest Business ( <.|lej*-e on the I'acMt'\nCoast. Write for cutaloKila-'lo it today-\nsent free.\nH. C. HLAIK, Principal,\nEvory man owes it to himself unci\nhis family to master a trade or profession, Read the display advertisement of the six Morse schools of telegraphy, in this issue, and learn how\neasily a young man or lady may learn\ntelegraphy and be assured a position.\nThrow Medicines to the Dogs!1\nAt best they are unpleasant, often\nuseless. You have some disease of the\nnose, throat or lungs. Doctors would\ncall it bronchitis, asthma or catarrh.\nThe common root of these diseases is\ngerm or mierobic irritation. CataJi'ho-\nzone not only destroys disease germs\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nit does more, it heals diseased and in\nUained tissue. The disease-is not only\ncured, but its return is forever pre\nvented by using Catarrhozone, which\nis splendid also for colds, coughs and\nirritable throat. Remember you inhale Catarrhozone\u00E2\u0080\u0094nature's own cure.\nUse no other but Catarrhozone\u00E2\u0080\u0094it's\nthe best catarrh cure made.\nIt takes modern material to do up-\nto-date work. The Sun job department is kept strictly up-to-date.\nQRAND FORKS OPERA HOUSE\nONE NIGHT ONLY\nSAT., SEPT. 23RD\nMR. C. P. WALKER PRESENTS\nTHE EMINENT ACTOR\nMR.\nHAROLD NELSON\nSUPPORTED BY MR. CLIFFORD LANE\nBRUCE AND A CAPABLE COMPANY\nIN\n\"PRINCE OTTO\"\nOTIS SKINNER'S SREAT PLAY\nA SUMPTUOUS PRODUCTION OF\nTHE MOST FASCINATING\nROMANTIC PLAY OF\nTHE PAST DECADE\nPRICES: $1.00 AND 75c\nSeats on sale one week in advance\nat Woodland's drug store.\nBICYCLES\nA Complete Line of 1905 Models.\nSecond-hand wheels always on\nhand, and will be sold cheap.\nBICYCLE REPAIRING A SPECIALTY\nGEO. CHAPPIE, Opposite Postoffice\nA Real Fair This Year\nBetter Than Ever Before\nThe Twelfth Annual\nSpokane Interstate Fair\nOctober 9 to 15,1905\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nWonderful displays of PAIN'S FAMOUS PYROTECHNICS, presenting \"THE FALL OF PORT ARTHUR\" in Flaming Fireworks.\nLARGER EXHIBITS in EVERY DEPARTMENT of the FAIR.\nMEN'S RELAY RACE during the Whole Week. EIGHT Entries.\nThe FINEST SHOW of LIVE- STOCK ever held in Washington.\nUP-TO-DATE Vaudeville Program Every Afternoon and Evening.\nBeautiful FRUIT DISPLAYS for BIG CASH PRIZES. FIVE or\nMORE EXCITING BACES DAILY. SPOKANE KENNEL\nCLUB'S Big Annual Dog Show. INDIAN VILLAGE and INDIAN\nRACES and DANCES.\nREDUCED RATES AND SPECIAL EXCURSIONS ON ALL RAILROADS\nConcessions for Sale\nWrite for Premium List and Race Program\nROWELL W. PEEL, Prcsident\nROBT. H. COSGROVE. Sic. a Man.\nBoarders Wanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094A few more\nsteady boarders ean find first-clacs\naccommodations at Mrs. J. B. Henderson's, Winnipeg avenue.\nStrained Back and Side\n\"While working in a sawmill,\" writes\nC. E. Kenney from Ottawa, \"I\nstrained my back and side so severely\nI had to go to bed. Every movement\ncaused ine torture. I tried different\noils and liniments, but wasn't helped\ntill I used Nerviline. Even the first\napplication gave considerable relief.\nIn three days I was again at work.\nOther men in the mill use Nerviline\nwith tremendous benefit too.\" An\nhonest record oj nearly fifty years has\nestablished the value of Poison's Nerviline.\nOur job department is superior to\nany other in the Boundary country.\nWe have both the material and the\nexperience to turn out high class work.\nRazor honing a specialty at the\nPalace Barber Shop, Victoria hotel.\nAtm-mll**, tu ail the new positions created bv Railroad ami Telegraph I'otnimnies.\nWe n-Kiit Vt-UNB MEN and LADIES of\ne;ood habits, to\nLEARN TELEGRAPHY\nAND R. R. ACCOUNTING\nWe furnish 75 per cent, of the operators\numl station uin'iiK In Amorloa- Our hIx\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0onOoli nre the largest exclusive Telegraph Sonooli in tub wtmi.ii. Bstah*\niished 2U y-'itrs \u00E2\u0080\u00A2itiilendorHt.il by nil lead-\nitii-r Railway om-.-itt.lti.\nWe execute a $2fttt Bond to overy stu-\ndent tfi f nniltdi hiin or her n poult [On paying from 940 to $00 a n-otlth In States -\"a-it\nof the Rocky M-niutuhit, or from $75 to\n$100 a month in States went of the\nKurilit'N, Immediately upon irrnduation.\nStudents ean enter nt any time. No\nniicRtlons. For full particular-*. rejnird-\nIn-*- any of our school* write direct to our\nexecutive office at Cincinnati, 0. Catalogue free.\nThe Norse School of Telegraphy\nCincinnati, Ohio. Buffalo, N. Y.\nAtlanta, Un. LaCrosse, Wis.\nTexarhana.Tex. San Francisco. Cal.\nP.BURNS(&Co.\nDealers in All .Kinds of\nFRESH AND CURED\nMEATS\nFish and Game in Season\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.\nW.H.ITTER&CO\nNext Door to Post Office\n^Announcement\nW* Largest and\nBest Display sf\nFancy\"\nChinaware\nEver Brought to\nthis Section of the\nProvince will be\nOpened Up at Our\nStore in a Few\nDays. *\nW.H.ITTER&CO\nNext Door to Post Office\nAgents Mason & Risch Piano, Singer\nSewing Machines, Columbia Grapho-\nphones, Standard Patterns.'\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*>\ni\n\t $\nV\nJJAVE YOU NOTICED\nThat we sell only the\nbest in our lines! We oft'er\nnothing that is not strictly\nfirst-class in GROCERIES.\nTHE QUALITY of our Stock\ncannot be denied, and it is\nfor this reason that we are so\nsure of giving perfect satisfaction to all who give us a trial.\nWe also carry a liue of Boots,\nShoes, Rubbe.is and Gent's\nFurnishings.\nJ. H. HODSON & CO.\nPhone 30\nOpposite C.P.R. Station\nSUNBEAMS\nW PALM\nWALLACE\nCHALMERS\nPROP.\nA FBESH STOCK OP\nConfectionery, Fruits,\nCigars and Tobacco.\nMOST COMPLETE STOCK\nof its kind in the city.\nCOR. BRIDGE AND FIRST STREETS\nDr Follick\nDENTIST\nGraduate of Philadelphia Dental\nCollege.\nOffice over Morri-\nPhone 27. son's Jewelry Store\nDRAYING\nW. H. P. CLEMENT\nJOHN D. SPENCB\nClement C$\u00C2\u00BB Spence\nBarristers, Solicitous,\nNotaries, Etc.\nBiden Block, Corner Winnipeg Avenue and\nFirst Street,\nGRAND IJOKKS. B. C.\nHeavy and Light Dray Work\nAttended to Promptly\nPassengers and Trunks to\nand Front All Trains\nTklkphoneA129\nGRAND FORKS TRANSFER COMPANY\nRuthehkoui* Duos., Props.\nHfAOOMIRES FOR\nSMOKERS'\nSUPPLIES\nRAINEY'S\nCigar Store\nR. C. McCUTCHEON\nCABINET MAKER\nTurning, Scroll Work, Saw\nFiling, Gun Repairing, Manufacturer of .Screen Doors nntl\nWindows.\nRIVERSIDE AVENUE\nOpposite J. VV. Jonei' Furniture Store.\nCHURCH DIRECTORY;\nKNOX PRKSBYTKRUN CHURCH Grand\nForks--.1. R. Robertson, H.A., paitor.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Services every Sunday at II a.m. art! 7:SI p.\noi.; Sunday school and Bible elans, 8 u.m.:\nWestminster Guild uf C. 17, Tuesday, 8\nPlRSTMKTHODISTCHUitCH Corner Main\nand Filth sta. K. Manuel, pastor. Jservlres\novery Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7.DU p.m.;\nolass tneetliiiratolo-teof morning service;\nSunday soliool and Bible cla-tsat Up. ni.;\nprayer meeting every Thursday evening\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2t 8 o'clook. Thvpiiblio Is cordially iuvlted.\n60 YEARS*\nEXPERIENCE\nTrade Marks\nDesigns\nCopyrights Ac.\nAnyone sending a sketch nnd descrfptlnn may\nquickly ascertain our opinion free whether au\nInvention Is probably piuentnble. Communleu-\ntlonn strictly coiifl(toiw..il. HANDBOOK on Patents\nsent free. Oldest nj-enry for securliispatenta.\nPatents taken thro'jjzh Munn & Co. receive\nspecial notice, without ch-in-o, la the\nScientific Hmericait*\nA handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific Journal. Terms, <3 a\nyear: four months, th Sold byall newsdealers.\nMUNN &co.3a\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*--\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\"\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 New York\nBr-ujob Offloe. tsifi V Ht.. Washington, D. C.\nM'NEIL & HENNIGER\nFLOUR\nHAY\nFEED\nAND\nCOAL .\nBRIDGE STREET,\nPhone A78 Guano Fohks\nSEE DINSMORE\nBefore Ordering Your\nFall Suit\nWe have all the latest styles and\ncan guarantee yoii satisfaction,\nand our prices are right. Call\nand inspect our goods.\nW. H. DINSMORE,\nMBHOHANT'TaILOH,\nBRIDGE ST. GRAND FORKS\nGeo. Taylor\nGENERAL CONTRACTOR\nEXCAVATOR\nETC. ETC.\nAll 0-fdoifi Given Prompt nnd Careful\nAttention.\nGeo. Taylor\nGeneral Contractor.\nFoo Lee\nLaundry\nFINE LAUNDERING.\nCOLLARS, CUFF*' AND\nSHIRTS WASHED CLEAN AND\nNICE AND IRONED HY\nMACHINERY, NEW\nMEN EMPLOYED.\nNEXT-CHINESE STORE\nRIVERSIDE AVENUE.\nAll donkeys haven't long ears; some\nwear silk hats.\nIt is easier to think about getting\nup early than it is to really do it.\nWhen it comes to jealousy and crowing many a man can discount a rooster.\nMany a man's good reputation depends on what is not found out about\nhim.\nNo sensible man is willing to swear\nto everything he said during courtship.\nNearly every man thinks that he is\nthe best friend some other man ever\nhad.\nMany handsome women are in reality not as handsome as they ure\npainted.\nThe ideal wife and the ideal husband are two of a kind that never\nmake a pair.\nNature's ultimatum to woman is\ntough\u00E2\u0080\u0094she must either marry or be\nan old maid.\nWhen a boy's trousers are baggy at\nthe knees, it is from praying or shooting craps.\nTo say, \"you are a diplomat,\" is a\npolite wiiy of telling a man that he is\na good liar.\nUncle Sam, like a good papa, is still\nwalking the door with his foreign possessions.\nA business man who is always complaining of hard times is a poor advertisement for his city.\nOnly 55 per cent of the bond girls\nmarry, while 79 per cent of their brunette sister engage in matrimony.\nPiei-pont Morgan passes his Sunday\nevenings in singing hymns. Doubtless\nthe mornings are spent in scheming\nhow to rob the other fellow.\nA modest young lady, who desired\nto make a purchase at a dry goods\nstore, addressed the young man behind the counter thus: It is my desire to obtain a pair of circular elastic\nappendages, capable of being contracted or expanded by means of oscillating burnished steel appliances that\nsparkle like particles of gold-leaf\nset with Alaska diamonds, and which\nare utilized for retaining in proper position the habiliments of the lower extremities, which innate delicacy forbids me to mention. After scratching\nhis head for a few minutes, the hi -\nwildered clerk asked her if a pair of\ngarters would answer the same purpose.\nDr. Mecklenburg, eve specialist, of\nWinnipeg, will be at White's jewelry\nstore, Grand Forks, from 18 o'clock\nWednesday to 13 o'olock Friday, Oo\ntohet'18-20. Byes examined, tested and\nfitted with glasses. Squint, cross eyes,\nshort sight, fur sight, irregular sight,\nota, scientifically tested. No guess\nwork, no dangerous and costly mis\ntakes. Safe, reliable, und satisfaotioi\nguaranteed.\nPurgatives Are Dangerous\nThey gripe, cause burning pains and\nmuke the constipated condition even\nworse. Fhysiciuns say the ideal laxative is Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake und Butternut; they ure exceedingly mild, composed only of\nhealth-giving vegetable extracts, Dr.\nHamilton's Pills restore regular movement of the bowels, strengthen the\nstomach and purify the blood, For\nconstipation, sick headache, blllious-\nness and disordered digestion no medicine on earth makes such remarkable\ncures us Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Try a\n25c box yourself.\nDOMINION EXHIBITION\n1905\u00E2\u0080\u0094SEPTEMBER 27 TO OCTOBER 7-1905\nUnder the Auspices of the Royal Agricultural and\nIndustrial Society.\nNew Westminster, B.C\n.Stupendous and Comprehensive Array of Exhibits\nRepresenting the Resources uf all Canada.\n$IOO,000.00--ln Prizes and Attractions--$IOO,000.00\nEnlarged grounds, new, handsome and spacious buildings.\nChampionship Aquatic and Lacrosse Events. Horse Racing, Broncho \"Busting,\" Military Parades and Exercises.\nRoyal IrlSh Guards and other Famous Bands.\nOrand Water CamlVal Parade of Fraser river*, fishing fleet, patrol\nboats, H. M. warships, Indian war canoes, etc.\nIndian Sports.\nFor all information write W. H, KEARY, Secretary and\nManager, New Westminster, B.C.\nBy tht accompanying illustration we can but suggest\nthe axceptional values offered\nby Uf in Brooches.\n\u00C2\u00BBs. su-raos, mm\nIn this beautiful Sunburst\nBrooch there are 65 Pearls,\nmounted in 14k. Solid Gold.\nOrder by mail. If you arc not perfectly satisfied with il your mousy\nwill be promptly refunded.\nWrite for our handsomely\nillustrated new Catalogue.\nReady for delivery Nov. 15th.\nRYRIE BROS.\nJEWELUHS\n118, ISO. 122 and 124\nYonge Sh, Toronto\nIf your watch needs repairing\ntake it to White Breos. All work\nguaranteed.\nHeavy teaming of all kinds done\nbv J. W. Jones.\nNOTICE\nTo the Board of License Commissioner-- far\nHie City of Grand Foi*ks.\nNOTICE fo hereby given tlmt I Intend, at\nthe next meet Ins of theLU'enseCtjinniis-\nsioners of the City of Gran Fork*- nt \vhii*li\ntills application can be heard, to apply for a\ntransfer and right to remove the miI-hiu\nlicense at present in my name in respect of\nthe premise*, known tis the Norden Saloon,\non Bridtre street, in the City of Grand Porks-,\nBritUh Columbia, from said premises to the\npremises known as the \"White House,\" on\nItiverside Avenue in said city, aud being on\nLor*. Eight and Nine, Block Two, Registered\nPlan Twenty-three,\nDated at Gtand Forks, British Columbia,\nthis |.ith.liiyi.f June. I'm*,.\nHUBERT LINDHOL5I.\nNOTICE\nIN TIIK MATTER of the \"band Registry\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Act,\" \"tid in the matter of the title to part\nof Lot 519, Group I, Osnyuos Division Yah*\nDi triot. hi the Province of British Columbia.\nWhbrbas the certificate -jf title of Angus\nClaude Slaedimeil, being certificate of tiile\nnumbered 4104a totlie above hereditament-!,\ntins been lost or destroyed, and application\nlias been mude to me for a duplicate thereof;\nNotice Is hereby given that a duplicate\nthereof to the above hereditaments will be\nissued at the expiration of one mouth from\nthe date hereof, unless In the meantime valid\nobjection to the contrary In made to uh iD\nwriting. W. H. EDMONDS,\nDistrict Registrar.\nLand Registry Olliee,\nKamloops, B.C., May 2%, 1B05.\nWe Province Hotel\nBRIDGE STREET\n'Renovated Throughout and Entirely Refurnished.\nNOW OPEN\nfurnished rooms in the city,\nFINEST BAR IN CITY\nIN CONNECTION\nFirst-clues board by day, week\nor month. Special rates to\n==== steady hoarders. The finest\nAmerican and European plans.\nEMIL LARSEN.\nLata of Winnipeg Hotel\nPROPRIETOR\nTHE\nOOZJ EST\nAND\nS\nMOST\n\\nUP-TO-\n/\nDATE\n/\nSAMPLE\nUOOM\nIN THE\nCITY.\nTHE CLUB\nFIRST STREET\nCOPPER\nThe new edition of the COPPER BOOK\nlists and describes 8311 copper mines and\ncopper mining properties, in all parts of the\nworld, covering the globe, these descriptions ranging from two lines\nt*4 111 pages in length, according to Importance of the mines. The\ndescriptions are not padded, hut give facts iu the most concise form.\nThere nre also fifteen miscellaneous chapters, devoted to the History,\nUses, Terminology, Geography, Geology, Chemistry, Mineralogy,\nMetallurgy, Finances and Statistics of Copper, rendering the volume\na veritable encyclopedia of the subject of copper and everything pertaining to the metal. It is the world's standard Reference Hook on\nCopper.\nKvery Miner, Prospector, Investor, Hanker and Broker needs the\nbook. Price is 85 in Buckram binding with gilt top, or 87.50 in\nfull library morocco, and the hook, in either landing, will he sent,\non approval, to any address in the world, to he paid for if frjund.satisfactory, or may bo returned within a week of HORACE J, STEVENS,\nreceipt and the charge cancelled. Address the .1(! PoSTOFFlOE BLOCK,\nAuthor and Publisher. Houghton, Mian., U.S.A \" They Take First Rank\nAmongst the Best\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'The Accident and Sick Policies of the Canadian Casualty and\nHoiLKit InsdraNOB Company arc sellers. They are greatly in demand at their agencies in all parts of Canada. The contracts are\nconcise, clean and without anil liguity and practically without a condition. They take first rank amongst the hest selling in Canada\ntoday.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Extract from Money and Risks, 'lorontu.\nP. T. McCALLUM, Local Agent\nPacific hotel\nOFF. C.F.R. STATION\nFirst-Class in Every Respect.\nSample Rooms for Commercial\nTravelers.\nHot and Cold Baths.\nBAR IN CONNECTION:\nFinest Brands of Wines,\nliquors and Cigars.\np. d. Mcdonald, Prop.\nCALL AT MASSIE'S\nand look over his stock. It is not necessary to\nleave an order. No one will ask you to do so, bpt\nthe goods will exert a very strong pressure. This in\na very well selected stoek of very handsome goods\nof seasonable weights and stylish designs. Under\nthe skilful hands of our\nExpert Tailors\nthese goods are made up into perfect, dress*/ and\nhigh-class suits.\nGeo. E. Massie\nMERCHANT TAILOR\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nBOUNDARY ORE SHIPMENTS\nThe following table gives the ore\n1900, and for the past week:\n(iranby Mines, I'hoenix\t\n.Snowshoe, I'hoenix\t\nMother Lode, Deadwood\t\nUriioklyn-Stonnvindcr, Phoenix\t\nRawhide, I'hoenix.....\t\nSunset, Deadwood \t\nMountain Hose, Summit\t\nAthelstali-Jnekpot, Wellington\t\nBrooklyn-Stemwinder dump, Phoenix.\nMorrison, Deadwood\t\nB. C, Mine, Summit\t\nR: Bell, Summit\t\nEmma, Summit\t\nOro Denoro, Summit Camp\t\nSenator, .'ummit Cnmp\t\nBrcy Fogle, SummitCamp\t\nNo. 37, Summit Camp\t\nKelianee, Summit....,\t\nSulphur King, Summit\t\nWinnipeg, Wellington\t\nGolden Crown, Wellington\t\nKing Solomon W. Copper\t\nNo. 7 Mine, Central\t\nCity of Paris, Central\t\nJewel, Long Lake\t\nCarmi, West Fork\t\nProvidence, Greenwood\t\nElkhorn, Greenwood\t\nSkylark, Skylark Camp\t\nLust Chance, Skylark Camp\t\nIC. P. U. Mine, Skylark Camp\t\nRuby, Boundary Falls\t\nMiscellaneous \t\nshipments of Boundary mines for 1900. 1901, 1903, 1903, 1904,\nWOO 1901. 1902.\n64,533 231,702 309,858\n297 1,721 20..S00\n5,340 99,034 141,32(1\n150\n1903\n393,181\n74,212\n138,079\n804\n7,455\nFinest Furniture\nJ. W. JONES\nA large consignment\nof Lounges, Dining-room\nChairs, Tables and Sofas just\narrived. Call and inspcel\nthem. Also a stock of Blnn\nkets, Quilts, Pillows, etc., to\nbe sold at greatly reduced\nprices. See our display of\nPictures.\nRIVERSIDE AVENUE,\nGRAND . FORKS, B. C.\nWhite Bros. Sffi.\"-\nCareful attention\ngiven to\nWatch Repairing.\nEngraving a Specialty.\nBridge Sire it\nJOIN the'CANADIAN\nPREFERENCE\nLEAGUE\n100,000\nMIMBCfta WANT-ID\nTHI object or tha League \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ta odueate Oanadlan* hew beat to\napply th* Oanadlan Preforence \u00E2\u0096\u00A0entlmont. Mambar* ef the\nLeague are expoctod, when making purchase*, to five preforence to the produoto of Canada and to all article* of Oanadlan\nmanufacture, when the quality le equal and the coet not In oxen*\nof that of elmllar foreign producte or manufactured article*. Each\nmember I* also expected to give preference te Oanadlan labor and\nto thle country'* educational and financial institution*. A monthly\nJournal will be published In the Interest* of th* League and mailed\nto aaoh membor. The annual memberehlp fee and subscription\nfor the Journal ie 81.00.\n, OUT THIS OUT, BIQWj AND SEND TO white\nThe Secretary, THE CANADIAN PREFERENCE LEAGUE, plsinly\nRoom 20, Homo Life Building, Toronlo\nPleaeo enroll my namo aa a member of the Oanadlan Preference\nLeague. Enclosed IsSl.oO, my membership fee and subscription for\nono year to \"CANADA FIRST,\" the journal of Tho Oanadlan Preforence\nLoague.\n(Name) Mr., Mre., Mis* . .\t\nP.O. Address...\n1,200\n19,49*.\n550\n150\n1*50\n47,40*5\n15,731\n5,646\n1904\n549,703\n174,iii)8\nii5,Q50\n3,070\n3,*2f>0\n1,759\n4,080\n5,000\n1905 Past Week\n413,542 12,371\n050\n14,811\n5G0\n8,530\n3,330\n19,365\n119,856\n43,179\n23,305\n855\n4,549\n1,720\n3,808\n22,037\n15,537\n303\n37,9(10\n10,400\n3,450\n222\n304\n33\n7,726\n2,091\n1,883\n110\n1,070\n2,250\n1,040\n2,000\n100\n3,230\n875\n665\nMO\n890\n785\n625\n' 482\n2,175\n\"219\n2,435\nTotal, tons 99,730\n'iranby Smelter treated 62,387\nBi C. Copper Co.'s Smelter treated\t\nMontreal it Boston Co.'s Smelter treated \t\nSO\n3,456\n390,000\n230,828\n117,611\n993\n400\n325\n507,545\n312,340\n148,600\n167\n'506'\n684,961\n401,921\n102,913\n123,570\n726\n325\n52\n50\n300\n-750\n827,348\n596,252\n209.637\n30,930\n33\n150\n30\n390\n150\n378\n609\n255\n73\n150\n20\n20\n40\n20\n619,172\n420,265\n138,213\n71,433\n15,389\n12,895\n3,823\nYou Are Ailing\nNot quite \u00C2\u00BBick, but robbed of ambition to work\u00E2\u0080\u0094find it hard to think\nolearly. Not ill enough to think of\ndying, but bud enough for life to be\npretty dull. There ia a remedy\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ferrozone\u00E2\u0080\u0094that quickly lifts that half-\n.lead feeling. Gracious, but Ferrozone\nmakes you feel good; it sharpens the\ndullest appetite, makes it keen as a\nrazor.\nBlood * Ferrozone makes lots of it.\nthe rich nouriseing kind that vitalizes\nthe whole body. You' 11 be wonderfully quickened, immensely strengthened, feel hearty and vigorous after\nusing Fcirozone. Buoyant healtl\nsurplus vigor and reserve energy all\ncome from this great restorative. Fifty\ncents buys a box of fifty tablets at all\ndealers.\nBioyci.es and Repair Work\u00E2\u0080\u0094A\ncomplete line of 1905 models. A few|\nsecond-band wheels cheap. Wheels\nto rent. Geo. Ciiapple, oppositel\nPostoffice, First street.\nYou're next at the Palace Bnrbeij\nShop, Victoria hotel.\nGrand Forks, B. C-\nFor a nice hair cut or shave go to\nthe City Barber Shop on Riverside.\nBaths 25c.\n\u00C2\u00AE{j*? mm\npitlNTS all the news of the\nBoundary, and prints it\nwhile itis news. It is the\nonly twice-a-week paper published in Southern British\nColumbia. It is not owned\nor cJiitrulled by a clique of\npoliticians, te further their\nown ambitious aims; nor by\na combination of merchants\nto be used as a means of lauding their own waies, to the\ndetriment of their rivals.\nThe Sun is the sole property of its publisher, and no\none else has any right to dictate its policy. It is printed in the interest of Grand\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E Forks and surrounding district. When its editor believes he is right, he speaks\nright out. He does not\nhave to consult half-a- "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_1905-09-22"@en . "10.14288/1.0341576"@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 .