"b7d2541b-2eea-49f8-bc58-97240e799420"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1913-02-28"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0341923/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " -Q\nkT\\nKettle Valley Orchardist\nMah =g ioi a rA\nTWELFTH YEAR-Nd. 18\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1913\n$1.00 PER YEAR\nMost ImpwtaQt Events at\nHome and Abroad! During the Fast Week\norder pf the secretary of war, is being\nrushed to the Mexican border. Trouble ia feared.\nThe budget for 1913 shows a large*\nincrease in the estimated British Columbia expenditures. The public works\noutlay is Urge.\nThe comfort of modern and humanized prisons is believed by the London\nChronicle to be responsible for the\ncontempt of the militant suffragettes.\nFriday\nEmpress dowager of China 'dies,\nprobably from appendicitis.\nThe superintendent of 'the Matte-\nwan asylum for criminal insane says\nhe was offered 120,000 to release\nHarry K Thaw.\nThe police save Mrs. Pankhurst\nfrom an attack by aa angry audience\nat a meeting. She twits em with\nbeing afraid to arrest her.\nThe United States government will\nintervene to see that ex-President\nMadero receives justice at the hands\nof the new administration.\nMore stringent laws tn aid the police throughout Canada to suppress\nimmorality are advocated hy aninflu\nential deputation at Ottawa.\nA Buss-inn who left Alberta to\nbring back his wife and children iB\n' thrown into prison and later is removed to the Siberian salt mines.\nA member of parliament declares\n'hat Premier Borden got the admir\nn'ty naval memorandum under duress\nand that his word need not be be\nlieved.\nThe British Columbia- government\nis believed to be dissatifled with Ron.\nPrice Ellison, and a wall .defined rumor says that he will be made a senator. ...\nSaturday\nPremier and Mrs. R L. Borden are\nguests of hunor at a dinner given by\nGovernor Sulier of New Yor_|.\nA brutal double murder in Montreal\nduring the early hours results in the\narrest of the brother of one of the victims.\nCanada is assured a prosperous year,\naccording to the monthly nummary of\nindustrial and trade conditions al\nready collected..,\nCanada's state prisoner, R C. Mil-.\nIer, requests a third hearing before the\nbar of the house,and will answer question if changed slightly.*\nA mass meeting of Hindus in Vancouver protest against the imiuigra\ntion law preventing their wives coming to Canada under present condi\ntion*.\nThe United Stales is thought likely to intervene if foreign residents in\nMexico are nut protected Diplomats\nwill try to force au explanation of\nthe murders.\nThe deposed president antl vice\npresident Of the Mexican republic are\nshot to death during a secret midnight\ntrip to the penitentiary from the national palace.\nThe London Daily Mail correspond-\nentat Belgrade states on reliable au\nthority that Turkey aud the Balkan\nallien are secretly negotiating for\npeace, to begin iu Maruh.\nMonday\nThe king and queen accept an invitation to dine at the German embassy.\nTbe anti-jingoes are jubilant.\nThe British government is in a\nquandary as to a decision on the question of the opium traffic* in China.\nThe Vancouver member will introduce a bill at Victoria regulating the\nsale of milk throughout the province.\nMr. Bowser opposes a plan to deal\nwith intoxicated persons, and a resolution ou the subject is defeated at\nVictoria.\nThe deputy minister of justice declare* that the power ot companies incorporated by provincial statute is\nlimited.\nA force of Uuited States troops, by\nShort Courses in Fruit and\nVegetable Growing in\nMiners' Union Hall\nTuesday\nThe brother of the late President\nMadero is reported to have beeu killed\nnorth of Monterey.\nAt a meeting in Vancouver Sir\nCharles Hibbert Tupper and other\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0peakers condemn the agreement with\nthe C.N.R.\nThe retail merchants of -British Columbia discuss many important matters at their annual convention in\nVanoouver.\nThe Vanoouver member of the provincial! legis|atu.*e insists that old\ncourt houae site should be given to\nVancouver.\nThe Canadian Manuf usurers' asso\nciation cousidera that the companies\nas at present constituted is a menace\nto business.\nDr. Wesbrook, of the University of\nMinnesota, accepts the position as\npresident of the new British Columbia university.\nLoudon is on the verge of a bread\nfamine, owing to a decision of the\nbakers to strike on March 16 if their\ndemands for better wages are not met.\nBritish Columbia frnit growers are\nsaid to be facing a serious crisis as a\nresult, ot unfair competition of the\nAmericans, who do not have to com\nply with the Dominion law*.\nWednesday\nUnited States paper mills ask that\na duty be placed on paper from Brit\nish Columhia.\nThe British Antarctic committee of\nLondon states that the Scott fund\nnow amounts to about $1,000,000.\nAlfred J. Morley is elected mayor\nof Victoria after the hardest fought\ncampaign in the history ot the city.\n- Mrs Pankhurst. is unaffected by a\nstorm of hisses from a London crowd.\nThe mounted police clear the way for\nher.\nParliamentary term ot British Col.\numbia will be extended to five years.\nRaise in sessional indemnity content-\nplated.\nThe Liberals speak on the nsvy\nquestion in the Dominion house. Port\nNelson will be the terminus for the\nHudson Bay line.\nRoyal commission says that no\nblame can be attached to the late\nLaurier government in connection\nwith the failure of lhe Farmers' bank.\nTwo hundred persons are killed or\nwounde 1 in Spain by the explosion of\n7000 pounds of black powder, laid by\ngovernment engineers to raise an\nenormous block ot rock.\nTwo hundred million pesos will be\nrequired for the pacification and rehabilitation of Mexico. President\nHuerla will send tumps instead of\nmoney to the rebels. Ilnmors of pints\naud counterplots.\nThursday\nThe session of the provincial legislature will end tomorrow,\nJ, P. Morgan A Co. deny the ox-\nistence of a money trust in the United\nStates.\nA London dispatch says that ths\nsuffragettes may be given penal servitude sentences for life.\nAmendments to the naval bill are\nvoted down. Premier Borden says the\nmeasure will be pressed to a conclusion,\nTurkey secures the good offices of\nRussia to work for peace. It is reported that she ii willing to cede\nAdrianople.\nTomorrow, March 1, a series of\nlectures and demonstrations in fruit\nand vegetable growing will be held\nin th* Miners' Union hall in this\ncity, under the auspices of th* horticultural branch of tbe provincial department of agriculture. Both afternoon and evening meetings will be\nheld, the afternoon lecture starting\nat 2:30, when VV. H. Brittain, provincial pathologist and entomolo\ngist, will speak on \"Insects and\nFungi in Relation to Horticulture,\"\nwith special reference to pear-blight\nand silver-leaf Al 3:30 M. S. Middleton, assistant horticulturist, will\ngive a pruning demonstration. In\nthe evening, at 7:30, B. Hoy, assistant horticulturist, will speak on\n\"Soil Cultivation Under Irrigation;\"\nat 8:16 Edwin Smith, in charge nf\nthe precooling, careful handling\nand cold-storage investigations\nbranch, will talk on \"Tne Handling\nof Fruit.\" an* at 9 o'clock \"Our\nMarket Conditions on tbe Prairies in\n1912\" will he discussed by J. For\nsyth Smith, British Columbia market* coniiiiissioner. The evening\nlectures will be illustrated. Tbese\nmeetings will be held under the au\nspices of the Grand Forks Farmers'\ninstitute. Not only fruit and vegetable growers, but all farmers, will\nfind tbese lectures on soils, cultiva\nlion, and plant growing of value to\nthem \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nJ B Castner, who had charge of\nthe apple packing school in ihis city\nthis year, delivered a lecture on the\nfruit growing industry in the Miners\nUnion hull last Friday night to a\nlarge audience of orchardists. Mr.\nCastner covered every phase of the\nsubject, from tbe selection of the\norchard site until tbe fruit had been\nmarketed. He is a practical fruit\ngrower, having had twenty years'\nexperience in the business, and di*\ncussed the matter from the viewpoint of the man who feel* thoroughly sure of his ground. Hi* has\nbeen employed by several enstern\nprovince* Hnd stales to lecture on\nthi* subject, wbich added additional\nweight to his remarks. One view\nexpressed on Friday night wil!\ndoubtless h* welcomed by the fruit\ngrowers of this province. In his\nopinion the cleanly cultivated orchard would soon he a thing of the\npast, and in ite place would come\nthe growing of grass between the\ntree* a* a mulch. Tbe advantages\nof tbe latter system, be said, are\nobvious. The work of cultivating\nthe orchard would be slimaied; irrigation would be simplified, and on\nturning on the water none of the\nearth would be washed away. Th*\ngrass sbould be cut several times\nduring tbe summer season, hut the\nhay should not be removed from the\norchard.\nEvidently it would have been more\nsatisfactory to many holder* ot the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tuck had the company gone aa is\nit started and paid for the development and equipment of the Hidden\nCreek property out of earnings. A\nlarge majority oi tha stockholders,\nhowever, wanted dividend*. Unquestionably tbe polioy of capitalizing in part the property i* correct.\nIf Granby were lo go on buying, de-\nvel ping and equiping new mines a*\nrapidly as it could pay the bill* out\nof the earnings it might be many\nyears before it would pay a dividend. Ratber than go to an extreme\niu this direction, it appear* to be\ntbe intention to meet half tbe Hidden Creek expense from earnings\nand capitalize the rest. The fact\nthat on* of the three or four leading\nNew York bonking houses underwrote Granby's bond issue, a firm\nibal had never before been interested\nin copper*, is an important point to\nkeep in-mind. It means that Granby\nii* making new friends, strong and\ninfluential ones. On any lurtber\nreaction lhe stuck should be bought,\nItis a good investment and a must\npromising speculation.\nA Winnipeg dispatch says tbal\nJames V. Welch, a railroad contractor, wbo assisted in building\nmany railroads iu Oregon; Wash\nington, southern British Columbia\naud western Canada, died recently\nat Port Arthur, Out., on which district be bad a coutract to build a\nportion of tbe Canadian Northern\nline east to Sudbury. He was 62\nyears old. Mr. Welch was well\nknown in tbis city at tbe time of the\nbuilding of tbe Columbia 6. Western. He bad a contract and cansp\nat Lime creek, on the North Fork of\nKettle river, aud win be remembered by tbose wbo bad business\ndealings witb lum as a generous,\nwbole-bearted man. There will be\nmany of old-timers wbo w ill read of\nbis deatb with regret.\nOn Munday night the Grand\nForka and Pboenix hockey club*\nplayed a tie game at lhe local rink,\nthe score being 33, and on Wednesday Phoenix- defeated Grand\nForks at Phoenix by a score of 4 to\n13, thus winning the championship\nuf lbe Buuudary league. Tomorrow\nnight I'hoenix plays lbe first game\nwllb Nelson, al Nelson, fur the Mc-\nHi nl,- cup.\nH. W. Collins, who was the dele-\ngale from tbe Urand Korks Fruit\nGrowers' association to tbe annual\nconvention of lbe Piovincial Fruit\nGrowers' association, recently beld\n' in Victoria, will make bis report at\nj tbe annual meeting uf the local association.\n- Mr. and Mrs. Kmberion Walker\n' have returned from Toronlo, ..Montreal aud other point* in eastern\n! Canada, wbere tbey bave been\ni spending tbeir honeymoon. They\n! report having had a very enjoyable\n.trip.\ni Tbe third furnace is again in commission at the Greenwood smelter,\nafter being cold for some time owing\nto th* abortage of coke.\nCity Will Furnish Power at\nCost for This Pur-\nTb e mayor and all the aldermen\nwere present at the meeting of tbe\ncity council laat Monday evening.\nA delegation from tbe West ward\ncomposed of Neil McCallum, P. H.\nDonaldson and W. H. Dinsmore\nwaited on th* eouncil. These gentlemen slated tbat they had authentic information to the effect that tb*\nC.P.R. intended to abandon ita passenger station in the West end in\ntne near future, and they wanted\ntbe council to endorse petition to\nlhe officials of the road requesting\ntbat the same be maintained. Tbe\nsubject was thoroughly discussed\nby tbe delegates and tbe members\nof tbe council, but the council did\nnot aee ils way clear to endorse the\npetition, in view of tbe agreement\nwith tbe road entered into by tbe\ncily last summer. Tbe matter was\ndisposed of by tbe appointment of\nAid. Miller, Manly and tb* mayor\nas a committee to ascertain tbe\nfact*.\nTbe finance committee recommended the payment of tbe accumulated\nmonthly accounts; that in future\ntenders be called for in purchasing\nfuel, and that the city account be\ntransferred to the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce on or before Nebruary\n28. All the recommendation* were\napproved, but the clerk was authorized to purchase five tons of coal at\nonce. Tbe chairman stated that th*\ncommittee appreciated tbe granting\nof a temporary loan by the Bank st\nCummerce.\nTbe chairman of tbe board of\nworks reported that tenders tor\nthe removal of the old Cooper\nbridge bad been advertised for.\nTbe council authorized the sale of\nfour lots, on tbe fiat across the North\nFork, to J. A McCallum for tiOO.\nTbe city electrician'* salory was\nriisetl from 1126 to 1150.\nAid. Manly, chairman ot the\nwater and light commitlee, reported\nthat a plan was being formulated\nwhereby business houses could be\nilluminated at night at*a moderate\ncoM. The thought thai eight lights\ncould be supplied eacb store up to\n11 o'clock at night at a flat rate of\n$1 per month. The plan contemplated wa* to bave tbem detached\nfrom the meters, with switches outside Ihe buildings, so that thsy could\n, be turned oil by tb* night watchman.\nAfter a short discussion relative\nI to health snd relief molten, the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 council adjourned.\nGeorge L. Walker, in the Boston\nCommercial, say* that the Granby's\nbond issue did not tske very well in\nspeculative circles, due tb the fact\nthat it wu n*t clearly understood,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd traders bav* been selling -their\nholding* during the put two week*.\n1 There may be some consolation in\nthe fact that Grand Forks came close\nenough to tbe cup to get a picture\nof it.\nJ. D. Honsberger, the rancher, re-\nThe Princeton Star says that the\npurchase of the V*igt camp by the\nBritish Columbia Copper company\nha* been advanced to a stage wbere\nbuth parties to tbe deal are no longer\nin doubt as to tbe issue. The form-\nalties of closing the transaction are\nnow grogressing.\nThere are twenty-five men working at the No. 7 mine, with A. W.\nDavis as superintendent.\nTbe Ledge say* that foreign gamblers can not raise enough money in\nturned to the city yesterday from a' Greenwood to buy a humming bird\ntwo mun ths' visit to Lethbridge. a meal ticket. THE SUN. PRAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBI.A.\nMME. MAURICE MAETERLINCK\nBelgium.\u00E2\u0080\u0094While It Is noy set-\ntied beyond a doubt tliat Maurice\nMaeterlinck, the famous Belgian author and philosopher, did not recently\ncome to this country, the arrival of\nhis talented wife, Mme. Georgette\nLeblaiic Maeterlinck, Is a very well\nestablished fact. The wife of the\ngreat playwright, poet, essayist and\nsage, herself a famous singer, is one\nof the most interesting personalities\nthat have visited our shores. She\nls a high priestess of the cult that\npreaches the perfect wifehood, and\nshe has evolved a philosophy of her\nown for reaching that happy destiny\niu matrimony.\nSTOCK BROKERS GO ON STRIKE\nResent Passage of Drastic Law Controlling Them Approved by Parliament\nln Home, the chamber of the\ndeputies has passed a new law which\nis very urgently needed, disciplining\noperations performed on lhe stock\nexchange, with thc object of weeding\nout unprincipled brokers. All agent*\nare required to deposit with the government a sum ot $29,000 aple :e as\ncaution money.\nThe premier, Slgnpr Giolittl, ln combating an attempt on the part of certain Liberals to modify this clause Tn\nlhe bill, exclaimed: The government\nis determined to apply once for all u\nradical remedy to the bourses, because they are real centers of Infection ln thc economic life ot Italy. They\nharbor a mass of operators who possess no guarantees of any kind. Let\nus say nothing of their morality, but\nat least let us demand substantial\n'caution.' Those agents actually inscribed will easily find the requisite\ncredit and cash if they be truly\nworthy of their calling.\nParliamentary approval of the drastic Glolittlar. measure which has\nhad the effect of raising a terrific outburst of Indignation on the stock exchanges In Rome, Genoa, Turin, Florence, Palermo and the center of Italian commerce, resulting in the resignation ot the bourse syndicates and the\nsuspension of all business as a sign of\nprotest. The brokers have sworn\nnot to resume business or allow others\nto transact their affairs until adequate\nsatisfaction ls forthcoming.\nBrought up on Beer\nAt Edinburgh Doctor Stilus\nof Edinburgh, confessed to the members of ths Clinical Society at Newcastle that ho was brought up on beer.\nHe had never drunk a glass of mill:\nuntil he went to Scotland,\nhe realized why there was moro tuberculosis in Scotland than anywhere\nelse\nSUFFERED 2 MONTHS\nBegan with Itching Sensation. Kept\nAwake at Night. Caused Great\nPain, Thought Operation Only\nCure, Cuticura Soap and Ointment Entirely Cured in 6 Weeks.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094*\nM Strang- St., Toronto, Ontario.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I auf-\nfpiud for Iwo months with tho piles. Thoy\ntint began wltb a sudden Itching sensation\nvflilcti used ti- keep mo\nawuke at night. 1 tried different kinds of ointment to\nstop the if-hliiR which did\nnot prove vuluablo ln tho\nlout and to my nirpriio\n' after a few weeks they hogan to blood. I did uot\nknow what to do as they\ncaused me great polo. I hogan to think\nthat an operation was the only curo for\nthem. I hoard ot Cuticura Soap snd Ointment and decided to try them. I sent for\na sample and after using them a few times\nI found out to my groat relief they gavo\nme leu pain and later on the bleeding began\nto ceaao. I got some moro and continued\nwith the Cuticura Ointment and Soap. I\nbegan to get better sleep nt night and after\nill weeks' careful treatment I Bad that I\naa entirely cured.\" (Signed) A. Bennett,\nMar. mi. 1812.\nI f you wish a skin clear of pimple*, blackheads and other annoying eruption-, hands\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2oft and white, hair live and glouy, and\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0clip free from dandruff and Itching, begin\nto-day the regular uae of Cuticura Boap for\nthe toilet, bath and shampoo, atrimed by\nan occasional light application of Cuticura\nOintment, Sold throughout thc world, liberal f ample of oach matliid free, with 32-p.\nHkln Book. Address post card Potter Drug\nA Chen. Corp., Dept. \u00C2\u00AB1D, Boston, U. p. A.\nBONSPEIL\nWinnipeg, Feb. 4th, to Feb. 18th\nTO CURLERS AND VISITORS TO WINNIPEG\nduring Bonspiel e extend a hearty welceme. Make our office your headquarters. Havo your mall addressed here.\nIT MAY BE THAT YOU DESIRE TO LIST YOUR FARM FOR 8ALE OR\nEXCHANGE. OR TO SECURE A BARGAIN IN A GOOD AS NEW 8EC0ND\nHAND AUTOMOBILE.\nWe have a great many listed with ua at snap prices to sell or exchange.\nPOSSIBLY YOU DESIRE TO INVEST IN SOME CHOI'.E WINNIPEG PROPERTY, the coming Chicago of Canada. Millions of profits will be mad* by\npresent Investors.\nWE HAVE PROPOSITIONS REQUIRING LESS THAN $100 CASH, OTHERS\nUP TO $10,000.\nWE WANT TO TALK THESE MATTERS OVER WITH YOU.\nSCOTT, HILL a CO., 22 Canada Life Building\nWinnipeg, Man.\nNEW TUNNEL MAY WEAKEN ST.\nPAUL\nFamous London Cathedral Said to be\nConfroned by Grave Danger\nLondon.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 A new danger now\nthreatens St. Paul's Cathedral, ln the\nopinion ot those responsible for the\nfabric, the proposed tramway tunnel\nthat forms an important part ot the\nSt. Paul's bridge scheme being regarded with apprehension.\nThe parliamentary bill seeking now\ner for this new venture has Just beeu\ndeposited by the London county council, and so we feel that we .must make\nour protest at once, said Canon S. A\nAlexander, treasurer of the Cathedra!\nrecently.\nThe danger arises out of the fear\nentertained by our expert advisers\nthat the proposed subway through\nwhich trams will run from a terminus\nat Cheapside under the east side ot\nthe churchyard and Cannon street to\na point near the new bridge, will drain\nour foundations. The Cathedral is\nbuilt on water-bearlug soil above the\nclay, and the constant danger ia that\nthis soil may become dry and decrease\nin bulk, thus leading to settlements\nof the foundations and cracking of tho\nwalls. Indeed, Mervyn Macartney\narchitect to the dean and chapter,\ntakes so serious a view of any sucn\ndrainage that he Is unable to say\nwhere the damage might end. When\nwe remember that Holy Trinity ln\nKlngsway which stands beside a similar subway had to be rebuilt, we\ncannot but do all In our power to\nsave St. Paul's from the possibility\not ruin.\nA protest has been addressed to\nthe chairman of the L.C.C. by the\ndean and chapter, and aB custodians\not a great national monument we trust\nthat due weight will be given to our\npoint ot view. About five years ago\nthe council diverted a big sewer\nscheme which it was thought threatened the Cathedral just aa the proposed subway would do, and so we are\nhopeful ln this matter. - The cost ot\nfighting the L. C. Cs bill would be\nbo heavy tor us and it Is so difficult\nto find funds even for the present necessary repairs that we feel sure the\npublic will be with us In urging, th?\nauthorities to drop that part of the\nscheme, which in the opinion of all\nexperts, would Berlouuiy threaten\nWren's great masterpiece.\nMillionaire Found Hanging In Train\nAt Berlin, a millionaire cattle raiser named Berger has been\nfound dead ln mysterious circumstances In a train near Chemnitz, Saxony.\nWhen tbe train arrived at a station\nnear Chemnitz the millionaire was\ndiscovert d hanging from the celling of\na second-class compartment. At ilr .t\nit was suspected that he had committed suicide, but an investigation revealed tho fact that several hundreds\nof dollars In cash, which he had takoj\nwith him to purchasa breeding Btock,\nhad been taken from hts pockets.\nTbe police are searching for a farmhand who recently entered the murdered man's service after being released\nfrom a convict prison. It ls believed\nthat the ex-convict induced Berger to\nmake a journey and either accompanied htm or .got In the same train by\nsurprise.\n$2,400,000 for Poor Family\nIn Paris there ls a working-class\nfamily living In the village of Flelg-\niit.ii-., In the Ardennes, are entitled,\nsavs a Reims message to tbe Journal,\nto a fortune of ' $2,400,000 awaiting\nthem In London. The formalities of\nthe transfer of the money have already\nbegan.\nOf the Earth Earthly\nA number of misguided persons\nat Hanover, Germany, calling themselves Terraphages, have formed a\nclub pledged to eat nothing but earth\nafter the manner of certain degrade!\nsavage tribes. Pamphlets extolling\nthc advantages ot Terraphnglsm are\nbeing Issued ln Frencb, Oerman and\nEnglish.\nPet Dog Nearly Frozen\nAt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Berlin, ' Star, the pet dog\nof Prince Frederick William ot Prussia, after disappearing for twelve days\nwas found half frozen In the refrigerator chamber of Potsdam Castle. After being thawed he was restored to his\nowner. * .-;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNine-Hundred Year-Old Church\nThe Saxon Church ot Oreenated, ln\nOngar,' Essex, reached Its 000th year\nyesterday It Is probably the most\ncurious church Ih England, being\nbuilt of rough-hewn oak trees split\nlengthways.\nW. N, U. M3.\nMlnard'a Liniment Cures Colds, Eto.\nA Swan's Broken Heart\nThe last two beautiful swans\nhave disappeared from the octagonal\nbasin ln Uie Jardln des Tullerles, Paris. They were an exemplary couple,\nBays the Figaro; the male died ot\nrheumatism and his widow of grief.\nNow They Don't 8peak\nMaud\u00E2\u0080\u0094So Jack compared me with\nsomething sweet, did he? The dear\nfellow! What was It?\nMarie\u00E2\u0080\u00941 don't think I should tell\nyou.\nMaud\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oh, dp. I Insist!\nMarie\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, he referred to you as\nthe human marshmallow. You \u00E2\u0080\u00A2certainly had laid the powder on thick,\ndear.\nMlnard'e Liniment Cures Distemper.\nHere Is a story about theman who\nunexpectedly had three seats sent to\nhim for The Pink Lady. His wlfo,\nof course, waB delighted, but sbe Bald:\nWhat shall we do with ihe third\nseat?\nI don't know, my dear, he said.\nWould you like to ask your sister?\nShe paused for a moment and then\na brilliant Idea struck her.\nNo, George dear, she said. I tell\nyou what we will do. You shall give\nit to the man whom you always go out\nto see between the acts and then you\nwon't have to disturb yourself.\n$100 Reward, <$luu.\nTbe readwi ot this paper will tt. pltxxed to lean\nthat tbere U at taut one dreaded Ornxx. tbat\nbas been able to care ta all Its atafta, and that a\nCatarrh. Hill'i Catarrh cure k tbe only poeltlve\neure now known to the medical fraternity, caterrr\nbelng a _-HBtlt_.tloi.al (tlaraee, requlrea a conatltu-\ntlonal treatment Hall'e Catarrh Cure a taken in-\ntcroally, eet'ai directly upon tbe blood and mucoua\nvurfaceB ot the ayatem. thereby deetroylng the\n'oun-ailon ol tbe dlacaae. fid ilvlni the patient\nitretuth by building up tho conaututkm aad aaatat-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nt nature In doing lu work. Tbe proprietor! have\nao much faith In Ita ouraUve powera tbat tbey offer\nOne Hundred Dollara lor any cue tbat It talla U\n aterlat deatroylaf laeocta, ate. The price\n_i 10 cute per booklet ($1.00 br Ik* fall **t *l 11.\niecladlat v***tabl* aal special Bald crepa), kat FREE la\nparckaaaraol oar seed*. Soo **r catalos**. P*l* 2-\ntrain TO-BAY roa OUR hue CATALOGUE. ADMIMMG DESK MD. I\".\n^STEELE,BRIGGS SEED CO.. \"J*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nNMESTER\nExtra Light Weight\nRepeating Rifle\nShasta .It thari, .It Um\nand .tt Lang UM* OarMdgoa L\nThis ia a well-made handy litUe rifle, known\naa ttie Model 1906, costing little money to\nbuy and little money to thoot It handle* all\nthree of the cartridges mentioned above,\nwhich makes it very useful, either for target\nor game shooting. It is made up to the Winchester standard, to shoot Strang and accurately and five satisft-ction in every way.\nLook into it Catalogue sent free on request\nWMCnSTER KPEAItM UMS Ml, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UN lUEfc CML\nLondon. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The wiilesdcn Rducir\ntlon Authority has decided to start\ncookery classes tor boys st th* local\npolytechnic. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPhilosopher\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bear and forbear, Is\nmy motto.\nDyspeptic\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chew and eschew Is\nmine.\n\ If\nTHE SUN, GRAND FORKS. BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nliquid Sulphur Nature's\nRemedy Cures\nRheumatism, Eczma, Stomach and\nKidney troubles, Asthma, Sore\nThroat, Catarrh and Dyspepsia.\nUse Liquid Sulphur Foot Bath tor\ntired or Sore feet. Try the Liquid Sulphur Bath, they are very\nbeneficial .to the whole system, and\nonly costs a tew centB each.\nLiquid Sulphur Is 100 times better than sulphur ln any other form.\nEACH BOTTLE A CURE\nThousands ot Vancouver citizens\ncan tell yob how Liquid Sulphur\nhas cured them.\nIt your druggist cannot Bupply\nyou, we will send by mall at our\nown Tlsk, upon receipt of prIc-3\n60c, or 11.00 size. Postage prepaid. Prepared only by\nCHACE d> JACKSON,\nVancouver, B.C.\nFREE TO ALL SUFFERERS\nIf you teel \"out of sorts\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"run down'\nor \"got tbe blues.\" suffer from kidney,\nbladder,.norvous diseases, chronic weak,\nneases, ulcers, skin eruptions, piles, &\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:..\nwrite for my FREE book. It Is Uie\nmost instructive medical book ever writ,\nten. It tells all about these diseases\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd the remarkable cures effected by\nthe new French Remedy \"THERAPION'*\nNo, 1, No. '-, No. _, and you can decide\nfor yourself if lt ls the remedy for your\naliment. Don't send a cent. It's absolutely FREE. No \"follow-up\" clrcu.\nIar*. Dr. LcClerc Med. Co, Havor.\nstock Rd., Hampstcad, London, Eng.\nWhy He Couldn't Go In\nA small but very black negro -was\nstanding very erect at one side of the\ndoor of a house where a colored man\nhad Just died. The servioes were\nabout to begin. Aren't you coming\nInside.\nI would if I could, said the small\nhoy, but, you see, Ise de crape'\nAsthma No Longer Dreaded. The\ndread of renewed attacks from asthma\nhas no hold upon those wbo hare\nlearned to rely upon Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy. So safe do\nthey teel that complete reliance Is\nplaced ou this true specific wltb the\ncertainty that it will always do all\nthat Its makers claim. It you have\nnot yet learned how safe you are with\nthis preparation at hand get It to-day\nand know for yourself,\nCare of Dairy Cows\nThe cows should be kept ln dry\nquarters and protected from the cold,\nThe barn Bhould be clean, warm and\nwell ventilated. Cold water should\nnot be given to the cows ln winter.\nWarm It to about 65 or 70 degrees.\nOld folks who need something\nof the kind, find\nNA-DRU-CO\nLAXATIVES\nmost effective without any discomfort.\nIncreased dose* net needed. 2So. a boa\nat your druggist's.\na.tltiul Ini xxt (m*M C it baife UaH*.\n' Heard at the Beach\nAs the couplo entered the dining\nroom at Revere Beach a raucous-\nvoiced young fellow was assaulting the\nair wltb alleged vocal music.\nWonder who he Is? said the girl\nwhen the howler had stopped his racket.\nDon't you know who that Is? returned her escort. He's the guy who\nput the din ln dinner.\nNo More Children\nLittle Mary'B father had denied her\na pleasure which she had confidently\nexpected to enjoy. That night, when\nshe said her prayers at her mother's\nknee, she concluded with this petition:\nAnd please don't give my papa any\nmore children. Ho don't know how\nto treat those he's got now.\nWhen going away from home, or at\nany change of habitat, he ls a wise\nman wbo numbers among his belongings a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kelloggs\nDysentery Cordial. Change of food\nand water ln some strange placo where\nthere are no doctors may bring on an\nattack of dysentery. He then has a\nstandard remedy at hand with which\nto cope with the disorder, and lore-\narmed he cau successfully fight the\nailment and subdue It.\nHow to Do It\nSonny\u00E2\u0080\u0094Aw, pop, I don't wanter\nstudy arithmetic.\nPop\u00E2\u0080\u0094What! A son of mluo grown\nup and not be able to figure up th<_\nbaseball scores and batting averages.\nNever.\n125Ealncubitor\u00C2\u00BB102\naadJrooder^'RS' |y\nIf ordered\nCanada. '\" '\nwalli. thi.. bio ell\ndoors. Fret ;atal\ni. Sanjtt'-rIt<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*<**, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2Tt!\nWISCONSIN INCUBATOR CO.*\t\n' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 240 Iteclw, Wl\u00C2\u00BB.\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB. %. *u m Chlek BreodOT\nMALE HEL\"\u00C2\u00BB WANTED\nWOULD YOU LIKE TO LEARN TIM\nstock broking business? I want a llv\u00C2\u00AB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 mblttous representative ln every city\nand town to handle stocks, bonds ana\nmortgages; applicant must furnish references and have from $100 to $600 personal capital. Write or call XI. R. Edgar\n& Co., 34 Victoria Street, Toronto.\nTHE JOHN 1NGUS CO., Limited\nEngineers and Boilermakers\nBoilers of all kinds\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Engines,\nPumps and Heavy Plate Work\nWrite us for Prices\n14 Strachan Ave., Toronto, Canada\nlit\nthte\n\"GORED BV A BULL\"\nMany a farmer has been\nscrioubly injured by vicious\nrattle. Don't run risks.\nDehorn yours with tbe\nKEYSTONE DEHORNER\nQuick \u00E2\u0080\u0094easy \u00E2\u0080\u0094humane \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nmakes clean, sharp cut from\nx. sides. Costs little, Write\nfor free booklet. a\nR. H. MoKENNA,\nKobert St. Toronto, Ont. Mentloi\npaper.\nSend yourRaw\nFURSto\nJohnHallam\nKST AND HEALTH TO MOTHEt MD CHIU.\nHas. Winslow's Soothing svaur hw beea\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0mti lo,over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS ol\nMOTH8R8 lor their CIULOREN WHI_.lt\nTSKTHINO, with FJtRI'I&T SUCCESS. It\nSOOTHES the CHILD, SOI'TENS the GUMS,\nALLAYS alt FAIN; CORES WIND COLIC, aid\nla the bnt remedy for IUARRHtKA. It li absolutely hirmfaif. Be eure and tile for \"Mre.\nWliitow'e Soothing Syrup.\" aad lake ao otter\nMad.. Twenty-fivecente\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 bottle.\nGALL STONES\nKidney Stonei and Gravel are aulekly expelled from tbe eyitem by Uu\nuw of\nSANOL\nwhioh has been a aignal auessss\nthroughout Canada aa a complttt\neure o( Kidney Trouble and all Urlo\nAcid Dlseaiei. W- will eend letters\ntelling of many cure* to all who will\nwrite ua.-\nPrice U.M Per Bottle at aU Leadtn*\nDrugglati.\nTHE SANOL M*FO. CO., LTD.\nWINNIPEG, MANITOBA\nBOYS!\nHow would you like to be our Selling\nAgents and make Bid MONEY In\nyour Spare Hours ?\nWe have the Goods I\nSend Post Card to-day\ntor particulars, and \"Get into Business,\"\n' M. O. Dept. P. O. Box 1256, Montreal, Can.\nDODDS\nKiONEY\n, ^ILLS\nt He. a fox er alx boxes ror $2.50,\nat all dealem, or The Dodde Medl-\naim Cem\u00C2\u00BBany. Limited, Toronto,\nCanada.\t\nO N\nM I - ANNUAL SAL\nTGa>l\n/<--_.\nHave You Received Our Sale\nCatalogue ?\nIt Is Full of Money Saving Opportunities.\n<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>*.\nfor\nW\nIt will give you full informaticn\nabout the generous values we are\noffering to our Mail Order Customers\nand show you how to make substantial savings on many necessities.\nIn this sale we have reduced the profits to the point where they barely cover the\nexpenses of handling. This is one reason why we are offering such splendid values\nin our Semi-Annual Sale Catalogue. The other is that our sale has assumed such\nproportions that we can buy in enormous quantities, and quaniities always influence\nmanufacturers to allow us substantial concessions.\nYou should not be without a copy of this catalogue, lf you do not possess a\ncopy let us know and we will forward you one without delay.\nAU orders should be mailed now. While we have made provision for a big demand it is possible that some lines will be sold out before the end of the sale, and\nwe cannot replenish any line that becomes exhausted. This is an important point\n,hat we desire to firmly impress upon our customers.\nEvery item in our Sale Catalogue is\ncovered by Our Liberal Guarantee\nof money refunded if you are not\nfully satisfied.\nWa EATON C\u00C2\u00B0u\nWINNIPEG\nLIMITED\nCANADA\nw. n, u. m\n1 GRI\nCO., LID.\nWINNIPEG,\nCALGARY\nEXECUTIVE 4.A\nJ. Fream, John Kennedy, William Moffat.\nmxamm*xmm**x**m*x****\ t DIRcCTORATE\nManltooa\u00E2\u0080\u0094T. A. Crerar John Kennedy. Wm. Moffat, R. McKenzie. Ssikatchawan\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oee.\nI.angley, J. A. Mahari, F. W. Green, J. Morrison. Alberta\u00E2\u0080\u0094B. J, Fream.\nIt you consign your grain lo us It will be locked alter In the beat po.ilblo manner.\nOUR AIM\nTo betur its condition ot the farmer and cut out ths spread between Ihe producer and ths.\nconsumer.\nT. A. Crerar, THE SUN, GRAND F0RK8, B. C.\nSil? (grand 9.ork.a$un\nG. A. Evans. Editor and Publisher\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2uaeoaiPTioH HAtse:\nIn. Im tl-SO\nOn. Year (In advanee) 1.00\nOn. Year, in rutted Slate. l.ho\naddr.ii all communications to\nThs Bvbning Sun,\nphohs b74 gkanu kukks, b.c\nFRIDAY, FEBRUARY \u00E2\u0080\u00A2_!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_. 1913\nBecause Ths Sun. a coupe of\nweeks back, ridiculed the idea thai\nmysterious German airships are\nhovering over England, and ex-1\npressed the opinion that all Buch\ndispatches emanated from tha federal government's advertising agents,\nwho appear to he working overtime\nin an endeavor to convince the country that an \"emergency\" does exist\nfor a cash contribution to the im\nperial navy, the Phoenix Pioneer\nrushes into print with a quarter of a\ncolumn of rambling remarks in defense of its \"great and good\" friends\nat Ottawa. It is difficult to understand what facts the Pioneer wishes\nto establish; but in one sentence,\nwhere it lauds tbe Borden government, and doubta the patriotism\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nor loyalty\u00E2\u0080\u0094of the opposition, it is\nquite clear. This wbb evidently the\nBole object of the article. It must\nhe admitted that in timet peace the\nLiberals have proven failures as\njingoes and flag flappers, but whenever the empire has been threatened\nthey have never been found lagging.\nIn this respect history will repeat\nitself. The Pioneer also appears to\nhave the utmost faith in the ability\nof airships to travel from Germany\nto England. The Sun feelB quite\npositive that up to the present time\nno craft of sufficieent buoyancy to\nnavigate tbe air bejween tbe two\ncountries haB been invented\u00E2\u0080\u0094unless\nit iB permissable to include in this\ncategory the heads ol the people\nwho are credulous enough to believe tbese stories. But we prefer\nlo take a more charttuble view ol\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the nutter' Until we receive-\nfurther proof to the contrary, we\nshall continue to believe that the\nPioneer man's head iB still heavy\nenough to stay on earth wiibout\nguy-ropes, and that it is only I t\npen which is foolish.\nthe white plague into building up\nhopes for the \"cure.\" Even the sen\nators of the state of Washington liav e\nput themselves on record as favoring\nthe purchase of the serum by the government of the United States, and\nsimilar purchase hy the German government \"fur the benefit of humanity.\" Attention to the discovery was\ndrawn in the Dominion parliament by\na question to the government asking\nif it intended making a special investigation. The idea of purchasing the\nsecret is inspired hy the off\u00C2\u00ABr of one\nmillion dollars made by President\nFinlay, of the Aetna National bank,\nif the German physician would come to\nAmeriea and cure Finlay's son-in-law\nand forty nine other tuberculous per\nsons. American legislators reason\nthat if the cure is genuine il should\nnot be left to private enterpriao tu se\ncure the boon to humanity. A physician who went to Berliu for some of\nthe serum on behalf of Trudeau, of\nSaranac Lake, a well known pathologist, has returned with very pemiinis\ntic ideas about the value of the Fried\nmann discovery. But-so ranch good\nhas been reported to offset his testi\ninony that it would not be safe to ae-\ncept his estimate any more than it.\nwould be wish to believe unqu-mtiun\niugly in the efficacy of the serum\nwithout official tests. Dr. Frieduianu\nis coining to America, probably in\nconnection with the Finlay otter, and\nthough his action in withholding his\nserum until a rich pecuniary reward is offered may be just ground\nfor judging him very mercenary, if\nthe serum lives up to the claims made\nfor it, it will be worth far more than\nthe price now offered.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Toronto Mail\nand Empire.\nVincent, Astor, the heir to the\nfamily millions, wiio owns among oilier\nthings a big farm on the banks of tiie\nHudson river, announces that he in\ntei.ils nmkiiig it an experimental farm\nalong scientific lines, and that everything he does tliere will be told to the\npeople of the country. The idea is an\nexcellent one, and the results can only\nbe good. Anything tliat teaches how\nthe earth can be made to produce\nfood in abundance benefits the con\nturner as well us the fanner.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Van\ncouver Sun.\nThere is something suggestively\nBritish in the jealous vigilance with\nwhich Ausialia guards her autonomy.\nAnd strangely enough in the old\n<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'Hint.iv press we seldom see evidence\nof any suspicion as to the quality of\nthe island commonwealth's loyalty.\nThese interesting speculations are .reserved tor Canada, and we know the\nreason why.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Victoria Times.\nCURRENT COMMENT\nThe wide publicity given to the\nFriedmann tuberculosis s.\" >im owing'\nt \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the unusai conduct of the disco* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nurer has led an army of uullerrrs from \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nTlie grain growers demand an increase of the British preference aud\nfree trade within live Jvears, Have\nthey no consideration for the poor\neastern manufacturer who is making\na desperate stiuggle for existen ie un\nder the shelter of tlie thrift' wall?\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBrandon News.\nhope of the Canadian west. This, wa\nwish to point out, is exactly what the\nwest haii lieen indulging in\u00E2\u0080\u0094farming\na little and subdividing the rest fur\nsale to eastern tenderfeet. And it's\na great thing for the west\u00E2\u0080\u0094so\nfar. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Toronto Star.\nThe financial genius who bought a\nbank, discounted his notes in that\nbank for the purchase price, and then\ndrew his cheque on the proceeds to\npay for it, is entitled to a | rize in the\nart of buying a bank with, the bank's\nmoney.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pittsburg Dispatch.\n\"Yes,\" said the old man, \"I find\nmy strength is failing somewhat. I\nused to walk around the block every\nmorning, but lately I feel so tired\nwhen I get half way round I have to\nturn and come back.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Women's\nHome Companion.\nHONOR ROLL\nMixed farming is pointed to as the\nIS TOE, ftESTTHAT 1$\nWe can't be on the level and sell poor took\nBe on a level with yourself. You can't afford to buy poor\ntools. Our policy has always been, the best is the cheapest\nin the end. We want your business, we want your oon-\niidence and we want your good will. Come to see us.\nThe square deal is our kind of a deal.\nMclntyre C& Smith\nThe following pupils uf the public\nschool were neither late nor absent\nduring the month of February:\nDivision I\u00E2\u0080\u0094Eric Atwood, Grace\nBarron, Helen DeCew, S anley D..n-\nMdson, Marie Fritz., Oswald Hay, A -\nfreil Heaven, Ruth Krischke, On\nMcCullum, Aiia Michener, Sam Mont\ngoniery, Aulay Munro, Mary New-\nbeauer, Hu^h Sloan, Jennie Simpson,\nMay Spraggett, Ivy Taylor, Renald\nTracy.\nDivision II\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gladys Ardial Murie\nBarnuin.Lila Burns.lJlga Frankovitch,\nDean Galloway, Ralph Gill, Frank\nHartinger, Lawrence Holmes, Robert\nHolmes, Ulric McCallum, Joyce McLeod, Maudie Beckham, Pauline\nSloan, Alice Spraggett, Dan Wells,\nHugh Wells.\nDivison III\u00E2\u0080\u0094Blair Cochrane, Geo\nCheplo, John Cheplo, Victor Gilmour,\nWilfred Holmes, Chads Krischke,\nRuby Keeling, Edith Larsen, James\nLyden, Teddy- Dempsey, Reggie Hull,\nKathleen Kerby, Gladys Latham,\nAllium Mooyboer, Harry Peterson,\nHolger Peterson, Muriel Spraggett,\nSarah McCallum, Mildred Meikle,\nWilliam Meikle, Gwenny Mcllwaine,\nHelen Peterson, Walter Petersen, Al\nPeterson, Thomas Reburn,Ida DeCew,\nHarry Atwood, Dorothy Bums.\nDivision IV\u00E2\u0080\u0094Laura Allen, Lily\nArdiel, Freddie Barlee, Aurena Bar\nnum, Hope-Benson, Bernard Crosby,\nSam Ericson, Harold Fair, Ray For\nrester, Vernon Forrester, Bessie Harrison, Mildred Hutton, Engeman Ja-\ncobsen, Cecelia Lyden, Viola Pell,\nFrits Schliehe, Frances Sloan, Kathleen O'Connor, Ewing McCallum\nDivision V\u00E2\u0080\u0094Teddie Cooper, Annie\nCrosby, May Crosby Norma Eriekson,\nAnnie Gilumur. Isabelle ' Glaspell,\nRonald McDonnell, Ambrose McKinnon, Eva Moir, Glory Morrison, Chris\nPell, Edward Potentier, Mildred Rydell, Thelma Turnbull\nDivision VI\u00E2\u0080\u0094Esthei Anderson,\nClara Brunner, Charlie Cooper, Randolph Oavis, Margarget Fowler,\n| Frances Latham. Reid McKie, Nelie\nMills, Annie Moir, Cleophus Mont-\ngomiry, Anuy Peckhum, Helen Simpson, Hairy Slide, Hazel Bache, Florence Bache, Harry Jones, Hazel\nHart, Robert Tryon, Howard DeCew,\nDennis O'Connor.\nDivision VII-\u00E2\u0080\u0094Freddy Cooper.Hose\nRoberts, Mary Hai-luii, Lee Sung,\nJimmy Pell, Reggie Heaven, Louis\nWaidon, Adeline McElliott, Dorothy\nLatham.\nDivision VIII\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gladys Armsnii,\n0. ville Baker, Margaret Bruno, Ray\nliiowu, Cory I Campbell, Bert Cooper,\nCelia Cmshy, Rntli Eureby, Mary\nErrett, Peter Hal-ton, Lilian Hull,\nAdnanue Lam, Johanna Lam, Law\nrence MrKiiinuii, Willie Nelson,\nDonald Rydell, Harold Quinlivan,\nDorothy Schliehe, Francis U'Reii,\nLeona C'R.m, Oswald Walker.\nWeekly Banner Contests\nThe cniitists for the attendance\nbanners at the public school this\nweek resulted as follows:\nPercentages and Number of Pu\npils Late\u00E2\u0080\u0094Division 1 99.6, 0 late;\nDivision II 83 89, 0 late; Division\nIII 95.53, 3 late; Division IV 87.88,\n4 late; Division V 89.78, 3 late;\nDivision VI 98.66, 8 late; Division\nVII 90 38, 3 late; Division VIII\n97.3, 0 late.\nDivision I won the banner for\nhighest average attendance, and Division VIII won the banner for\npunctuality.\nBRCrWNI\nBrownie Cameras\nWork just like -\nKODAKS\nTRICES W to $12\nWoodland 8 Co.,\nThe Kodak Dealers\nMEHtaOLOblCAL\nThe following is the minimum\nand maximum temperature for each\ndny during the past week, as re\ncorded by the government thernioin\neterdn E. F. Laws'ranch:\nTHKHMOMETW\nMilt. Mm\nFriday, *21st 4 3'_i\nSaturday, 22 \"1 5 . 26\nSundiy, 23id 8 29\nMondnv.'-Hht., Ib 3d\nTuesday. 25th 4 28\nWednei.i|.iv.'27i!i <> M\nthiirsdtjv, 27th 4 '.2\nInfill'*\nPrecipitation for month 13\nCUSTOMS RECtlPTS\nR. R. Gilpin, customs officer at this\npnrt, makes the following detailed report of the customs receipts at the\nvarious sub customs offices, as reported to the chief office in this city,\nfor the month of Fel nary:\nOrand Forks 13,793 26\nPhoenix 1.2113.17\nCarson 197 12\nCaruade ..' 48 67\nTotal * $6.242 22\nEGGS FOR SALE\nNow is the time to place\nyonr orclem. We have for\nsale settings of eggs from\nBuff Orpingtons, Black\nMinorcas, Silver Pencilled\nWyandottes and White\nRocks.\nHILLTOP POULTRY RANCH\n}. A. McCALLUM. Proprietor\nGrand forki, thorn I 10*\ntab. Itok. 1911.\nNEW BLAGKSMITH SHOP\nMOOYBOER 8 POSTMA\nGENERAL BLACHSMITHING\nHorse-Shoeing a Specialty\nRepairing of Every Description\nAll Worn folly Guaranteed\nBicycle and Automobile Repairing\nCAMSTT * MILLSrVa OLD 8MC\u00C2\u00BB\nCORNER OF MAIN AND HIST STREETS\nAt the Head\nTht-mar. al ll.. heal ui affairs\nwhether st home uf in bu-inm. it\nIhe one whine .mention you wish\nto attract\nOur paper aot, into da- best data\noi homes and i- read li> lhe head ,it\nthe family That accounts for the\nresults obtained hy the use ol\nCUwificd Want A.ls\nThe government has appointed\nAid. Taylor and Andrew Mcllwaine\nas police and licence commissioners\not (irand Forlta.\nWin. Henderson, of Victoria, government architect, ariived in the\ncity today.\nDon't forget that The Sun haa the\nbeat joh printing deparrment in the\nBoundary country.\nI,i)U nf people get atone bruises on\ntheir consciences travelling the rocky\nroad to fortune.\nSome business men are so fond of\nbeing deceived that they even endeavor to believe that tbey can reach\nthe consumers oi tbis district without advertising^ The Sun.\nGEO. W. COOPER\nPLUMBING HEATING\nINDIAN MOTOCYCLES\nBICYCLES \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 DRY BATTERIES\nETC., ETC.\nWINNIPEG cAVENUE\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\nNOTICE\nSilver King and Silver Queen* Mineral\nilHliiiH, Hirsute Iii the Urand Fork* Mlnlnir\nI'ivlninn uf Yule nimrlcr. ___\nWhere lawnteil: On the Kurt fork ol the\nNorth Fork ol Keltle Rlwe.\nTAKK NOTICK tlmt 1, Jacob M. Caliban.\nKiee -llutr'l Cerllflrsle Nu. 1681811, fur\nmyself and as airntit fur William H. Huffman,\nexecutor, ami It-iea Major, executrix, of the\nKill ol Catherine Huffman. Free Miner'*\nCertificate No. 9S817B. intend, sixty days\nin m ihne hereof, to aunly to the Mlnlnir\nKci-flrtlerloraCeitlfleiiteol Improvements, for\nthe piiristxeuf obtsinliiK ermvti Krauts of the\nabove eiHimi\nAm! further take notice that action, lindef\n..ectieii H7, must tw commenced before tbo illli-\nauee ul mioli Ccrltlcaice of Improvement.\nDated this Ith day of May, A.l) 1918.\nJACOB M. PAULSEN.\nTHC HARK OP QUALITY\nORIGINALITY AND LOW PP1CES\nWE EtlPlOYOHLYaniliO ARTISTS\nENGRAVINGS OF LETTER HUM\nCAROS.MOK COVtRS,BUIlOINGS\nLAKlS,ADOESKMS,IUUSTRATtO_n\nFOR AU PURPOSES\nFASHION DRAWINGS\nWASH DRAWINGS OF HECHAMKAL\nSUBJECTS, BIRDS EYE VIEWS\nRETOUCHING PHOTOGRAPHS\nAND CATALOGUE PLATES Of ALL\nKINDS FOR PRINTING USE.\nESTABLISHED IBM\nEM1LC.0LS0MC0.\nARTISTS, ENGRAYERS\nDESIGNERS\nHALFTONES.ZMC ETCHINGS\nCOLOR PLATES OF AU KINDS\nWOOD AND WAX ENGRAVINGS\nAHD ELECTROTYPES.\nI67&I69W.WASHIKGT0KST.\nCHICAGO\nPLUM HINTIM THB MK*\nMONTREAL.\nTHE STANDARD la the Nntlt-tiu.\nWeekly Newspaper ot the Domlntoi\nuf Canada, it ia national In all ita\nnlms.\nIt uses tho most expensive ehgrav-\nlnii\u00C2\u00BB, procurlnit tho photograph! from\nall over the world.\nIts articles ure carefully (elected (nil\nIta edltorlul policy la thoroughly\nindependent,\nA subscription lo The Standard\ncoits S2.C0 p\u00C2\u00ABr ysar lo any address In.\nCanada or Grent Urituln.\nTRY IT FOR 1912!\nMontreal Standard Publishing Co,\nLimiUd, Publis'-ars.\nElectric Restorer for Men\nPhOtDhonol \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2!\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00AB\"T an-, la the body\nrnvmy\"******* ... in proper tension s restores\ntm\nto Its proper t\nPremature dec .\n 1 at sacs. nisi-baMl will\nnew mm. Pries Maboi-ortwo lot\ntin sad vitality. Premature decay and all Mutual\nweakness netted al sacs. FhmbaMl will\nto any sddress.\nDon't be misled by false statements ol competitor*. Advertise in\nThe Sun, because it is read by more\npeople tban any otber paper printed\nin tbe Boundary district.\nI r\nTHE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\n1\nWISE AND OTHERWISE\nAfter the wedding beHs cornea the\nstruggle with the new gas range.\nYou never saw a man wear his new\nsuit in order to make another man\njealous.\nThe unlucky man is sure to find his\nprize a white elephant when he dues\ncapture one.\nBe young while you can; you'll have\nhard enough work trying to be young\nwhen you can't.\nSome men tell the time of day by\nthe suu, and aome women tell the time\nof night by the son.\nThere's is no rest for the weaay, hut\nthen who cares as long as there's a\ncrowd vl the social!\nWhen we have to work only four\nhours a day, think of all the time\nwe'll have to make chicken coops\nThe only time some persons enjoy\ndoing duty is when it is an unpleasant one for the oth r fellow.\nThe girl who can have faith in\nthree men at the same time has no\nbusiness trying.to be a summer girl.\nIt is noticeable that the present\ncraze for old things doesn't lead any\ngirl into running tallow candles and\nmaking soft soap.\nAnd the present generation will\nhave nothing: but automobile races,\naeroplane meets and moving picture\nshows to take the place of spelling\nschools, torchlight processions and\nhusking bees.\nHouses and Lots\nFor Sale in All Parts of the City\nAlso Fruit Lands and Tracts suitable for\nsubdivision. I have a few Real Snaps left\nin the boom ^centre in the West End. I\nsell my own property, and save you commission.\nNEIL c^WcCALLUM\nPHONE R 117\nORE SHIPMENTS\nThe following fire tbe rettirrm of\nthe ore production of the Boundary\nmines for the week, and also for the\nvear to date:\nGranby 24,504 lS3,G()t>\nMother Lode 5,474 47,7!H\nRawhide 5,300 34,5,52\n-Napoleon 620 5,243\nQueen Victoria 1,0(50 4,3rt2\nOthers \u00C2\u00AB0 681\nSmelter treatmen\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGranby 23,720 160,232\nB.C. CbpperCo...ll.B4l 84.946\nEgg\nSecond International\nLaying Contest\nHeld under tlu! supervision of the\nprovincial department of agriculture,\nat the exhibition grounds, Victoria\nFirst monthly total, from January 2\nto February 2, 1912, 1013:\nCLASS 1\u00E2\u0080\u0094NON-WEIOIITVAM-.TIKS.\nNn. of\nl'en Oirne.r nnd Breed. /?\naalans sine* llll\u00E2\u0080\u0094accept ns ethers.\nThe E. B. Eddy Company, Hull, Canada\nINSIST ON GETTING - EDDY'S\"\nWashboards, Wood Pails and Tub*\nFibre Pails and Tubs.\n:J5W e\nTurn idle hours into\nconcrete fence posts\nEVERY farmer finds himself now and then with a few idle\nhours in which both himself and his help must look for \"odd\njobs\" to keep them busy. Use these hours to make concrete\nfence posts. You can make a few at a time, storing them until needed. Then\nwhen you want a fence in the new field, your posts\u00E2\u0080\u0094everlasting, concrete posts\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n--are all ready to use. The making of fence posts is only one of scores of every-dajr\nuses for concrete on the farm described in the book,\n\"What The Farmer Can Do With Concrete\"\nNOTE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tlii-160 page book will be sent to you free upon request. You do nol hare to agree\nto use cement or place yourself under any other obligation. Just tend ui your turns\nand addreii. Address,\nPublicity Manager\nCanada Cement Company Limited\nHERALD BUILDING, MONTREAL\n%\u00E2\u0080\u00A2':'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00C2\u00A7;:.;*.\nI\n\"tTiTHEN yott buy cement, rememb r that lhe farmer, 0/ Canada\nW hart found that \"Canada\" Cement i, belt. THE SUN. GftAND FORKS, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n%\nL-\nOam<*tm,am stsitm* hi i h \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0n.\u00C2\u00BBttss$r]\nLuck of the\nCross Eyed-\nCat\nOt, the Omen o( Bad \\nLuck\nBy CLARISSA MACKIG\nl in-.il sihki. I i -mmm \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 inml imniisfl\n\"Where did It come trom?' demanded Hob Sabln, hou ot tbe logging\ntamp.\nThs camp cook wared a floury band\nIn midair. \"Search me,\" bs said\nfrankly. \"Bere I rat maklug thess\nbere biscuits -wben sll of a suddlnt\nmy eyes felt queer and l-*sokcd np to\nsee that-critter staring st ms big ss\nlife. I swan It glrs me s turn to look\nat IL\"\n\"1 never saw a cross eyed est before.\" remarked Sabln, surveying the\nlarge black, lean looking feline wblcb\nbad appeared In camp tbat morning.\nTbe cat bad been washing Its face Industriously, but nnder Bsbln's steady\nscrutiny It suddenly ceased Its tabors\nand stared back at blm uncannily.\nTbe right eye was Isrge and yellow,\nwith dilating black pupil In Its proper\nplsce, bnt tbe left orb was marred by\na decided cast In fact, tbe pnpll ot\nthe tye manifested a desire to disappear entirely behind the animal's nose.\n\"I wonder If It means bsd luck T\nmused Sabln.\nLater tn tbs day Sabln remembered\ntbe cross eyed cat, and wltb a tbonght\nto tbe Ingrained superstitions of soms\nof bis men and ths unnecessary talk\ntbat wonld be ezebanged among tbem,\nto tbs detriment of their work, be or-\n. dered Smith, a newcomer, to carry tbs\ncnt to where tbe highway crossed a\nlittle section of woods wbsreln tbey\nwere working snd there leave tbe est\nGlad ot any relief from tbs tedium\nof hauling logs to tbe river bank,\nyoung Smith picked ap tbt black cat\ntnd carried It, unresisting. Into tbs\nshadow of tbs woods. An bonr later\nfee returned to say that bt bsd left\nthe black cat sitting In ths middle of\ntbe highway.\n\"Gave mt a creepy feeling down tbe\ntplnt as 1 walked away.\" be remarked\ntt supper, \"and I turned and looked\nbsck, aod I know you won't believe\nwbat I'm going to tell yon,\" be concluded hastily.\n\"Ob, yes, wt will,'' chorused his companions. \"Firs ahead. Smithy!\"\n. \"1 turned and looked back, and by\ncrlcky, boyt, that cat had shifted ber\nposition so that slit was looking after\ntoe wllb them craned eyes ot ben,\naod I never wont to set a mors tvll\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2mile on snybody'a fact than there\n.was on hers.'*\n\"Hub.\"\n\"A cat \u00E2\u0080\u00A2tulle.\"\n\"Ain't you going It ratber strong,\nSmithy 1\"\n\"Itemember tbls ttn't no *4Hce In\n.Wonderland' party,\" protested another.\nAmid tbe chorus of gibes Bub 8a*\nbin's clear volet startled tbem Into silence.\n\"lf you don't believe Smith, Just look\nthere, boys,\" be said quietly.\n-there wus silence os tbe tlgbt men\nturned and looked at tbe' spot which\nhe bad Indiesicd. There, on Ibe edgt\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2r the timber growth, ist tbe black,\ncross tyed cat, tn tvll smile curving\nher wide month.\n\"Good heavens! I'm not going to\nhave tbat tblng around here!\" ejaculated Peterson, springing from bis cbslr.\n\"What art you going to do!\" bt wu\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2sked.\n\"Fill ber full of lead,\" bt announced\nominously.\nHut tbtrt wns a murmur of protest\nfrom bis companions. Sabln watched\nthem curiously, outing tbe element of\nsuperstition tbnt tinged Iheir handling\nof this matter. Ills men were com*\nposed of Americans.Swedes nnd Frencb\nCanadians, and of them til lbs Frenchmen were ibe most excitable.\n\"Ah, m'sleu.\" appealed Jean Fabrols\nto his boss, \"pray let us not bsrm tt\ntvll eyed est! Nons of us bavt too\nmooch ot ta good fortune lo takt tt\nrn.sk. I myiolr will takt ber gently\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2way tnd loss bsr.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2That's Ibt best plan. Peterson.\" said\nSabln, wltb t nod toward tbs msn\nwho was seeking his gun. Peterson\nwas disappointed and cams back to tbt\nlibit.\n\"Tbert's only ont way yeo can lost\nthst rat,\" ht grumbled.\nYoung Smith nodded bis held. \"Sbs\ncertainly camt backl\" ht ejaculated.\n\"Whit will you do, Jean?\"\n\"Ah. tlkt bsr in tt darkness ana'\nlow bsr forever In it tangle of woods\n\u00C2\u00ABn tt other stdt ot it river,\" nttlsd\nthe f reuebmsn gayiy.\n''That's i good Idea, Jean.\" commend-\nM Rabin, rising from tbt table. \"Takt\ntbt small boat aid bt back is soon ss\npossible. Wt can't Itt a cat Intcrftrs\niWltb our work In tbt morning. It't ia\nImportant matter tbnt wt get thit lol\nflown \"*ltho\u00C2\u00ABt delay.\"\n\"Out. m'sleu.*' rospoadrd Jsan Ft-\nfcorlt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 bt suddenly swooped dow*\nupon tht cnn tyed cat snd caught It f\ndeiterously In bis Isrgs hands. As bt\ndisappeared In tht direction of tht rippling river his comrades txebsnged\nsmiles of amusement and concern.\n\"Her vill comt back,\" said Larsen,\nthe big Swede, as bs pushed heavily\nan-ay from ths table.\n\"I'll give ber three times to corns\nback. Tht last tlmt will bt my torn,\"\nwarned Peterson ominously.\nNest day the big drive occurred, and\nSabln and a number of picked men\nwent down to Doubft forks* hoping to\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2vert a repetition of tbe trouble of tht\npreviout year. Tht river was running\nfull, for tbt spring freshets bsd added\ntheir share to the brimming stream.\nTbt logs csmt down a roaring, tumbling chaos of blackness, now and tben\ntossing out i dark arm is ths pressurt\nfrom behind hermit heavier. Sabln,\ntall and muscular and handsome, stood\non the east bank of tbt river at tbt\nforks snd watched tbt logs crowding\nsrouud tbs beua. Ou either bank hli\nmen were strung ilong wltb poles,\nstanding ready to risk llfs and limb tbt\nInstant necessity called for It. All\nwort rough corduroy clothing snd long\nhip boots.\n\"It tbls lot gets through all right wt'll\n' be safe tbls time.\" muttered Sabln to\nyoung Smith, who stood closs beslds\nhim.\nThey looked upstream where tbt\nwhite foam bubbled around/a mass ot\ntumbling logs, It wn I great ligbt.\nespecially when a log was tossed twenty feet In tbs air to come crashing\ndown upon Its.fellows In life water.\nTbe two men were so Interested lu tht\ntight ot tht approaching logs thnt tbey\ndid not realize at first what had happened when Peterson's voice was megaphoned across the river.\n\"Jam there!\" be yelled. \"Jnml\"*\nSabln looked. It was true.\nAcross tbe river directly In front ol\ntbem snd at Its narrowest point the\nlogs bad Jammed Into a wall tbnt momentarily Uftw wider as mors logs\nwere added as tbey floated down.\nSomewhere In that raaiie of tret\ntrunks was one log that formed tbt\nkey to the situation. Locate tbnt log\nand ptf It loose snd tbo wall wonld\nbo broken. Then tbe rest of tbe drlvt\nwould follow like a flock ot sheep.\nSabln frowned aad swore s little.\nTbere wss t chorus ot .Indignant yells\nis suddenly there broke from tbe\nwoods on tbe west bank ot tbt river a\nlean, black streak that shot out In ont\nflying leap Ind landed on one of tbt\nlogs tbat formed tht lower end ot tbt\nbarrier.\n- \"The cross eyed cat!\" yelled Peterson\nthrough the megaphone. Then be'\ndanced sngrlly np and down as be\ncontinued: \"1 knew It would bring ns\nbid lock. Mr. Sabln. If t can borrow\na gun I'd like to knock It Into flinders!\nMny I?'\n\"Don't bt s fool, Peterson!\" shopjed\nback bli employer. \"One of you fellows get out there snd start tbat Jam,\nsnd I guess tht cat will get all that's\ncoming to blm.\"\nTbers wns a moment's conference\namong tht men on tht west bank, and\ntbsn Peterson lesped to tbe nearest ot\ntbe closely packed logs and made bis\nway cautiously toward the onter edge\nof tbe Jam. Be carried a gun.\nAll at once the lumbermen met with\nanother surprise From tbe same\npolut In tho woods from whence hnd\ncome tbe cross eyed cat tbere darted a\ngirl's slender form. She wore s red\ncloak, and a red knitted cap was tossed on the hack of ber wind blown\ndark bair. She looked neither to tbt\nleft or right Her gaze seemed trans-.\nDied upon ths small block form of tbs\ncross eyed est and tbe gnu In Peterson's band.\nAlmost on tbe beets of Peterson sbe\nleaned fearlessly to tbs Hooting logs\nand tben darted from ons tn another\ngntll sbe panted close behind Peter\nson's big form. Tbe boss lumberman\non tbe shore watched ber wltb panic\nstricken eyes. If tht Jam sbonld break,\nas It mlgbt any Instant, whnt chance\nwonld tbat frail girl bars among the\ngrinding togs} Peterson, big nnd\nstrong ss be was, realized tbat hs was\ntaking a cbaoce lu trying to break tbt\njam,\n\"Coward!\" cried tbt girl, htr voles\nrinsing cltarly above tbs boiling of tbt\nwater among tbt logs, As sbs spoke\nshe snatched Peterson's gun from hts\nnerveless bsnd and flung It Into ibt\nstream. Tben sbs leaped to tbt tnor.\nmom pine log on whicb tht crura tyed\ncnt ut and clasped ths uncanny creature In her arms. Tben sbs uruss and\nfor tbe first time seemed to realize tbs\nsituation.\nHer lift wss not worth sn Instant's\npurchase It tbe Jam brokt. Sbe turned\nterror stricken eyes toward Peterson,\nwbo Indulged In ont ot bis flerco tits\not anger, laoghfd contemptuously it\nbtr and leisurely flicked bis way over\nthe logs, protending to scrutlnlzs each\none-sen re bing for tbt key log tbit\nwonld break tht Jam.\nSabln watched tbt two for ont long\nminute. Then, wltb an Indrawn brtatb\nof mingled +sge snd fear, bt lit bli\nfoot on tbt nearest log ind wtnt to\ntbe rescue of tbt girt. At ht lifted btr\nfainting form In bli iron, togttbtr\nwltb tbi bltck cit. wblcb ibt still carried wrapped in tho folds of btr rtd\ncloak, bt itft tbt fi-Mt pint log oa\nwblcb tlit crura eyed ett bad dtlinM\nto Ht Stbtn'i foot hid bsrely ltft tht\nlog wben It shivered slightly.\n\"Tbt key log-she's breaking nowt\"\nshouted Sabln and need for tbt nearest shore.\nAa bt stumbled op tbt river bank\nwith bis double toad ot lovely girl and\ncross tyed black cat there camt a\ncrabbing boom from tbt river as tbt\nJam brokt and the logs went thundering down to their destination.\nAfter beautiful Malslt Woods bsd\ndeparted for boms wltb her lost ptt-\nyes, ths crass eyed bltck cat-big Peterson approached the lumber boss\nshamefacedly enongb.\n\"I suppose yon'll wsnt me to band\nln my tlmt, sir,\" bt muttered. \"It'a atl\ntbt luck of tbat cross eyed cat\"\n\"Nonsense!\" returned Sabln brightly,\nt happy light in bis dsrk tyei. \"Stay\non, Peterson, and try to remember tbal\ntht cross eyed cat brokt tbs Jam, after\nall. If anybody can show ms a better\nmascot than a cross eyed black cat I'd\nlike to bt shown.\"\nAfttr Sabln bad married Maltls\nWoods nnd had become part owner of\ntbe black cat tbsy understood what ht\nmeant .\nThe Tramp\u00E2\u0080\u0094My pal says as 'ow yoa\n'ave lust give Mm sixpence for 'avln'\none leg.\nThe Old Lady-yes, I did.\nThe Tramp-Weft, tben, gl' me a shll-\nlin', cos I've gott wo.-Sketch. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\n_ TOOK HIMJJTERALLY.\nAnd ths Qrsst Sculptor Heuden Found\nHis Name Changed,\nBoudon, the famous Frencb sculptor,\nrendered great service to tbe fine arts\nnot only through tbt masterpieces hs\nleft behind blm, but also by perfecting\ntbt casting ot statues tn bronze. This\nsrt fallen Into dlsuss since tbe renaissance, be revived. Wben be reached\nhis seventy-third year, writes Mr. 0. B.\nBart and Mr. Edward Blddle In tbelr\nlife ot tbt artist, Boudon withdrew\nfrom active work. As-a means ot\nagreeable relaxation bo began also to\nfrequent the performances at ths Come-\ndle francnls.\nIt lo happened that In consequence\nof certain alterations tbe building bad\nto be closed for a considerable period.\nOn the day of its reopening,Boudon\ncame as usual, but a new ticket taker\nhnd been engaged since bis last visit\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'Monsieur, your ticket, pleasel\" this\nofficial cried.\n\"I don't need any,\" and tbe venerable figure continued to advance.\n\"But, monsieur, uo oue enters without a ticket\"\n\"1 bave my entree, air,\" replied Boudon. growing warm.\n\"Bnt bow do you call yourself?\"\n\"Bow do I call myself/ Bow do I\ncall myself?\" Tben pointing to tht\nstatue tn tbt peristyle, wblcb be himself bnd made, \"I'm tbe father of Voltaire!\" be cried, aad be passed In triumphantly. The amusing part of It Is\ntbnt the next evening as Boudon pass*\ned ln the ticket taker turned to bis assistant and Instructed blm to Inscribe\non tho register of entries for the evening, \"M. Voltaire. Is pere.\" It ls easy\nto Imagine tbo hilarious reception of\nthis at tbe Comcdle. and for somt tlmt\nafter tbe old sculptor nas referred to\nby this name exclusively.\nA POET'S GUARDIAN.\nPaludan-Muller*! Flares Little Wift\nKept Him Secluded.\nThs famous poet of Denmark, Filu-\ndan-Muller, was closely guarded in his\nlater years by an eccentric wife, greatly bit senior. Of her preposterous\noddity, writes Edmund Gosso la \"Two\nVisits to Denmark,\" stories were everywhere current ln Copenhagen. She\nkept blm ii mucb as sho possibly\ncould from all Intercourse with tbt\nonler world. During a visit to Copenhagen the bost of Mr. Gosse decided\nto Invite tbe poet to dine, ond bis\ndaughter and guest were tent on \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nmission to Invite blm.\nIf ws could secure hlm.for t night\nconvenient to him, writes Mr. Gosse,\nsll tbat was brightest snd best In Copenhagen was to bs constrained to\ncome too. But fortune wss against ns.\nIf we hsd found him alone It Is possible that success mlgbt bnve crowned\nour efforts. When we arrived wltb\nour dinner Invitation on our lips we\nwcrt damped by being told tht poet\nhad gone ont for a walk, but tbat Mrt.\nI'aludan-Muller would receive us. Tbs\nfierce little lady, In fact, closed onr retreat by peeping round tbe edge of tbs\ndoor and commanding us to enter.\nMiss Alias Fog, overwhelmed by tht\nevent, lost ber presence of mind tnd\nblurted out- tbs invitation, which ll\nwould bavt been wiser to suppress.\nThs answer came at once: \"Impossible, my dear lady. Impossible! 1 could\nnot sanction It. Mr. Paludan-Muller Is\nweak; be Is good nstured; bt Is only\ntoo ready to go Into society. It ls my\nprivilege lo prevent It. I say to him:\n'Vou aro too delicate, my dear, to mix\nwith others. Tou must positively consider your health'.'\"\nMiss Fog feebly tsked whether the\npoet mlgbt not blmself bs appealed to,\n\"sucb old friends; so small a party; so\nearly an tourl\" Tbe lady was quits\nobdurato, however. \"I conld not trust\nhim with yoar message. Be Is so\nweak, so. good natured. Bis plsce ls\nst home wltb me. 1 do not wltb to\ndine abroad. Wby sbould bt?\"\nHit Hsrvstt Seiion.\nTeacher\u00E2\u0080\u0094Now, Knrlle, tell nt when\nts tht harvest teton. Bsrllt\u00E2\u0080\u0094 From\nNovember to March. Tescbtr-Why,\nEirlle, I tm surprised tbst yoa sbonld\nnsmt sucb barren months. Wbo told\nyou tbey went tht harvest season!\nEsrllt-I't. Be't i plnmber.-Brooklyo\nKlglt.\nEYE STRAW.\nFirst Ftlt Net In tht Eyes, but 1* Ma\nOrgan That Is Weakest\nNo human organ, txcept possibly tbt\nheart, lt called on for such bard and\ncontinuous activity. Even the most\nmusical ear is never taxed beyond tbt\nthree or four houn of a Wagnerian\nopera and at the worst Is rested by\n(reqnent Intermissions. Tbe Drain,\neven tn tbe case ot professional men.\nIs called on for only six to eight hours\nof work a dny. But we use our eyes\nIn business all day and tben nil evening In our amusements. In point of\nfact tbt heart Itself ti less severe)/\ntaxed.\nTbe eye bas, to bt sure, l most marvelous strength. Al long ts Its mechanism remslns measurably correct It\nseldom or uever gives out, snd Itt vitality ls supreme. But wben to tbt\nstrain ot near work tn artificial light\nare added defects tn Its own uiecban-\n; Ism even tbls wonderfully adaptable\nand hardy servant gives symptoms ol.\nstrain.\nTbt brain ls generally our flrst Informer. It automatically Applies Iha\nenergy tbnt flogs the lens muscle to Itt\nceaseless task, and It Is In the closest\npossible sympathy wltb tbs retina, tbt\nsensitive plate on which all vision Is\nrecorded. The brain declares Its exhaustion ln headache aod vertigo. Tbt\nmasterful tyt, tu tb speak, shunts oft\nIts snering upon the nearest neighbor.\nYet In many cases even tbe brain\ngives no direct symptom. It Is tba\ncentral organ, tbe highly vital and\ncomplex master, ot the entire system,\nand lt also bas a superior way ot passing on tbe kick. Just bow It does tbls\noculists do not profess to know. Tbt\nrule teems to bs tbat eyt ttraln declares Itself first in tbe organ wblcb ts\nnearest snd weakest The stomach,\ntbs liver, tbe Intestines, tbt kidney,\ntht benrt or ths membranes of aosi\nsnd throat may develop symptoms\nwhllt tht eyt and tbe brain teem nor-\nmat-Metropolitan Magazine.\nOutdoor Floral detritions.\nPottery Jars snd vases are, of count,\nvery attractive for holding flowers\nwhen used on tbe porch it a decoration, but tbe most suitable receptacle!\nLllsrsry Nets.\nDtntlst-Penley, tbt oovelllt, wat ll\nthis morning and hsd t tooth pulled.\nFrtend-Abl An extract from \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 popu.\nItr author, ss It wire.-Boston 'l*ria>\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2dipt\na* Why, Indeed.\n\"Why, oh, why,\" remarked tho observer uf events and things, \"will a\nwoman smile with delight when she\nsees a hat in a milliner's window and\nfrofvn when she sees tho same hat\non her neighbor's head?\"\nTha Hssling Laugh,\nMerrlopathy Is tbe sclencs of tbs\nhealing laugh. Merrlopathy Is better\ntbao homeopathy or allopathy for cur\nIng all the gloom diseases nnd grouch\ncomplaints that innko llfs inlseniblt.\nTbi wise physician well understands\ntbe therapeutic value or fun snd l\nchecrim spirit Medicine may bi t\nnecessary aad powerful agent In tbt\ntreatment of Illness, bnt It may fall\nwhere tear and melancholy Join bandi\nwith Ihe disease. Laughter Is one ot\nthe best medicines In tbt world snd\nlengthens lire as well ss brightens It\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nChristian Herald.\nAids to Gordon.\nMajor Henry Octuvius Brown, who\nwas at ono time A.D.C. to \"Chinese\"\nGordon, and who received from the\nChinese Uovernui'-nt the rare order of\ntin Imperial Dragon, died recently is\nNtw Westminster, sged 74 years.\nCsrts Blanch*.\n\"1 tblnk.\" said Mrs. Cumrox. wbo\nwas arranging a musical -program,\n\"tbat wt will bavt t mezzo toprano.\"\n\"All right\" replied her Indulgent\nhusband. \"Don't bother me shout It\nOo sbead tnd set in architect\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWashington Slar.\nrtxtD DAISIES AMD rnuis.\nsn those of birch bark, suggesting it\nthey do the spirit ot the woods.\nThe Illustration shows an attractive\narrangement of Held daisies and ferns\nIn a tall birch bark vase.\nPointing ths Path tf Duly.\n\"\"Don't you think women ought to\nvoter\n\"Of course I do,\" replied Mr. I.row-\nclier, \"Mao Is oppressed by economic\nconditions which only women cau uo\nderstnnd. What women want to do Is\nto get together and legislate to prareut\nbnt mops trom collecting $10 for t\nhandful of straw aad t Duucb ot\nfcithera.\"-\Vashtngton Star.\nWring Diagnosis.\nBlngs-DId you see where tome critic\nsoys tbat women bave not gut the objective faculty? naags-Huhl I'd Ukt\nthnt critic to start tny question wltb\nmy wtft.-Baltlmort Amtrl.-nn.\nSt Funny.\n\"I wonder,\" sola tht bead of tbt fim.\nHy, surveying t contemplated purchast\nof a family Heed, \"If ht will kick.\"\n\"Oh, pa,\" niggled hit daughter, \"It't\nfunny, but tliut'i'exactly whnt Georgt\nasked tbuut you.\"-Btltlmort Amerl-\ncm. \t\nCtrdlll.\nlira. Jenkins-Mrs. Smith, wt ahall\nbt neighbors now. I bavt bought a\nbousi next you wltb a water trontagt.\nMrt. 8mltb-So glad! I hopt you will\nIrop In lomt time.-Everybody's.\nTsm e' Shsnltr's Inn.\nEvery visitor to Ayr. Scotland,\ntbould Its tbt lllllt Tim o' Shunter\nInn, wltb Hi tlmptt frflnt tnd great\nlamp banging over tbt sidewalk, lien\nopentd tbi tcene nblcb Robert Burnt\nhas Immortalized In bts pottn '\"llm o*\nShunter.\" Tarn bsd spent a very cun*\nvlvlnl tvtnlng at tht Inn, aud wben bt\nDon My started bonis on bts gray mare,\nMtg. bs wns in s ratber foggy framt\nof mind. A terrific ttorin was raging,\nsnd on ths way ht wot caught by\nghosts, whu ended bis csrthly csrttr.\nHindi Upl\n\"Tou uy you were beld up tbli\nmorning by a footpad with a revolver.\nAt whot time?\"\n\"Five mlnutci to 1.\"\n\"Bow can you fix tbt time to precisely?\"\n\"Because I could let tbt church\nclock, and I noticed tbat Hi htndi\nwere exactly In tbt tame position it\nmy own.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Boston Transcript\nCrutl ind Unusual.\nOf course the Icemen ara all churls.\nNo wonder they look wan.\nFor every morn Ihey see ths flrlt\nj Without their mskiUDi on.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0sd Fsr Chickens.\n. \"I think, dear, wt may ns -.veil glvt\n, np tht Idea of raising chickens thli\nyear.\"\n| \"Why? Don't you tblnk It will be \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n'good yenr for chickens?\"\n{ \"Xo. It will cost too much to feed\nIlium. Tho man next door tells mi\nJ lhat he hat Joined t golf club, sn bt\n{Iso't likely to bavt a gardens-Chicago Record-Herald.\nLiterally.\nPoliceman (to suspicious stranger it\nmidnight)-What ire yoa doing In this\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tortt Burglar-Can't ytr tet I'm tsk-\nId' stock?-Iloston Transcript\nTss Sensible tt dive Ut.\n\"Will yuu promise.\" tbt inilously\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2sked \"not to do snythlngdeiptri.il If\nI tny It con uever btl\"\n\"Vet,\" bt replied. \"I tblnk i mtn'i\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 foot who (on to tht bad bteinst \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ngirl refuses to love him.\"\n'Tbsn I will bt jours.\"-Cblcsg*\nRtcord-Hernld.\nHi's Out.\nIt's almost time In melt once more\nThst spoiler ot OsltlM,\nThat kill Joy, iiirtviltni bora\n1 Who thlaki Ih* umpire rlibt\nNtxt to eictllinct It tht apprtclitloi\n\u00C2\u00BBt It-Thickenu _\nMsks Uss tt Tlmt.\nKnow tbt trutriiuiot tlmt. Snitch,\nselii ind enjoy tnry morotnt ot It\nNo Idttnm, ao ntlness, no procrtstl.\nostlons. Ninr put off (HI tomprruu\nwhat yoo no do todiy.-CbtitirBii*\nPitlenct li bitter, hat Itt frulti U\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2mtt-Uuumia\nAustrisn English.\nTh* proprietor of a bottl it Prague),\nAustria, bli oppcuded tbt following\nnolle* to hli English nt* card: \"Dl*\nsatisfied guests are pleaded to bring\nibilr tlBlclloni to my own person.\"\nTht LtrgMt Lum.\nattain/ hn tb* world'* Isrgtst\nloom, Id which ftlt dliki for pipit\nmills up to Sts fnt la ctrcnafltttct\nCM bt W\u00C2\u00BBT*B. tl'-.t' !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I III\t\n*-u:j'-'\" -\"\"7\nTHE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\n1\nfc\n(^Announcement\nI am now ready to serve your\nHardware Wants in My\nBig New Store\n/ extend to you an invitation to\nvisit and see the up-to-date store.\nsJWake this Your Headquarters.\nI shall tn future, as in the past, try\nto please you and give you full\nvalue tor your money\".\nW. K. C. cTVIANLYJ\nNLWS OF THL CITY IN BRIEF\nAn interesting case wns tried in\ntht police court yesterday morning.\nThe provincial police summoned G.\nM. Fripp fyr not renawing his motocycle license. Mr. Fripp's defence\nwas that he did not intend to ubb\nmachine this year, and therefore he\nhad no of a license. After both sides\nhad given their evidence, Magistrate\nCochrane rendered a verdict in fa\nvor of tbe defendant and dismiss, d\nthe case.\nA telegram hus been received in\nVictoria from the secretary of commerce and labor at Washington, D.\n0.,. to the effect that the decision\nof tbe immigration officials at Marcus, refusine Peter Vereittn admission to the United Slates, has been\nabrogated. It will he remembered\nthat Mr. Vtregin was on his way to\nVictoria to interview the government when he ws\u00C2\u00AB I opped at the\nfrontier, and as a consequence had\nto return home.\nIn thp provincial estimates Grand.\nForks riding gets 188,000 for roads\nand bridges; Greenwood, 163,0(10;\nOkanasan, $260,000.\nMr. Harkness returned to the cily\nlast .Saturday from the Okanagan,\nwhere he has been ranching for a\ncouple of years.\nW. C. Allen, of Grand Forks, who\nfor several months has been the guest\nof his niece, Mrs. A. L Towns, at\nthe Hotel Republic, will leave next\nweek for Vancouver, B. C-, wbere he\nhas purchased a home, He recently\nsold a valuable fruit ranch near\nGrand Forks. -Republic Newt*.\nMiner. \t\nIt iR reported in Greenwood that\nthe British Columbia Copper com\npany intends shortly lo resume development work al the Brooklyn\nmine, in Pboenix cnmp, which has\nhepn closed for a number of years.\nWm. Waterston, formerly city\nelectrician of Grand Forks, but whi*\nfor a number of years lias been lo\ncnted in Vancouver, returned to\nthat city last Monday after a week's\nvisit in the Boundarv.\nThe Jewel mine has been tern\nporarily closed down, and Supsria\ntendent C. A punka lefl 'ireenwood\nla\u00C2\u00ABt week for London lo confer with\nthe directors of the property.\nColumhia Copper company, to sue-\ncet*d E Hihhert.\nFo-'-es M Kerby, P.L.S, relurned on Wednesday from a bust\nness trip tn Kamloops and tbe coast\ncities.\nLost\u00E2\u0080\u0094Plain gold wedding ring;\ninitials E ... to C. C. Finder return\nIt to the office of The Sun. Reward.\nTwenty-one sacks of T. Ea'on\ncatalogues arrived at the Grand\nForks post office last Saturday.\nW. K. C. Manly returned last Friday from a business trip to Spo\nknne.\nTen Minorca Roosters, one yenr\nold, for sale. Apply Dick Malm,\nRuckle addition.\nSubstitute for the Big Stick\nThe United States of America appeared as complainant against'ont\nwalking stick\" in a suit in the federal court in Boston last Saturday.\nThe cane was seized by customs officers because of a picture concealed\nin its' handle. Judge Morton gave its\nowtier, a sailor on tbe freighter In-\ndrant, until March 11 to show cause\nwhy it sbould not be forfeited to the\nUnited States, As the seaman is now\non tbe high seas, bound for China,\nUncle Sam may get a new stick. j\nThe Sun job office ia overstocked j\nwith some sizes of billheads. Call\nand get a bargain.\nMining Stock Quotations' j\nSpokane, Feb. 27 \u00E2\u0080\u0094The follow j\ning me today s opening quotations for\nthe stocks mentioned:\nBid. Askerl\nGranby Consolidated. 53.00 58 00\nB. C. Copper 4.00 4.7..\nWILSON'S REMEDY\nEFFICIENT IN\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0MNCHITIS, CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA,\nCATARRH, SBIPFE, STUBBORN COUGHS, [TC.\nFrom a Minister lu New Tork: \"I was\n\"severely 111 with lung trouble. My otten-\n\"tlou was directed to the Wilson Remedr\n\"whicli I used wltb splendid effect.\"\nFrom a lady ln Michigan: **1 used your\n\"medicine Snt 43 or 44 years ago ond It\n\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0and me from ending my days with consumption. Tbere would be no use ot so\n\"many people dying with consumption tf\n\"they could be persuaded to try Wilson's\n\"Ilemedy.\"\nIf yon are suffering from ANT tang or\nthrci.it trouble It ls your duty to Investigate. Send for free full Information to\nWilton's Sternest, Westwood. N. *.\nHANSEN 8 CO |\nCITY BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER\nWOOD AND COAL DEALERS\nAND GENERAL TEAMING\nOfficii\nF. Downey's Cigar Store\nOrpic's, Rut' ' ' ffart StrHt II\nHanssm's HKsinisc-t.RiB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\" OltWil I\nMetal Quotations\nNkw York, Feb. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Silver 6!\;\nI standard copper, tl4.75@15.00;\nI weak.\n.London, Feb. 20.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Silver, 28J;\nI lead, \u00C2\u00A316 10b.\nTHE\nLONDON DIRECTORY\n(I'ubltibed Annually)\nEimiileB tntderi throughout the world to\ncommunicate riireot with BngHith\nM ANUFACTUKEK8 it DEALERS.\nIn each clans, of irood*. Besides beinjr a com-\npltte coininert;iul guide to Loudon and lt\u00C2\u00AB\nsuburbs, the directory o\u00C2\u00ABntaiuft lists of\nEXPORT MERCHANTS\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nwith tbe (louda they .tup, and the Colonial\nand Konlgn Marketi thoy.iuuply:\nSTEAMSHIP LINES .\nin-HNtred under the I'orUto which thoy\nand iiidlcetinit the nuiiroxlmate Sail m_\u00C2\u00BB\nPUOVINCIAL TRADE NOTICES\nof leadlun Mamifsetiiren, Merchants, etc.. In\nthe principal provincial towna and '\u00E2\u0080\u0094 -'\nm-ntrcauf the United Kinadom.'\n' A copv ol thc current edition will he fur-\nwarded', freight paid, on receipt of Portal\nOrder lor 208.\nDealers seeklnaaAgencles oan advertise\nIholr trade eardi lor IS, \u00E2\u0080\u009Er Uraer advertise\nmen!* from \u00C2\u00A33,\nTHE LONDON DIRECTORY CO., LTD.,\nih Ahchun-li Lane, London, E.C.\nWOOD AND FENCB POSTS\nPHONE L14\nDry four-foot Fir and Tamarac. Cedar and\nTamarac Posts. Prompt attention to phone orders.\nA. GALLOWAY, \u00C2\u00ABSu,. Columbia p. d\nGrand Forks Transfer\nPHONE IX9\nCOAL, WOOD, OIL, CEMENT\nDRAYING Of ALL HINDS\nTrunks to and From Stations\n; Mclntyre 8 Clayton, Props.\nST. JOSEPH'S BOARDING\nAND DAY SCHOOL\nLocated in tbe central part of the citv\nnf NeNon, offers every facility fur a\nali.J-A.iil.il education in Englinh, ciiiiitiierciul\nand music branches. Embroider .-.plain\naud fancy needlework and singing are\ngiven special attention. The commercial course includes stenography, typewriting, bookkeeping and commercial\npractice. Pupils prepared for examinations of the Associated Boards of the\nLondon Royal Academy and Koyal\nCollege of Music.\nGeon\u00C2\u00BBi D. Clark returned home\nihis week from a business trip to\nVancouver. _.\nTake your repairs to Artnson's\nRoot and Shoe Hospital, Bridge\n*treet, Orand Forks.\nUT. CHAS. bAt.ES SAYS\nUa. C. A. ABBOT\", Aujnit ll, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0**.\nfcAnnSl., NewYorVCUv.\nDur Sir: l hav*. known fnr over 40 yean of tto\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_.ect>ofW.lton'.keni.i!v I Wllann'l Preparntfca\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I Hjpovboephltee uld Ulodwttll in mewl pul-\nxxooxey troul.1.1. At thli point I will xx, to yoa\nwhat tou have not befor. known of; that 40 yeara\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2uce, while I was \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 nsident of N.Y. City, I wu\naevanljIUw'tliliuigtnHil.'e. Fhyilciuiuidlwaa\namtesaattr, and my fain, ly physician told my wl fa\nthat kathoosht I conld net reaver. Mratuattoa\nana directed 10 the Wilson Kemedy, which I aaat\nwtehapleadidedrct. I havo been on ay feat and at\nwcekavaraincerwreaifl.. Yours truly,\nRKV.CHAS.SAOER,\nWmm IC Vfl Chord, Hunter, (Greene Co.,) N. Y.\nOa Pec ,, ion, Mr. Saser wrote Mr. Abbott;\n\"My kaalth li very uuod.'r\nIf you will -fl rite Mr. Abbott he\nwill gladly fmni >i you any further\nInformation yuu desire.\nPrintin\nWe are prepared to do \u00C2\u00ABi\nall kinds of\nCommercial Printing\nOn the shortest notice and in\nthe most up-to-date \u00C2\u00A9tyle\nBECAUSE\nWe have the most modern jobbing plant\nin the Boundary Country, employ com\npetent workmen, and carry a complete\nline of Stationery.\nLeslie J. Bruce, of Nelson, inspec\ntor of schools, spent a couple of days\nin Ihe city ihis week inspecting lbs\nvarious schools of the disiiiel\nW. F. ROBINSON\nGENERAL TRANSFER WW\nwood and ice:\nF. S. Norcross, a native of Menominee, Mich., has heen appointed or,,ot *T \"TW**\" 'TORE\ngeneral superintendent of the British PIONF 64 GRAND FORKS, B. li.\nSuits to Order &18 iWs\n1 We are agents for some of the leading tailoring establishments in the eaat. When you order from us you have\nthe advantage of being measured by a practical tailor,\nensuring perfect fit. We guarantee satisfaction.\nOur Fall and Winter Goods Have Arrive d\nThey are the best you can buy. We guarantee yon the\nbest made clothes in the country at the lowest prices.\nWe always have men that know their business making\nthese clothes. Call and see our goods and prices. We\nwant your trade, and we can give you satisfaction.\nGeo. E. Massie, the Reliable Tailor\nWE PRINT\nKillheuils und Statements,\nletterheads and Envelopes,\nPosters, Dates and Dodgers,\nBusiness and Visiting Cards,\nLodge Constitutions and Uy laws.\nShipping Tugs, Circulars and Placards,\nRills of Fare and Menu Cards,\nAnnouncements nnd Counter\nPads, Wedding Stationery.\nEverything turned out in an\nUp-to-date Printery.\n(pnnn pdimtiiwj-the kmd we r*o\u00E2\u0080\u0094i\"-in ibw\"\nvlUUl/ LMnilLlVJ an advertisement, and a trial\norder will convince you that our stock and workmanship are of the best. Let us estimate on vour order.\nWe guarantee satisfaction.\nm Wye &tm f ritit Stop\nM9**P&QaiP&V _^^\u00C2\u00BBTi\nPICTURES\nAND PICTURE fRAMINB\nFurniture .Made to Order.\nAlso Repairing of all Kinds. _,\nUpholstering Neatly Doije.\nKAVANAGH & McCUTCHEON\nVMNNIPBG ATBNCB\nDowney's Ci$|ar Store\nnMt'l-KTIt -fin K (IP\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Cigars, Pipes and Tobaccos\n\ Ki'-nti . -Mi.mliti.iii.-iit f)|\nConfectionery\"\nIWivhI We. k v.\nPostoffice BuilcUng\nPalace Barber Shop\nKm*-\" tiv h *\nfell\ntig it H|M\u00C2\u00BB "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_1913-02-28"@en . "10.14288/1.0341923"@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 .