"0afdcbca-8484-4ba4-90b6-3a04921fc0e3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1911-01-27"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0342110/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " ,- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWtoeti\u00E2\u0080\u009E,\n-\nftbe\nTenth Year\u00E2\u0080\u0094No. 12\nGrand Forks, B. C, Friday. January 27, 1911\nTHE ICE CARNIVAL\nA Large Attendance and\n.\nMclnnes 9\")\n7^1\nGreenwood 12\nGreenwood..\nBurns Cup Competition\nHood..\n J} Mclnnes\t\nMcNicol\nMclnnes,\nIH\nMotrin.. .Z.'.'.'.'.'.'.:.5}Morrin ,a-l\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nWilliams, ,V\ _-M<\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 9]\nGardner\n...,,\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0g\ Williams tof\nK!!:::z=.:,nMcKira \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00ABj\n* J ]\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Greenwood 9,\nj-Greenwood....: 9.\nMclnnes..\nPerkins..\nGreenwood..\nGreenwood 1\noj\nGrand Forks Cup Competition\nMorrin til\nMclnnes 12}\nWilliams 6)\nMarshall l6(\nAtwood 13*\nGardner it J\nMcNicol i\nPerkins J\nBrown it)\nMcKim 3}\nGreenwood ul\nHood 13C\nMclnnes 6\nMarshall 8\nAlwoot. lol\nMcNicol... 20)\nBrown 9)\n\ Hood\t\nHood 14)\nMarshall 51\nI\nj- Nicol..\nii .\nMcNicol 12 J\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2131\n1 Hood..\n..li J\n^/ill-Comers Competition\nLHood..\n1 Atwood..\nRod and Gun for January\nVariety, and plenty of it, is the\nkeynote of the January issue of Rod\nand Gun in L'anada. The opening\narticle deals with thn outfit required\nfor the backwoods, nnd though\nsportsmen may differ on' many of\nthe trimmings, there will be a general agreement as to the essentials.\nThis is followed by a number of\npersonal experiences in hunting,\nfishing, canoeing and mountaineering throughout Canada, while a\n(taper on the birds of Manitoba and\nsome iight verses add materially to\nthe interest of thc number and recommend it as one in which sportsmen of all tnstes can find something\nwhich cannot fail to prove both\npleasurable and profitable to themselves.\nThe Copper Situation\nDiscussing the copper situation,\nformer Senator William A. Clark,\npresident of the United Verde Copper company, says:\nI consider that there is a fair copper outlook for 1911. While domestic deliveries are off, January so\nfar bas produced twice the nmount\nof inquiry ns compared with the\ncorresponding period in December.\nThe stagnation in the steel industry\nis, of course, bound to he reflected\nin c, at I look for improve\nment in ,oth lines in the near fu.\nture.\nHood 141 -\nMorrin 6/\nAtwood 13 j\nPerkins 11 1\nMclnnes 16 \ ,,. _,\nMarshall ,} Mclnnes..\n\"cJ$!mV '31 McKim....\nMcNicol 12 }\nGardner '-^Gardner \\nOreenwoott.. 9 J 1\nb^\":::::::::::::::::i}n\u00C2\u00B0'>\u00C2\u00AB'''1^'1 /\n}\nZ. Pare contracted cold feet last\nwinter, and there nre no indications\nthat they have been thawed out.\nSome time ago the chief of police\npromised us a game, but signs are\nnot lacking that be is beginning to\nwilt.\nChinese New Year starts on Sunday, the 29th inst. The inhabitants\nof Chinatown will receive all next\nweek.\nTHE BONSPIEL\nMeetings Under Auspices of\nDepartment of Agriculture\nThe provincial department of\nagriculture has arranged for a series\nof \"short courses\" in fruit growing.\nThe department recognizes the importance of having every fruit\ngrower acquainted with the principles of soil culture, tfee growth, etc.,\nthat underlie his everyday operations. The principles of fruit growing are not less important than the\npractice. The application of principle to practice will be a feature of\nall the lectures. The different\nmethods of culture necessary for\nmost economical production in each\nparticular district will be emphasized. Men in every branch of\nfarming will find the lectures on\nsoils, plant growth, nnd cultivation,\nof value to them, and all interested\nin agriculture are invited to attend\nthese meetings.\nThe meetings in this city will be\nheld on Thursday and Friday, February i) and 10. The following is\ntbe program:\nThursday.Februnry 9\u00E2\u0080\u00942:00 p.m.,\n\"TypeB of Soils in Relation to Practical Ft nit Growing,\" B. Hoy; 3:30\np.m., \"Physiology of Plants in Relation to Practical Fruit Growing,\"\nJ. F. Carpenter; 7:30 p.m., \"Orchard\nPests and Their Control,\" B. Hoy;\n8:30 p.m., \"Sprays and Spraying,\"\nJ. F. Carpenter.\nFriday, February 10\u00E2\u0080\u00942:00 p.m.,\n\"Selection of Nursery Stoek. Orchard Plans and Planting,\" M. 8. Middleton; 3:30 p.m., \"Irrigation and\nthe Control of Soil Moisture,\" B.\nHoy; 7:90 p.m., \"Winter Injury,\nand ItB Prevention,\" B. Hoy; 8:00\np.m., \"Pruning: Summer and Winter,\" M. S. Middleton.\nGrand Forks Rinks Are Victorious in Three of the\nEvents\nThe local hockeyists appear to be\nnfraid of The Sun's team. At any\nrate, they are not anxious to meet\nour aggregation on the ice. Peter A.\nRev. Father J. A. Bedard, of\nGreenwood, who until recently con\nducted services in Phoenix, is lenv\ning for St. Mary's hospital, New\nWestminister, for a complete rest,\nHe was tendered a big farewell testi\nmonial in Greenwood this week,\nHis successor is Rev. Fnther Lam\nbat, O.M.I.D.D., formerly director\nof St. I.ouiB college, New Westminster.\nShow cartls for widnows and inside\nare a fine form of silent salesmen.\nMake them brief, terso and pointed]\nPrint them plainly, to bc read at a\nglance.\nSome business men arc so fund of\nbeing deceived thnt they even endeavor to believe that they can reach\nIhe consumers of this district without advertising in The Sun.\nThinking possibilities makes mora\npeople happy than counting probaj\nbilities.\nThe three days' bonspiel of the\nBoundary curling clubs at the local\nrink wound up the three of thc\nevents lust night, nnd the last of the\nvisitors departed for their home today. Tho fourth event, the All-\nComers, is now confined to the\nplay-off among the local rinks, and\nwill be finished tonight.\nThe following local and visiting\nriuks participated in the bonspiel:\n(IRAND KOUKS.\nGeo. Traunweiser Geo. Rutherford\nH. Mills N. Taylor\nH. W. Gregory J. D. Campbell\nN.L.McInnes.skip R. J. Gardtiei'.skip\nJas. McArdle Hov. 11. Steele\nA. E. Savage F. Coryell\nF. W. Russell R. Lamond\nA. B Hood, skip Judge Brown, skip\nA. F. Fraser E. W. Ltuart\nG. Massie W. Hamilton\nG. M. Fripp F, Haverty\nC.A.S.Atwuod,skipW. Williams, skip\nD. McCallum\nT. A. Wright\nW. Bonthron\nA. S. McKiiu, skip\nI'lloKNIX.\nF. J. McDougail W. X. McDonald\nC. W, Hunter C. Davidson\nJ. Batemati E. Carter\nJ. A. Morrin, skip Li McNicol, skip\nD. McDougail O. F. Edwards\nP. Cook T. A. Love\n.1. Miller H. J. Mathews\nJ. Marshall, skip W. X. iVt'kiits,skip\nliHKKSWOOI).\nHev. J. A. Petrie\nDr. McLean\nA. McDonuld\nW.G. McMynn,sklp.\nThe results were as follows:\nGrand Forks Cup\u00E2\u0080\u0094Won by A. il.\n' Hood, of Grnnd Forks; L. McNicol,\nof Phoenix, second.\nBurns Cup\u00E2\u0080\u0094Won by N. L. Mclnnes, of Grand Forks; Greenwood\nrink second.\nSmith Cup\u00E2\u0080\u0094Won by Greenwood;\nN. L. Mclnnes second.\nIn addition to the cups, the foi-\ni lowing individual prizes were given\n!for tbe members of the first and scc-\n[ond rinks in each event:\nSmith Cup-First prize, four uiii-\nI brellns; second prize, four pipes.\nBurns Cup\u00E2\u0080\u0094First prize, four cut-\nglass bowls; second prize, four sels\nof safety razors.\nGrand Forks Cup\u00E2\u0080\u0094First prize,\nfour club bngs; secmd prize, four\nsets of military brushes.\nAll-Comers\u00E2\u0080\u0094First prize, four silver touacco jars; second prize, four\npairs of gloves.\nBorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094In Grand Forks, on Friday. January 27, to Mr. and Mrs.\nGeo. W. Cooper, a son.\nIn the proposed reciprocity trcaly\nbetween Canada and the United\nStates fruit and potatoes are on the\nfree list.\nThe hockey game at Phoenix this\nevening between Grand Forks and\nPhoenix resulted in a victory for the\nlatter club by a score of five goals to\nthree. At half time the score was\n1-1. \t\nL. MncAdaiii arrived in the city\nthis week from New Zealand, and\nvisited nt the home of hi\" sister-in-\nlaw, Mrs. A. MacAdnni, for a few\ndays, lie lefl for tbe const later in\ntlie week.\nThe net earnings of the British\nColumbia Copper company iu December were _J25,(i0O.\nThc Grnnd Forks nnd I'hoenix\nhockey tennis will meet on thc local\nice next Monday night.\nThe fourteenth annual RWsland\nwinter carnival will be held ou\nFebruary 1-I-18, inclusive. A long\nprogram of sports bus been prepared.\nTrophies nnd prizes are hung up for\nBritish Columbia and international\nhockey championships, ski jumping,\nskating, tobogganing, curling, horse\nracing and other events THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nBOWSEHSTRAW\nOily Clerk Sells Him a Preside*\ntial Panartia Blook.\n\"What do jrnu mean?\"\n\"Why, thin Isn't yonr four dollar hat\nThbt one never cottt the half of that\"\n\"By tbe Jumping JlngoP' he shouted\naa be grabbed for tha hat -\n\"It lan't yoUntJ\"\n\"Of rtmtw It bin't. Some one baa\ntaken mine and left tbti behind. 8ay.\nnow-wy\"-\nFLATTERY DOES THE TRICK.! \u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00AB5? taT* b~ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00B0B\" nntT \"\n \"It waa. I'll bet a hundred dollara\nI *_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nPara Top Price and Then Llea About\nIt te Hia Wife\u00E2\u0080\u0094Exchange at Barber\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2hop Ciuhi a Whole Lot of Trouble,\nAnother Exchange et Midnight Makce\nMatter* Straight\nBy M. QUAD.\nICopyrlpht, 1910. by AflnoclateO Literary\nPress. |\nWHEN Mr. Bowser went to\nbuy a straw hat be In\ntended to Invert just $'_!.\nHe bad said to Mrs. Bow.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2er tbat the man who paid more man\ntbat sum was a reckless Idlut When\nhe reached tbe store und asked for a\ntwo dollar but tbe salesman looked at\nhim In a puzzled way and tben queried:\n\"It ta for yonr choffer. I suppose?\nTea. a two dollar hut Is good enough\n(or bim. Senator, wby don't you buy\none for yourself at tbe same lime?\nTaken for a senator right off the\nreel-taken for a capitalist who could\nafford an auto and a chauffeur, a\nman to whom a few dollara wus nothing:\nMr. Bowser waa flattered. He\nwouldn't burp been human otherwise,\nespecially wben tbe salesman contln\nued:\n\"I can give yon a duplicate of President Taft'a panama. This way.\nplease,\"\n\"But I tbougbt\"-\n\"Just In this morning, aenator, ami\nI don't want tbem picked over before\nyou get your choice. Now, look ut\nthem. Here are style, wear and dignity.\nWben you see a man wearing one ot\nthese hats you cun place bim al once.\nBeen buying any more autos lately?\"\n\"N-o-o-^.\"\n\"Well, half a dozen ought to do you.\nThings In Wall street looking up it lilt?\nTbey say tbat all you senators keep\nposted.\"\n\"T-e-s, we do.\"\n\"Here's tbe mate to Taft'a pannma.\nmade of Ihe same model. We asked\nbim f30 for his because Uncle Sam has\nto pay the bill, but In your case It's\n'*_!!> Examine It Keel nf It Let\naowaait, rLAiruiiD, nm\nme put it on your head. Senator, you\nnever had anything like It\"\n\"l-thouuhi of something a little\ncheaper,\" aaid Mr. Bowser.\n\"Don't seuan.i. You are as good as\nTaft You waul somelblug above Ibe\ncommon herd. l_ook In Ihe glass again.\nJust your lit. and you dou't lose a\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2bade of dignity.\"\nChuoKIca at His Bargain.\nMr. Bowser thought of wbal be had\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2aid about lite reckless Idiot, but be\nalso fell lhal be was cornered. He\nbad been mistaken for a senator wbo\nbad six auios and speculated In Wall\nstreet and be baled to let himself\ndown. As a result ha took Ibe bat.\nWben he rent-bed home and met Mra.\nBowser's accusing eye be said:\n\"Friend of mine Introduced ma to\nthe batler. and I got this for ti. I\nthink It's a bargain.\"\n\"But did you go and pay $4 for a bat\nwben you knew I hadn't a glove to\nput on my hand:\" abe exclaimed.\n\"I was rather dragged Into It. but It\nlooks like a pretty good bat Yon\nahall bave aome pin money next week.\"\nMr. Bowser swelled around under\nthat panuwa bat. B* pul the price\nat Kin. He called attention lo H. He\nfell a warm glow wben he saw the\nalreet ear conductor looking at ll. He\ngave It a rakish slant ou bis head and\nfell lo pity other men. As be came In\nto dinner Ihe other evening Mrs. Bow-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2er was not at band to notice the\nchange of hata. It waa only after the\nmeal bad been finished and tbey had\ncome up f^om tbe dining room to alt\non the front steps tbat abe glanced at\nIbe ball tree and exclaimed:\n\"Why, Mr. Bowser, have yon been\ntrading hats?\"\nto a cent tbat It waa that Infernal\nProfeaaor Swlggs'. Tea. It waa. Ha\nbad craaae oo bla hair and smelt ot\nwintergreen. Look on tbla sweat band.\nSmell of lt\"\n\"But If be made \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mistake you can\ntelephone bim.\"\nA Loud Smelling Discovery.\n\"Telephone nothing I saw him looking at my hat and I know he changed\non purpose. I don't know where ha\nlives. I never heard of him before.\n\"He called to see if I was interested In\nastronomy. By. thunder. I'll put him\nwhere he can't see stars or planets tor\nthe next year!\"\n\"I hope yon get yonr bat back,\" said\nMm Bowser, \"bin don't get too excited about It Yours only coat 84. yoo\nknow.\"\n\"Four dollars! Four dollars! Why,\nI planked down $_!5 for tbat hat!\"\n\"But you told me $4. You said a\nfriend introduced yon to the bat man.\nand\"-\n\"If I said $4 I waa absentmlnded.\nTwenty-live big dollara. and that\ngreasy haired astronomer baa got It!\"\n\"Well, wbat are you going to do\nabout Itr\n\"Uo? Do? Wby, I'll follow on hla\ntrail for the next 100 yeara. I'll never\nlet up till I bave him ln my clutches.\nI'll go to the police. I'll advertise a\nreward for bim. My twenty-live dollar hat\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Which yon told me waa a oat-gam\nfor $4.\"\nMr. Bowser rushed Into the telephone and railed up police headquarters and stated bla case. After he bad\nspent ten minutes In giving details tbe\nreply waa:\n\"Very sorry, but we are not tbe\nstraw hat police. Inquire next door.\"\nThen he rushed out to the policeman\non the corner. The officer heard the\nsad tale without being affected. Un\nthe contrary, he calmly said:\n\"Yes, life Is full of Just such harrowing things, bin we must make the best\nof them. I rather Ilka the smell of\nwintergreen myself.\"\nA rnsb wus made for home, and,\nwith a wild hope in hla heart Mr.\nBowser wild:\n\"Look bere. Mrs. Bowser. 1 am not\ngoing to threaten you!\"\n\"Nor\n\"1 am going tn roox you. You may\nhave slipped ibis old bat on to the\npeg lust for a Juke on me. If yon did\nI will lake ll as a joke. Ha, ha. ha:\nIt would be quite a little joke.\"\n\"Yes. but I didn't Thia ta tbe bnt\nyou wore home und bung up\"\n'\"Theu I'll have tbe professor's life:\nI'll dabble my hands ln his winter--\ngreen blond! I'll catch hint by tbe\nthroat, and I'll t-w-l-s-t his brazen bead\noff.\"\nHat Recovered, but His Lio Stands.\nAll the rest of the evening Mrs. Bowser tried to quiet and console hiin. lint\nwltb poor success Mr. Bowser walked\nthe Hour and abused tbe professor. He\nwalked the floor nud planned bow to\noverhaul hint. He even went out to\nthe gale with hla mind so full of tli\"\nevent tbat be stopped the butcher's\nhoy lo relate particulars. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\"It's au awful case.\" replied the boy,\n\"hut I know something awfuler. Cork\ngoes up another rent tomorrer!\"\nMidnight hud come. Bowser had\ntossed nnd grinned and grunted and\nfallen asleep. Mrs. Bowser wns nlsiut\nIn go to dreamland wben tbere wits a\nwild ling at the doorbell. Mr. Bowser Jumped out of bed and pnt bis bend\nout of ibe wludow.\n\"Dues s mun named Bowser live\nhere?\" asked a man below.\n\"Yes. sir \"\n\"Is his name In hla straw hatT\n\"It la.\"\n\"Well, I've got yonr Infernal old '\nheadpiece here, and I want my own ;\nhat. Yon look mine when we were j\ngelling abaved In tbe barber shop\nabout 1 o'clock. Nice old party, you\nare!\"\n\"Are yon Profeaaor Swlggs?\"\n\"Professor nothing! And 1 don't go\nround ateallng hata either!\"\nMr. Bowser went downstairs and\npassed ont the wintergreen bai and re-\nreived bla own, and Mra. Bowser bad\nootblng to say until he fell asleep\nagain. Tben sbe softly wblapered to\nherself:\n\"And he came home and aaid It coat\nonly $4.\"\t\n\"Only Granny.\"\nSir Douglas Powell, one of tha royal\nphysicians-in-ordinary, tells a pretty\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tory of how some years ago he waa\nwaiting in an ante-room to be summoned tor an interview with Queen\nVictoria. Out nf the royal apartment\ncame tumbling two of King George's\nions. \"Why don't you go' In?\" inquired the elder prince. \"Because,\" said\nSir Douglas, \"it might not be convenient.\" \"Oh.\" was the cheerful response, \"there's nobody there \u00E2\u0080\u0094 only\nflrauny.\"\nAPPRECIATION OF O.O.R.\nLondon Dispatch Writer Liked tha\nCanadian Boya.\nPart of this week my lot haa fallen\nIn pleasant places, says a writer in\nThe London Weekly Dispatch. I have\nbeen living with the Queen's Own\nRifles of Canada. They are a very\nfine body of men. They might, in\nfact, be our Queen's Westminsters\nwith an American accent. The accent\nla all they have got which associates\nthem with the United Statea. I have\nnever imagined that it was possible\nto hate a Yankee aa much as these\nfellow-subjects of ours do. To suggest annexation to the States is to\nrun the chance of \"bayonpt, get it In\nyour innards,\" as Drummer Lew\nSBid to the Afghan. The regiment is\none with traditions diiting back over\nfifty years. As it is a rifle regiment,\nIt carries no flag, otherwise it would\nhave at least lour honors upon the\ncolors.\nColonel Sir Henry Pellatt is a Una\nman, who is devoted to his regiment,\nwhere he served for years in the\nranks. He told me that he does not\nwish people to think he is an overwhelmingly rich man..He is spending\nfluo.OuO out of his store because he\nloves his men-, his colony, and Great\nBritain. He is the head of a big firm\nof brokers in Toronto.\nThe men are keen to learn and\nhave much to pick up. The notion\nof one man being as good as another\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094which is sheer nonsense\u00E2\u0080\u0094which\nhas arisen through close neighborhood, with the United States leads\nthem to be less disciplined than, is a\nBritish territorial regiment of the'\nsame class. They obey their officers\nsmartly enough, but no battalion is\ngood until it heeds even the whispered beherts of its non-commissioned\nofficers. I dislike intensely to hear\na sergeant cnsuelly say to a private,\n\"Ain't you going to full in on thia\nparade?\" and the private respond,\n\"Why certainly.\" The men will,\nwhen once they are away fighting\ncheek by jowl in manoeuvres with\nthe Buds or the Faugh-a-BuIlaghs\n(which latter meats \"Clear the way\"l\nand see the Regular sergeants at\nwork begin to realize how vital it\nis to jump to the co. nands nf their\nN.C.O.'s.\nThey have a strong element nf Ihe\nScot in them. One of the most interesting men 1 have met foi a long\ntime is old Sergeant Elllnis'vnrth.\nwho is spending the we.l- .-nd amid\nthe scenes of his youth nt Edinburgh\nand Glasgow, when he whs a guy\nvoung soldier of the primus fllrd. He\nhas heen out of the army for forty-\nseven years, but ever since etni'-fsting\nto Canada he hHS heen with the\nQueen's Own, nnd they are irnud to\nhave the sturdy, self-reliant old man\nrfith them. He still hns lire, and\ntakes pride in Cannda and Great\nBritain, and above all in his soldiering. We gossipped a day or two ago\nin his tent, a few of us, on his career,\n\"e had nnt on'y soldi'red in tin\nCrimea and in India, but he Is one\nof the few men who remain who have\njourneyed frnm Puris to Marseilles by\nroad in a carriage in the davs when\nthere was no other way of doing it.\nHe was traveling w'th one of his\nofficers\nNow he made one of the famous\n\"thin red line\" which on a certain\noccasion did the impossible in the\nCrimea. He has the bar on his\nmedal for Sebastopol. He went to\nIndia, and his medal bears \"Relief\nJ of I.ucknow\" and \"Lucknnw.\" Yet\nof actual fighting it is dPflettlt to get\nhim to talk. He will insist thnt the\n(13rd were the first at the relief of\nI.ucknow. but ac for feelings, fancies,\nmental attitudes in general you will\nlearn nothing. A young Canadian\nventured the question: \"8ergeant,\nwere you ever aware that you killed\ns man?\" \"Weel, lnddie,\" said the\nold warrior, \"I was never conscious\nthat I killed anybody in the Crimea,\nbut I wish I hnd a pound for ev>ry\none I stirkit in India. We didna'\ncare Wc just drove the bayonet in\nthem. I dinna think you can under-\nstun' what Cawnpnre meant to us\nThat was a terrible time.\" It is not\noften ihat one can get sn much frnm\na man who has neaged in the dread\narbitrament of battle.\nTha Peel MacLachlan.\nAlexander MacLachlan was a Catta\ndian poet, whose writings wete attracting much admiration fifty years\n-ago. He was born in Scotland in\n1820. and though without any advan\nlages of rank and fortune, and nppre.i-\ntioed to a tailor, he was a voracious\nreader, and soon familiarized himself\nwith the wotks of the principal Brit\nish authors. Several of his poems ap\npeared in volumes published by him\nin 1856 and following years. He contributed very materially to the establishment of a notional literature lb\nCanada. His chief aim aa a poet was\nto be considered the exponent of the\nviews of the working classes of tha\ncountry, ln this effort, it has beeu\nclaimed that he stands shoulder to\nshoulder with such men as Burns an 1\nMiller, while a proof of the excellence\nand popularity of hia verse is to ba\nfound m the fact that he wsn tha\nwinner of the prize offered by Tha\nGlasgow Workman for a national\nsong for the Scot.\ni\nFor those whose enjoyment\"of Canadian winter\nweather is marred by frost-bites, eczemas, rashes,\nchafings, chapped faces and hands, and other\nannoying conditions incident to cold, wind, and\ntender skins, there is speedy and grateful relief in\nCuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. For many,\nCuticura Soap\nalone, used regularly for the toilet and bath, is\nsufficient to preserve skin comfort in the severest\nweather. Skin and scalp troubles, from pimples\nand dandruff to eczema and psoriasis, yield to\nCuticura Soap and Ointment when all elsi fails..\nIt is always advisable to know j Morocco uses about two thousand\nsomething about what you arc trying j barrels of American cottonseed oil\nto teach. yearly.\nNA-DRU-CO Headache Wafers\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2top the meanest, nastiest, most persistent headaches In half an\nhour or leu. We guarantee that they contain no opium,\nmorphine or other poisonous drugs. 25c. a box at your druggists',\ner by mall from X\nMiMistl Piss cad tte___leel Ce. el Casals. taiiaaX ....\nWHEN IT COMES TO\nPAPER BAGS and\nMATCHES\nWe are everywhere with tha standard goods.\nPaper and Matches ara our specialties. Let us\nknow your wanti\u00E2\u0080\u0094we'll do the rest.\nTheE.B.EddyCo.LtdA^-r\nHULL, CANADA (frW^mmm\nTEES & PERSSE, LIMITED, Agents, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton,\nRegina, Fort William and Port Arthur.\nChivalry.\nChivalry la from chevalier and aim.\npiv means a horseman, originally used\nto distinguish one who rode from ont\nwbo waul to tha ware afoot.\nW. N. U., No. 825.\nMAKE MORE MONEY\nA Burroughs Adding and Listing Machine Will\nHelp You\nIt automatically adds and Hats all aorta of figures, fraction a. decimala, feet snd inches, pounds\nand ounces, etc. You eimply register each number\non the keyboard (much after the fashion of a typewriter) and then pull the handle while you press a\nlever\u00E2\u0080\u0094and it \u00C2\u00BB printed I When all have been registered, press a key and pull the handle Anally\nand the total is printed I Simple, eaay, economical.\nA Burroughs relieves you of all routine figuring:\ngives you time to think out new Bailing plans; enables you to know that your accounts are right,\nso you can puah the money-making departments\nof your business to the limit.\nA Burroughs enables you to get your day's work\ndone in the lay\u00E2\u0080\u0094leaving your nights free and undisturbed fc- rest.\nWe make 78 different stylea of adding and Hating\nmachines. Any on* of these you may try and test\nin your own way in your own office, at your own\nconvenience, and at our expense.\nWe are not philanthronists. but we ara anxious\nthat vou should know the advantages of Burroughs\nMachines. The best wav to know is to try one of\nthem. We'll stand nil the expense-of a reasonable\ntrial H you will accord it to a Burroughs,.\nA note addressed to us at Detroit will bring full\ndetails.\nBURROUGHS ADDING MACHINE CO.,\nIM Burroughs Block, Detroit, Mich.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_____\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_____\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0__\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>< THE SUN. GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nMUU^l\nsntmi\nLamp\nThe Rayo Lamp la a high trade lamp, sold at a low prlca\nTh\u00C2\u00BBr\u00C2\u00AB ara lainpi tbit task non, Mt then li in hatter lanp msAs sA %\t\i\nprioa. Cnottrnetxt of Mild brut; alektl pUtart-aaaUy fcapt cU\u00C2\u00BBn; u\nornaraant tn any rooM <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 smj hotna. Than la nothln\u00C2\u00BB known to tha art\noOUi\u00C2\u00BBp-m*Wn| thnt ean add tn tha *\u00C2\u00BB'\u00C2\u00BB nf tha HAVO Ump at a light*\n*W\u00C2\u00BB_r darlot. artrr daalar avarrwhara. If not at yon rt, writ* lorit*\n\"\"\" tAatiMiMaraatuatmrnf\nUnited.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0aripllTaolroiiUr\nnaaratt amincr of\nThe Imperial Oil Company,\nTANNING AND FUR\nDRESSING RECIPES\nBy An Old Hand.\nHow to tan or dress all light fur\nskins, such as mink, muskrat, weasel,\nfox, fisher, lynx cat, &c.j how to tan\ndog skins, sheep skins, wolf skins,\nbadger, &c, for mats, rugs, robes,\ngauntlets, 4c.; how to dye sheep skin\nmats any desired shade; how to remove the grease from furs or fur skins\nwithout wetting the skin, making the\nfur as clean and lively as new; how to\nclean white fur, such as thibet, angora, white rabbit, &c, making them\nns white and fresh as new; now to\nttan cow and horse hides for coats,\nrobes, &c; how to make easily and\nquickly a good tough leather for repairing harness and general use on\nthe farm; how to care for hides and\nskins that are to be sold, and how to\nsell them to get the most money for\nthem.\nAny of thc above recipes will be\nsent to any address on receipt of 60\ncents, or the booklet complete for\n$2.00. Address:\nAN OLD HAND,\nBox 363, Winnipeg, Man.\nHit One Need\n\"Then you think the Indian doesn't\nneed civilizing?\"\n\"Certainly not. With its blankets\nand beadwork, his tjpee looks like\nthe regulation cosy corn_r now. All\nthe Indian needs is a chafing dish.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Courier Journal.\nTo discern and deal immediately\nwith causes and overcome them,\nrather than to battle with effects after\nthe disease has secured a lodgment,\nis the chief aim of the medical man,\nand Bickle's Anti-Consumptive Syrup\nis the result of patient study along\nthis particular line. At the first appearance of a cold the Syrup will be\nfound a most efficient remedy, arresting further development and\nspeedily healing the affected parts, so\nthat the ailment disappears.\nNew Yorker (astonished)\u00E2\u0080\u0094But you\nreally love me, dear?\nMr. Eat (ardently)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Do I? My\nHow He Proved It\nAn Irishman was once serving in a\nregiment in India. Not liking the\nclimate. Pat tried to evolve a trick\nby whioh he could get home. Accordingly he went to the doctor and\ntold him his eyesight was bad. The\ndoctor looked at him for a while and\nthen said: \"How can you prove to\nme that your eyesight is bad?\"\nPat lokctl about the room and at\nlast said: \"Well,' doctor, do ye see\nthat nail upon the wall?\" ,\n\"Yes,\" replied the doctor.\n\"Well, then,\" said Pat, \"I can't.\"\n\"Ah\u00E2\u0080\u009Eah!\" exclaimed the great explorer, as he crawled from beneath\nthe bed and proceeded ftr put the gold\naffair into his clean cuff. \"At last I\nhave found the missing link.\"\n\"Just hear how the wind howls!\"\n\"But can you blame it? When it's\nout in the cold all night?\"\nMinard's Liniment Cures Colds, Ste.\nThe domesticated ostrich had just\nbeen relieved of his \"tips.\" \"Trimmed again!\" he groaned; \"I wonder\nwhy the C.P.C.A. doesn't agitate for\nanti-tipping legislation?\"\nBrown\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Is it correct to speak of a\nman as 'of the male persuasion?'.\"\nJones\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Yes, if the subject is not\nmarried.\"\n\"What has that to do with the matter?\" \"Why, when he is married his\nprecious one, you're a piece of cheese !|wife persuad'e9 him\nORBINE\nRemoves Banal Enlargements,\nIhlokened, gwolleo Tinsel.\nCurbs. Filled Tendons, SoreaeH\nteam any Brulte or Strain,\ngores Spavin Lameness, Allays\nrain Does aot Boater, nmi\ntb. hair or l.f the *,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.. up. 92.00 a\ntouie. d.HT.\u00C2\u00BBd. Beck ID tree\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 _. AnaOBIIINK. SU., (mtntltdn.M\n**smSf \"\"lit,) Tor SynoTlil., Strain., Gniur\n\u00C2\u00ABe UAjsetle OeaotlU, Tirlaoit Valna, Vatic*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\"Tdmcale. AUwtMla. Book Ir...\n\u00C2\u00AB. t. roum, p. 0. f., WW. St. i(\u00C2\u00ABi\"ffl\u00C2\u00ABw, \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nih.i_T.ba.. -7 aiir.il Mil a \u00C2\u00BBniii)5_!\u00C2\u00BBi..ii\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABi\nTHE BEST GIFTS\nara Mose which last. Far Nils I\nrtaioa gifts of film an alwayi\nappreciated. To disfinguJaft lie\nbtti, lack In tbt md, auk\nHandsome presents may bt\nselected la spoons, taints,\nforts, or fincy strains pieces.\n\"SihtrTlatt that Wear,\"\ntut Its Hit, Oil Im, Wtn,\netc.instia,,*\nMMIDKN BRITS CO.\naotp ST t.\u00C2\u00AB .wtq jwataa.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0____.\nA Gentle One\nMrs. Stoplnte\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Do you remember\nwhen wc were children and I used to\ncome and play with you?\"\nMiss Tersbep\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Yes\u00E2\u0080\u0094and your\nmamma never let you stay more than\nun hour. Tnoie were the happy\ndays!\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cleveland Leader.\nI wns cured of Rheumatic Gout by\nMINARD'S LINIMENT.\nHalifax. ANDREW KING.\nI was cured of Acute Bronchitis by\nMINARD'S LINIMENT.\nSussex. Lt.-Col. C. CREWE READ.\nI wns cured of acute rheumatism by\nMINARD'S LINIMENT.\nMsrkham, Ont. C. S. BILLINGS.\nLukefleld, Que., Oct. 9, 1907.\nInsistent Salesman\u00E2\u0080\u0094And another\ngreat feature of our typewriter is the\ntwo-color ribbon. You can't be up-\nto-date nowadays without that long-\nfelt want.\nBusiness Man \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Great Caesar!\nYoung man, do I look as if I wanted\nto inject yellow journalism into my\ncorrespondence.\nIt Eases Pain.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ask any druggist or\ndealer in medicines what is the most\npopular of the medicinal oils for\npains in the joints, in the muscles or\nnerves, or for neuralgia and rheumatism, and he will tell you that Dr.\nThomas' Eclectric Oil is in greater\ndemand than any other. The reason\nfor this is thnt it possesses greater\nhealing power than any other oil.\n\"Did you marry your ideal?\" asked\na new acquaintance of a bright\nmatron. Mercy, no! I married my\nhusband.\"\n\"Are those eggs any\nCustomer-\ngood?\"\nGrocer\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Can't beat 'em, sir.\"\nCustomer\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"My gracious! are\nas far gone as that?\"\nBlack Heavy Substance\nThe returned traveller was exhibiting some souvenirs. Presently he\ncjpie to a queer black heavy substance wrapped up securely in some\npaper. \"ThiB,\" he snid impressively,\n\"is a fragment of air that I gouged\nfrom upper berth No. 9 in our Pullman.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Judge.\nAn Always Ready Pill.\u00E2\u0080\u0094To those\nof regular habit medicine is of little\nconcern, but the great majority of\nmen are not of regular habit. The\nworry and cares of business prevent\nit, and out of the irregularity of\nlife conies dyspepsia, indigestion,\nliver nnd kidney troubles as a protest. The run-down system demands\na corrective and there is none better\nthan Parmelee's Vegetable Pills.\nThey are simple in their composition\nand can be tnken by the most delicately constituted.\n\"In sooth, Charity, we should not\njudge unrighteously, but I fear that\nBrother Turnaside is next to an im-\nposter.\"\n\"How canst thou say so, Elder\nHopewell?\"\n\"Hush; but it cometh privately to\nmy ears that he is making nutmegs\nout of soft pine, instead of our good\nold hickery.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Distemper.\nHe was an observant little chap\nwith a knack of storing knowledge\nwonderful in one so young. But he\nrather spoilt himself the other day.\n\"Pa,\" he said, \"I hear Uncle Joe is\ngoing to be married on Friday.\"\n\"Yes,\" said his father, \"Uncle Joe\nhos only three days more.\"\nThe little boy sighed. \"The last\nthree dnys,\" he said, \"they give them\neverything to eat that they ask for,\ndon't they, pa?\"\nthey\nManager (of Prostville Academy of\nMusic)\u00E2\u0080\u0094We got the darndest cutup\nof a trap-drummer here you ever ^ee\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094always injectin' little touches uv\ncomedy into a show.\nVisiting Actor\u00E2\u0080\u0094For instnnce?\nManager\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, Inst week a feller\nplayed \"Richard the Third\" here an\nwhen he roared \"A horse! A horBe!\nMy kingdom for a horse!\" what did\nthat comical drummer do but blow\nhis autohorn real derisively!\"\nIBANK OF\nMONTREAL\nScott's Emulsion\nis the original\u00E2\u0080\u0094has been\nthe standard for thirty-five\nyears.\nThere are thousands of\nso-called \"just as good\"\nEmulsions, but they are\nnot\u00E2\u0080\u0094they are simply imitations which are never\nas good as the original.\nThey are like thin milk\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSCOTT'S is thick-like a\nheavy cream.\nIf you want it thin, do\nit yourself\u00E2\u0080\u0094with water-\nbut dont buy it thin.\nIOR HLI ST ILL DKOOOISTS\nBon, ste., __aaaa ot paper \u00C2\u00BBt_4 1Mb ad. for oar\nboautltul Barlnta Bank and Child'. Skatoh-Book.\nKm* bask oonUloa a Good Luck Pauar.\nSCOTT * BOWNE\niaa WtWartoa StrML Wa* TanMa.OM.\nReport of Annual Meeting\nA Boon for the Bilious.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The liver is\na very sensitive organ nnd easily deranged. When this occurs there is\nundue secretion of bile and the acrid\nliquid flows into the stomach and\nsours it. It is a most distressing ailment, and ninny are prone to it. In\nthis condition 11 man finds the best\nremedy in Parmelee's Vegetable Pills\nwhich nre warranted to speedily correct the disorder. There is no better\nmedicine in the entire list of pill preparations.\nD'Auhist\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Do you think my battle\nscene expresses, as 1 have meant it\nto, all thc poignant horrors of war?\"\nKrittick\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Oil, yes, it is the awfull-\n\u00C2\u00ABst tiling I ever saw.\"\nShihhb\nHubby\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Your milliner's bill last\nyear lias cost mc as much as the salary of my two book-keepers. That is\nmore than I can afford.'\nWife\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Well, discharge one of\nthem.\"\nDODD'S\nKIDNEY\nPILLS\nt\u00C2\u00A3L KlDNE\,< .ci-\nH|CHT S Dl5,X\n1 \u00C2\u00AB 11 C T C S ' _-'\nShilohs Gure\ntalskly sieve etubt, cures colds, beds\nIts throat aad luaie. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB coats.\nBachelor (to intimnte friend)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWhat would you say if I should\u00E2\u0080\u0094er\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ntell you thnt\u00E2\u0080\u0094er\u00E2\u0080\u0094I am going to\u00E2\u0080\u0094cr\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nmnrry a sweet litle widow with six\nchildren.\"\nFriend\u00E2\u0080\u0094I should sny you were putting on heirs.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hnrvnrd Lampoon.\n$100 Reward, $100.\nThe readers of this*paper will be\npleased to learn that there is at least\nine dreaded disease that science has\noeen uble to cure in all its stages,\nnnd that in Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh\nCure is the only positive cure now\nknown to the medical fraternity.\nCatarrh being a constitutional disease\nrequires a constitutional treatment.\nHall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blond\nand mucous surfaces of the system,\nthereby destroying the foundation ol\nthe disease, and giving the patient\nstrength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its\nwork. The proprietors hnve bo much\nInith in its curative powers that they\noffer One Hundred Dollars for ary\ncase that, it fails to cure. Send for\nlist of testimonials. Address:\nF. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.\nSold by druggists, 75c.\nTake Hall's Family Pills for consti\nnation,\nA certain business man of Rochester is of the opinion that he has an exceedingly bright office boy, ond nothing pleases him better than to tell\nhow he acquired the youngster's services. A notice had been pOBted in\nI the man's shop window, which rend\nas follows: \"Boy wanted about fourteen years.\"\nA lad of that age, with little that\nwns prepossessing in his appearance,\ncame into thc office nnd stated that he\nhad read the notice.\n\"So you think that, you would like\nlo have the position?\" asked the merchant, patronizingly, as he goned at\nthe lad over the rim of his spectacles.\n\"Yes, sir,\" wns the reply; \"I want\nthe job, but I don't know that I can\npromise to keep it for the full fourteen years.\"\nCAUSE AND CURE\nOF RHEUMATISM\nDUE TO IMPURITIES IN THE\nBLOOD-CURED BY DR. WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS.\nThe most noticeable and immediate\nresult of rheumatism is a marked\nthinning of the blood, and iu no disease dues it develop more rapidly.\nMot only does tlie blood become weak\nbut it is soon filled with impurities,\nwhich the different organs of tne body\nhave been unable to throw off. One\nof the most harmful of these impurities is uric acid, wnich is formed from\ntne waste products of the body. In\nhealth it is readily passed off by the\nkidneys with the help of oxygen from\ntlie red corpuscles of the blood.\nWithout oxygen the kidneys are unable to rid tne system of this acid and\nit is retained in the blood and distributed to all parts of the body. The\nweak back, pains across the kidneys\nand thin, scunty, highly colored secretions, which follow, show that the\nacid is already in tlie blood ond often\nleads the sufferer to think he has kidney trouble. If the disease is not\ndriven out of the blood, rheumatism\ncan never be cured, and the sufferer\nwill always be subject to uttacks,\nwhenever exposed to damp or cold.\nWitli ench returning attack tlie pain\nbecomes more severe and complications often arise making necessary\ntlie use of habit, forming drugs to relieve pain.\nlt is readily seen thnt the only wny\nto cure rheumatism is through the\nblood. Dr. William's Pink Pills afford such a treatment ns they contain\nall the elements necessary to build up\nand purify the blood. They increase\nits oxygen currying enpucity enabling\ntlie kidneys to pass the uric acid\nfrom the body nnd the otlier organs\nto do their work. Thus rheumatism\nis reached at its root ami permanently cured. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills\nnre absolutely free from all habit-\nforming drugs, nnd nre not nn experiment as the following esse will show:\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. W. Studley Lewis, Pilot Mound,\nMnn., snvs:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I nm a Arm believer in\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills and always\nkeep some by me in case of need. A\nfew years ago while teaching school I\nsuffered so much with rheumotism in\nmy urnis and shoulders that I had the\ngreatest difficulty in writing on the\nblackboard, and after trying a number\nof remedies without benefit, I was almost in despair, and felt inclined to\nabandon teaching. But one dny I\nhappened to pick up one of Dr. Williams' almanacs, and read of the cure\nof a\" number of severe cases of rheumatism through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. This decided me\nto give the Pills a trial, and I had\nonly token them a few weeks when I\nfelt much better. In the course of a\nfew weeks more the pains nnd stiffness hnd nil left me. and I had no\nmore difficulty in doing my work. I\ncannot sny enouirh in praise of Dr.\nWilliams' Pink Pills for they nnd\nthey alone cured me of my rheumu-\ntism.\" ,\nSold by all medicine dealers or by\nmail at 50 cents a box. or six boxes\nfor $2.50 from The Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.\nDR. WINTERS\nCures all chronic diseases. Write\nhim. His valuable advice will\ncost you nothing.\nBOX 215. NEW YORK CITY.\nThe 93rd annual general meeting\nof the shareholders of the Bank of\nMontreal was held on December 5th,\nwith Mr. R. B. Angus, the president,\nin the chair. The annual statement\nsubmitted was one of the best in the\nhistory of thiB finnnciul institution.\nThe Bank of Montreal which is so\nultimately bound up with the financial history of this country has be-\ncome the strongest of our financial\ninstitutions. At the present her total\nassets have reached the enormous\nsum of $240,000,000. With her 147\nbranches scattered throughout the\ncountry the bunk is able to keep in\nclose touch with the business interests\nof every community, and is doing her\nfull share in promoting the financial\nand industrial development of the\ncountry.\nThe annual report showed a balance of profit and loss on Oct. 31,\n1909, of $603,796. The profits for the\nyear ended Oct. 31, 1910, after deducting charges of management and\nmaking full provision for all bad\nand doubtful debts, was $1,797,992,\nmaking the total profits $2,401,789.\nFrom this was deducted four quarterly dividends at 2 1-2 per cent.,\namounting altogether to $1,440,000,\nleaving a balance of profit and loss\ncarried forward nt the end of October, 1910, of $961,789.\nA further examination of tlie report shows that the hank has deposits\nbearing interest of over $154,000,000,\nwhile considerably over $43,000,000 is\non deposit not bearing interest. During the year the deposits hnd increased hy $18,000,000, an indication\nof the bank's growth. The note circulation of the bank nmoiinted to\n$14,502,000, being slightly larger thnn\nthe paid-up capital. Thc bonk has a\nrest or reserved account of the lnrge\nsum of $12,000000. The nmount of\ncall and short loans in Great Britain\nnnd the United States wns reduced hy\n$14,000,000 dining the year and now\namounts to $01,918,000. This amount\nof money is kept on call in New York\nand London nt a low rate of Interest\nlis the bnnk finds it l\u00C2\u00BBss disturbing to\nOanadlan business interests lo hove it\non deposit in foreign centres. If it\nwere nn deposit in Canada and were\ndemanded nt a few hours' notice-it\nmight seriously eniharass local institutions.\nThe loans ond advance made hy\nthe bnnk during the year show an\nincr\"nsp of $21,000,000, indicating Hint\nthe bnnk is doing its full share in ns-\nsistin; Delta (Ladner), September \u00E2\u0080\u00A2__!___ and 2'.i;\nSurrey, September \"iti; Pang-\nley, September 27; New Westminster, October 8 to 7; Richmond, September \"28,\nFifth Circuit\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cranl irook,\n[September 18 and '20; Nelson,\nSeptember '2(, to 28; (Irand\nJ Forks, September 20 and, 30;\nKaslo, October 2 and 3.\nThe only policy holder who\n1 doesn't need to pay his premiums is dead. The only man\nwho doesn't need to advertise\nis the \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 man who has retired\nfrom business.\nTiik patient people on the\ncoast are beginning to show\nindications of impatience regarding tlie construction ofthe\nCanadian Notliern in this\nprovince, To allay their rest-\nlestness, we suggest that Sir\nWilliam borrow one of his\nson-in-law's aeroplanes forthe\npurpose of making a preliminary survey of the route.\nSome people like tolly high.\nA few weeks ago Sir William\nMackenzie received hisknight-\nhood. Now his daughter has\nmarried a French aviator.\nI5Tiik provincial government\nhas a surplus of $2,500,000.\nIt will he considerably smaller\nafter the present session.\n^^^^^ srt went up\nPhoenix and Greenwood on\nWednesday and sold 150 gallons of cider and 150 boxes of\napples.\nThe Granby company this\nweek commenced to ship 01 e\nfrom its Cliff mine at Rossland to the smelter in this\ncity. \t\nThe Phoenix hockey team\ndefeated (ireenwood by a score\nof four goals to three at (ireenwood on Tuesday night.\nMrs. W. K. C. Manly visited Spokane this. week.\nJ. P. Manly left today for a\nbusiness trip to Vancouver.\nPUN POINTS\nIf a man can't invent anything else he always can invent deviltry.\nSome people imagine they\nare up-to-date, when they are\nmerely erratic.\nThe real upper class will\nbe presently those who own\ntheir own aeroplanes.\nA girl can imagine romance\nthat is more real to her than\nsteak and fried potatoes are\nto a man.\nJust as soon as you begin to\ngive anybody charity he begins\nto think you owe it to him\nright along, and t% lot more besides.\nW. Carruthers, travelling\npassenger and freight agent of\nthe Southern Pacific railway,\nhas some original ideas on sizing the worth of a town.\n\"When I enter a new city,\" he\nsays, \"I*do not look up the\nnewspapers to see tiie amount\nof sensational news they print,\nbut turn to the advertising\ncolumns to see the character\nand volume of advertising carried by the local advertisers'.\nI can always tell whether aI\ntown is a live or dead one by I\nthat.\"\nWoodland's for Quality\nEverything: sold here i.s selected with regard\nto Quality and Service. When you want anything, ask Woodland first, and get satisfaction.\n-2WOODLAND So CO.\u00C2\u00A3-\nPHNONE13\nDRUGGISTS AND BTATI0NER8\nA Dollar Goes a\nLong Way\nwhen you buy' your supplies at our market; we\nsell you choice, prime cuts\nof beei, mutton, lamb, pork\nand veal at as low a margin of profit as we can do\nI business honestly upon\nand give the best you can get anywhere. Our meats\nare tender and delicious\u00E2\u0080\u0094our poultry fat, fresh and\ntender, and our hams and bacon fit tor a king at\nP. BURNS <& CO., LTD\nClothes Cleaned\nand Pressed\nS. D. CURRY has re-ppened\nthe business formerly owned\nby Mrs. Pew Johnson.at the\ncorner of Riverside Avenue\nand Main Street.\nzjUl Work Neatly Done\nGive us a call.\nLAND ACT\nFORM OF NOTICE\nYnle Land Distrli'l, District ol Similkameen.\nTAKh NOTICK tliat Silas Untile, at Onbden,\nI Illinois. U.S.A., oct-lipntiou Funner, Intends to apply for pcmii.sloti to purchase the\nfollowing deiicrilil'd lands:\nCnnitneiii'lnu at a post planted about 20\nchnins east of -the southeast corner nf Lot\nlllll S.. on Deep Creek: thenee well SO eliains:\ntPence south -li i-luiin-; thence east till chains;\nthenee south 20 eliains: thenoe east __0olltllnei\nthenee north 111 elniini to point of commencement.\nSILAS LINGI.E, Applicant\n.I.R Crnnston. Agent.\nDated December I2lh, 1910.\nThe manish woman should\nnot complain when she is\ntreated as roughly as if she\nwere a man.\nCommon sense is an uncommon quantity in this world.\nNEWS OF THE CITY\nPresident Rooke, ol' tlio Septeml\nFarmers! institute, has issued\nFair Dates\nThe dates of the British\nColumbia fairs for this year,\nus fixed at the annual meeting\nofthe Hritish Columbia Fairs\nassociation in Victoria, are as\n| follows:\nFirst Circuit\u00E2\u0080\u0094Alberni, October^ Nanaimo, September\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-'(I and 21: Islands, September\n(J; Comox, September 26 and\n27; Victoria, September 12 to\nI Pi Cowichan, September 22\nand \u00E2\u0080\u00A2___:!; X. and S. Saanich,\nj September \u00E2\u0080\u00A2_'!> and 30.\nSecond Circuit\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coquitlam,\nSeptember 1\">; Chilliwack,\nSeptember l!i and 21: Kent,\nSeptember 12 and PI; Maple\nRidge, September 18 and lit.\nThird Circuit\u00E2\u0080\u0094Nicola, September 7: Revelstoke, September 11 and 12: Kamloops, Sep-\nItember 14 and ..\">; Vernon,\nSeptember 1.0 and 21: Kelowna, September 20 and 27;\nSalmon Ann, September 28\nand 211: Armstrong, September 21 and 22: Snniinei'land,\nSeptember 17 a\"d I*: Peach-\nind, August 20 find 30,\nLANO ACT\nFORM OF NOTICE\nYale Land District, District of Similkameen,\nTAKK NOTICE that Thorns! Henrv Paul-\nI son of I'Hill-oii, H. C, peculation Merchant. Intends to npply tor permission to\npurchase the following described binds:\nCommencingat upost planted about sixty\nchains north of the northeast corner nf Mlllci\nllrotber's pre eiiip'inn. Lot 1181 8\u00E2\u0080\u009E on Deep\nGreek I thence north 80 dhnlllll thenee west\n40 chnins: theneesonth 80 chains: thence east\n40 chainsto point of coinmciji'etnetit.\nTHOMAS HENRY PAULSON.\n.1. K. Cmtitton. Agent,\nDated December 12th. I'.'l\".\nCarbide\nin Bulk\nFor Motorists and Cyclists,\nat\nLowest Prices\nGEO.W- COOPER\nPRACTICAL PLUMBER\nWinnipeg Avenue\nBargains\nIN\nCity and Suburban\nProperty\nLAND ACT\nFORM OF NOTICE\nYiiIp I,uml DUtrb't. DUtrlut of SiinllkiitiH'i'n.\nTAKK notice thnt I. AxneiiRlleii Paulson(\noi PiiiiImiii, tt. c ocfiiiuntioii W|fo. hi\"\ntt'iiiU iii iippi' for m'ii.iissioi. to puronastJ\nthe followingdworlbed latiasi\n( (IIIlllH'lll'tliU lit II I'dst I'luil't'il Hi til''\nM.inthw(\".t oorrtcr of J, Miller'* prO*i'm)i*\ntion. Lut ||8B8.,on DeopCrpek; thenoe nortli\ntxiohnlim: thence wi-i SfOohelntt thence youth\n-iu rtiuiim; thenee wa*t 411 oh a Ini! tln-ncp\nfotitii i'i I'liuiiiN; tin'iif- nisi fiOohatm to thu\npoint of (\u00E2\u0080\u00A2uinni.'lie.-merit\nAC1NKHS Kl.l.KK PAULSON.\nJ. K.Qranitoti. Akoui.\nIiiit\u00C2\u00ABil December 13th, 1910.\n$350\n$3200\n-17AX17S PT. LOT between\nSecond mid Thin] street*,\njiiNt almvi? Jtidfro Lctmjr'a\nand It. OaW'l plHCM! Iep>\nunited from nil other properties by 20-ft.\ntenet an lurue hh tteveti <\u00C2\u00BBr ffcht ordinary lots,\nadjoining Intu ure worth $r>0; would make\nnice liiime, with wiiffleleiit irroimd for chick*\naim; fruit, mirileii and Uiwn; mo\u00C2\u00BBt desirable\nlocution iu city.\n85 ACRHS adjoining\ncity limit* on 10uth;\nIt ucrpN cleared; lfiO\nfruit lieen; new four-\nKiin houset burn fur six home*; horse.\nbltugy.double hiiriifjss and tHrmlng Implements All for fSitOO. Kuh.v terms.\n-FOUR.ROOM ROU8B\nund three lotu within\none block of buiiliieia\neentre; lii'.vn, ilmde\n$2000\n, berry hu\u00C2\u00BBhf>i, lurifu tenrden.\nWill aNi) >ell fui nit uie 01 lioii-e if ill-wired.\nireew, fruit ire\nwlFlnlioeellf -\niliie-lmlf cii-li, biitanue terniN.\nNOTICE!\nlh the Estate of Margaret E. Coryell.\nDeceas id.\nNona: m hkrkby given that on the wth\nday ot November. A.D. li'lli, probate of\nlhe will of Vai'uaret li. Co' yell, deeeaacil, hue\nof thet ity of timnd Korks, it (' , was urunted\nout of the Mipreme Tout of Hritish O'dnin-\nbin, at Vancouver, B.C., lo John Abraham\nt'oi-yell and Krauk \ his ncoount, verified by statu\ntor.v ilcelni ation, ti mi tlie nature of the security (If Mir) lu-lil by him.\nAlter Hie said Hist d iy ef February the e.\-\n itoi- will proceed with tlie iiduiini.-trii-\ntioii of ilie estnle. having repaid lo tlm-e\nelalms onlv of which they sbail then bave\nnotice,\nhided this Wtjj day of November, A.D. lOiti.\nJOHN A. OOkVKliL,\nFRANK U.I OUVKl.L\nKxpcutor-.\n5 ACRES\n$1500\n$15,000\n~V,j miles from town;\n7-romii house, plait*\nered: lartrc liuagyiued,\n woodshed] Wu fruit\nrees, 7U neiirfllgl li'ij acres strawlicrrios.\ngooseberries, cinrniith, raspberries: free fttiin\ntrust: ttie licit locutioniii'ouml Orand Korks;\nplenty of tfo.nl water; trait and crop in\neluded.\n-Between 8 hnd 4 acres\nIn West end of city;\nfirst class soil, nil iiu-\n__, iter cul ivatiou: small\nbouse, wood-died und outbuildings: well mid\npump: \u00C2\u00AB00d fence- This Is asucrllice, as owner iti about tO leave City. Terms.\n$9000 rash, balance lerms. One\nol best hotels iu\na . . the business cen\ntre nf (.Irand 1'oiks; now doing a profitable\nbusiness', owner desires to remove to the\ncoast. This li the bent bargaiu In this part\nof tlie province, an there are but wen hotel\nlicenses in tlie (irand Porks, ''ity li growing\nrapidly. No other town lu southern llritish\nColumbia linn us bright future piospeetN.\nFor further information re\ngiftrdiug tlie above properties\ncall or address\nTHE EVENING SUN, GRAND FORKS, B.C.\nHiuYci.i.s and Kkpaih Work\u00E2\u0080\u0094A\ncomplete line of 1910 models. A few\n.econd-hand wheels oheap. Wheels\nto vent. ko. W . Cooi'Mi, Winnipeg\nAvenue.\n$1500\n160 ACRES IN FRANKLIN CAMP\n2,500,00 feet of commercial\ntimber on property; $oU0 hewn\nlog house; North Fork runs\nthrough land; Kettle Valley line\nsurvey crosses property; deed\nclear. 1878 cash, balance terms.\nFor further particulars apply\nSUN OFFICE\n\"VmmIi Large May\nVenture More, but\nLittle Ships Mutt Stay\nNear Shore.\"\nIte large ilepUr ate. *r* good\nfee ike large bveinew end the\nClwelAed Weill Ada. are prapor-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2iMalalr tfaad far tha smell firm.\nI* feel mttmr large Arma became\navail fcr Uie dlUgent uae of \u00C2\u00BBhe\nCleaaiiad C\u00C2\u00ABlumna. There \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0pie la gaad - etart aow.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2MpMiVNI \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Mini\nWORK WANTED\nJ KKDMCWORK wmitwl to do \u00C2\u00AB home. Call\n1 on Hn. Wm. Keron, Seooiid itrcet.\nPASTURAGE\nGOOD I'ASTUHAUIC for rattle oltwj to oity:\nunfa fenvei almii'laoe ol feed. For term:\nupplv to John iliimiti.-r. Fourth of July creek.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTI.il Sltlliitl'in un Jin.itor or liurtend-\nit, AiMri'na VV. J., (ienerul Delivery,\nGrinul Fin-In, 11. C.\nFOR RENT\nFURNISHED ROOMS-Apply Mm. K.Cruw-\nI.n-d.\n!\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nllVKRTISINii SPAOK in The Suii.thn mint\nwidely read newnpa|ier iu the Kettlo Vnl -\nFOR SALE\nTYPKWRITEK-Ollver. new. Apply Suu\nI uHloe.\nTHRKK BOTTLES cold N'clion Beer Uo.\nI Lion HiittlhiK Worki.\nBARN ANIlllilliSE-The Forrester burn, i\nltitn and holme, in Columbia. Apply J. H.\nIMinh, Dux 111.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Aimn imiTLK Pert Wino 7.-.c. Lion Bot\ntling WorlM.\nLAND-ISO acreHitood timothy land. Apply\ntlita otlice.\nSPAi'E\nSun.\nfor advertising purnosos In The THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. 0.\nFOURTEENTH ANNUAL\nWINTER CARNIVAL\nFEBRUARY 14 TO 18, 1911\nROSSLAJND\nUnder the auspices ofthe Carnival Committee, J.\nD. McDonald, President. For information apply\nto Percy Hunt, Secretary.\nSPLENDID SPORT\nHANDSOME TROPHIES\nAND PRIZES\nTHE CITYC01SI\nS Short Session and Only\nRoutine Business Transacted '\nA GRAND PROGRAM ..iii\"^\"^\nday night. Reduced Transportation Rates.\nUnPI/TV Championship of R C. and Interna-\nnUul\LI tional championship. Ski Jumping\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nChampionship of Canada. Skating\u00E2\u0080\u0094Championship\nof the Province. Tobogganing, Curling Bonspiel,\nHorse Races and other events. Masquerade and\nDance, Good Music.\nROSSLAND'S ANNUAL WINTER SPORTS\nOur time, knowledge and j The high price of living has\nexperience in the printing not affected our job printing\nbusiness is at your disposal j prices. We're are still doing\nwhen you are in need of some- high class commercial work of\nthing ir this line. Don't for- all kinds at prices satisfactory\nget this.\nto you.\nRemember that every added'\nibscriber helps to make t\npaper better for everybody.\nYou might as well cut off\n, -, ii. t _.!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 your legs because you are run-\nsubscriber helps to make tins f- fn \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u009E .. {\u00E2\u0080\u009E_,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, \u00E2\u0080\u009E .\n-' - - ning well in a footrace as to\ncut off your advertising be\ncause\ngood.\nyour business is too\nWATER NOTICE\nNOTICE Is herehv tlven thnt nn application\nwill he mnde under Pnrt V of lhe \"VV-iter\n6 Year Old Girl Cured of\nKidney Trouble\nMrs. Alex Moore, of James St.,\nOxford, N.S., says: \"Booth's Kidney\nPilla cured our little daughter, Chris- A,,, ,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E..,\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E,.,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E \t\ntina, aged six yeara, of many HVlrip- f nieeit OTvfalon nf Valo District;\n7... \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . ... J \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 00 \"he iintneM. nddrotl nnuoootipntton nfihi\ntuiiis nt Kidney weakness. She- pom- applicant*! \u00C2\u00BB'. A. Cooper nnd A. .1. ronner,\nnlaliinH nf u nnrn lim.L- tin. Iriiinnv _u_ Orand Forks.Ml. ,-.. Rnnoher*. (If f\"r inin-\npiaineu oi a soie hulk, tne Kinney so- (D, p\u00E2\u0080\u009Erpl\u00E2\u0080\u009Ew) yree Miner's .vriiiline Nn . ..\nactions were frequent and iincoiitrnl-! Theifnmonf the hike, stream w source (|l\n,li - ii . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i . _-i ' linniliiieil, the ilt-Hi-rli.tI.iii Is) Small Inke (\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nlable, especially ut Ulf(ht. Her atom- name) wholly situate upon Lol Number B0(),\nach wus weak ami her appetite poor. Orm'iiI.w.nllkameenDlybl.m of Vale Die-\nThis caused her to huve fmiuellt ('')'Tho point of inversion: At aniithnea!\n' portion of said like III\nsnid l.ot Number \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\"\u00C2\u00AB.\n(d) The t|iifliitltv nf wnler applied fnr (in cil-\nbll'roetper mrtillil): One rlllile foot per sec-\nSooths\nhidneu\n>ills\nheadaches, and the least exertion\nwould tiro her.\n.Ve I ad tried (,-) The character of lhe proposed works:\niinnv roi,mi I ini PnmiilliB plant mid pipe,\nnun) ruinous, ((| Tliapronlmn an which the water Is to be\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ut siio dill not n\u00C2\u00BBd (d-si-rlbe mime): Portion of l,i ihh),\ny.1 \u00E2\u0080\u009E UrnupOnc -ii.iili.on n I'll i-i.oi ..f . ,i n Ills.\nmprove I'iniillv triet, owned by aopjloiinta,\n,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ivui-umI .If (111 The pnrpoiea for whleli the water la lol*\n'\" leailltu nr \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,!. Irrleiiliini ainliiirrleolliiri'.\nI liiiith's Kidney <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> Hfnr Irrigation deacr the land Ini I-\n... . - ed to be imitated. iilvi n-reme Rant llfty\nIlls llllll pro- nor. I of said Lot Mm. lirnill, HiiV -linllkiiino n\nuied u latx. In a J},*!^\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 \"' V\u00C2\u00BBle I>i.irl<-i. li.r.. owned by \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nshort tiniuslie wus (') H 'he water is to be tiseil for power or mfn-\n.... i . , Ine I'lirposi'sde'erloi. the pliiee where the wntei\nWell and (Inns not now complain about I- to be returned to snni tural channel, mul\nhrir liui-li tin. Iililnnt- sui-rotiiins have \"\"'HlVer -e In altitude h \"tween the polllt n\nmi nam. me Kioney setieiions nave dtvoralon and the point ol return t Not to b\nbecome normal, untl she plays around need for power or mining pnrposea.\n. , . , ' * . . (J) vroa of Grown lnnd iateutlud to be oeou-\ntno house with nil apparent fatigue p....lhr ih..|.i-i.|Kiaei| u-nrVs: Ml.\n (It)- .This uoilie ivm pn.te-1 oh tho Bt 3 da\nJanuary, h'll. and appllcaflnit will he mmlt\nto tin- tiomtnlMloner on the 16th dav of I'V'ru\nary. 1911.\n(I) Hive the nsines atul addresses of nny\niIoioimi im 1. .tit ri|'\u00C2\u00BBrinii i.rii|.rleior\u00C2\u00BBorlli...ii.ei.< who or whose\nili'iite no nenelit i,',,.!. ,re itkelr to beam-cled bv tli\" nropnaed\nntll's works, eln-.or above io-below the outlet: W. A.\n CoO|Mr, ibe n|>|ilieants,\nWe always recommend Booth's Kidney Pills \"\nBooth's Kidney Pills carry a gunr-\nantee thut if yuu\nynur money will he refunded. Hi\nKiknt-y I'illi nre u specilic for ull dis ,miy\neuses ut' the kidneys mul bladder-\nSold hy ull druggists, oPo box, or post-\npnid from the It 'I'. Booth Co., Ltd., \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFort Brie, Ont. Snid ami guaranteed\nby 11 Iv Woodland >v Co.\nCupper a,i.i A. .1.\n(Signal liro)\n(P. o. Address)\nW. A.ROOI'BR,\nA..i. niini'Kit.\nIlrnud Forlis, ILL-\nNOTICE\nTHE\nNTIIKMtlTKH \u00E2\u0080\u009Ef 'he Land lle^lstry Aet\nand lathe matter ol the rib, to i.nt ITU\nlirtiint l.ilsiiyons -ilvUi.iii. (UOW Known as\nSl.nlll.nm I IHvlsli f Vale lllstnet,\nHrltlsli Columbia.\nWl I K It I-: V ~ Ortlllenln nf Titlenf I'atrlek\ni-ri-imi, bring Certllleate nl Title No.\n7iil a, to the above hereditaments has been\ntost or ecstrnyed, an a|i|illeiitlu will be lnileu nt the -s iiir.it Inn of one ninoth\nAftUl'AOlU III. KM A ni.AI.l_l>!> from the date herenf, unless In the meantime\nLONDON DIRECTORY\n(i'dhjlthed Annually)\nKnnbli.\"* tivi'li'f-* throughout tin- world to\n(\u00E2\u0080\u00A2riimmihlcute tin I witli K-mholi\nIn ciu'li olanof B00f)*j Mr> .id<-\u00C2\u00AB lieliiK n OODl*\npi to c.iiiniu\"i'i,il ifiifilc ru Loiidnii nml \u\nsiiiinr.ts. the director)' fnititiu- lUtH uf\nKXPOKT MERCHANTS\nwith ihe Gooda thoy shiji. nml Dio Col on ltd\nmid Ko it I tfi i 'liirltotx 'lirv ltlp|)ty;\n(.TliAMSlIIP LINKS\nitiTiLtipo'i inider the Porti ti> whicli they lall*\niiimI IndloiititiK thuuiMiroxiiiiiito Siiilin.:-.\nPUOVINCIAL TRADE NOXICKS\nuf ii'iiHn;' .MnmifuoturiTti, Merohtttltl, otr., iti ,\ntin- iirliioliiHi i>r ivlimlti! towiiJtund Indti^trlii!\nvnll'l nhjortimiv to tin' ciiiitniiy ho nimlti to\niiib in wrltltifi.\nW.H.RPNOND%\nHist riit Registrar of Titles.\nLand Kptrlstrv '\"lift*\nKomloapi, H.C. S('|.t. 7, l.NJ.\ni in\nlU\niitro\u00C2\u00ABorthe Unitod KhiKl.>\nwriter\u00E2\u0080\u0094tlju mow highly pi-r. ted typewriter\niin tlit' nniiktr -yiiur.s for 1/ cetltfl dny!\nTliL' typfwrltur whupecouquesl: of the com*\nnierolnl world is a matter of tiUto v\u00E2\u0080\u0094 yoort\" i\u00C2\u00BB>i\n171'imttiidiiy!\nTlte typewriter that in equipped with booi-os ol\nmeh coiivenletim us \"Tin; Ituluueu Shift'-\n'Ilie (tiding Device\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Dotiblo Reletine\"-\n\"Mii! Locomotive Bane\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Tlie Aufbrnmio\nipaeer \u00E2\u0080\u0094'The Automat In 'ralmlator\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 DisiippeiiHiKrlntllCHior\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"'lie AdltiBtablu i'a-\nperKliiticw,'-\"Tlie s.-i-\nenTliie Condensed Key-\nboat a\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094all *-+%\nYours (or 17\nGents a Day!\nWe anon need this\nnew mils jhiui ruuetttly, jjinl tu feol iln- pnisi- nl\ntlie people. Pimply a fiinttil cui*h payment\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthen IT cents uilay. That lithe plan lu a nutshell.\nThe result Ims lieen uuch a deluge of ii|)plien-\niiiiiin fnr m.irliincs that wn nm islinplv an-\ntounded,\nTin1 ileiutui'i comes from people of nil etaesefi.\nall ages, all ncetipatlnns.\nTh\u00C2\u00AB majority ul inquiries Ims come,'from peo\nleof known llnaiieial stamiiiiK who were attracted by the novelty of thu prupOit. \"nu, An\nimpressive (iemmistrntlon of the inuneiisu pop-\ninarityof ihe Oliver Typewriter\nA startling 1'Onflrm'atlou of our belief that\nthe Km nf Universal Typewriting ih at hand.\nA Quarter of a Million People\nare Making Money with\nOLIVER\nTypewriter\nThe Sta,ndardVisible Writer\nThe Oliver Typewriter 1h a mnni'v-inalcri\nright fwlna the word \"ro!\" So eaiv tn run Hun\nbeginners booh irel in the \"expert\" olais. Karn\niisyou learn. Lot the much Ine pay the J\" cent*\na day\u00E2\u0080\u0094and nil abn'te that 1b yours.\nWherever you are,there Is (vork to be dohe\nand im y to be made by using the Oliver Tbe\nbnslness world Is ealllng for Oliver oponit\"rs.\nI here are imt enough to Mipplv the deimuui\nriielrsalaries ure couaiderably ahove tim.se ol\nmaiiy.c'iassospf worlten.\nAn Oliver Typewriter in Every Home!\nThat is tho battle (try today, >u* have madi\nthe Oliver supreme In usefulness ami absolutely\nIndispensable f\" biHuess. Now comes the con\nquest of th<- home,\nTbe slmpllclfy and strength ofthe Oliver fit it\nmr family use. It Is becoming an Importani\nf.Ktor in the home training ol young people.\nAn educator as woll as n money maker.\nonr urn sellihL'plan puis die Oliver on iln-\nilire-lnd'hif every home In America. Will von\nclose the door i>i your home urottlee on this re-\nmarlrableOlfveroII r?\nWrite for Further details of our easy olfer and\nn free copy of the uew Oliver catalog. Adi ress\nThe Olfver Typewriter Company,\nOliver T\u00C2\u00BBpnwrIlor Miilldlng,\nCHICAGO. ILL.\nR. A. Brown, of Volcanic,\nreports having received anai'\ndition to his poultry\nFamily\nduring the present winter from\nthe wilds. Every night two\nwild birds come to his henery\nand roost with the chickens.\nUe does not know the species,\nbut they are very pretty specimen of the wild feathered\ntrilie. They feed with thc\nhens in the daytime, and at\nnight nestle as close to them\non the perch as it' they were\nblood relations. They have\nbecome quite tame, and are\nnot averse to being petted by\nhuman beings.\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGE\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nReoslva Imtli I.ti'llo. mul Gentleman as rci-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Iimi, or ilny itnilontrj naia oomolnta Cum-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0neroinl or Builuott Oouriei prAtwroi .tn-\ndoutitorain 'lVm-ln-iV CiTiiiii-iiti-H of nil\nirnuli\"': t-lv... tin-fmir ypiim' oouin for tnl\nii. A.degree,nntl tho Brrt -.,-.,r.\u00C2\u00BBr tr... Sofaoo\nof 8oleno lurao, \u00E2\u0080\u009E miii; .1 ultli tin- Io\nru11tuU11iver.lt)-; Im. u \u00C2\u00BB|.i-.iiil pru.tienture\nuoiirio for mlneri who worn in B.C. In-irur-\ntii.n i. alio given In Art, Minti.-, Pnyileel Cul\nturn mil h.liii-litluti. Term opone Sept. II.\nWa, Kiir i iilnutliirH, etc., HililrcH.\nCULUMHIAMt:OLl.K(IK\nHotel C\u00C2\u00B0li dozen liooks in one, covering the\nhistory, geography, geology, chemistry, mineralogy, metallurgy, terminology, uses, .statistics and finances of\ncopper. It is a pracieal hook, useful\nto all and necessary to most men en\ngaged in nny branch of the coppes\nindustry.\nIts facts will puss muster with the\ntrained scientists, unci its language is\neasily understood by the everyday\nman. It gives the plain facts in plain\nKnglish without fear or favor.\nIt lists and describes 4(i3fi copper\nmines and companies in all parts of\nthe world, descriptions running from\ntwo lilies to sixteen pages, according\nto importance of thc property.\nThe Copper Handbook is conceded\nto be the\nWorld's Standard Reference\nHook on Copper\nThe mining man needs the book- for\nthe facts it gives him about mines,\nmining antl the metal.\nThe investor needs the book for tho\nfacts it gives him about mining, mining investments and copper statistics.\nHundreds of swindling companies are\nexposed in plain English.\nPrice is !<5 in Buckram with gilt\ntop; 87.50 in full library morocco.\nWill be sent, fully prepaid, on approval, to any address ordered, and\nmay be returned within a week of receipt if not found fully satisfactory.\nHorace J. Stevens,\nEditor and Publisher,\n483 Postoflice Block,\nHoughton, Michigan.\nSynopsis of Canadian Homestead\nRegulations\nthe weather conditions will\npermit, Timber work i.s bding\ndone on tlit- shaft, and considerable lumber will be\nhauled to the mine for the\npurpose of building the terminal of the tram Mini tn construct ore bunkers.\nWork toward the completion of the Lone Star t nun way\njs progressing as rapidly as\nAliens McDougail, the contractor and, carpenter, has\ncompleted a handsome store\nbuilding for J, Bell ni Danville. Mr. Hell is making\npreparations to move into the\nbuilding.\nFriends of The Sun should\nIpatronizo (lie local merchants\nwho advertise in this paper.\nANTnviiiliiltlr-niiiniiilnii Land, ivltliln tint\nHallway Ui-lt of llrltuh Columbia mav lin\nt...i,i.^ii..i'l...l bj 1111.V imrsnn wiio i. tlip in1:..)\nnf it family, nr any mala over etgbtean v.-ar.\nof iiiri'. to too extent ot one-tiuarter natlott\nof 160 aore., mnrt> nr let..\nKntiv mimi In- ...itdi- per.otially nt tin* 1 -. * -. * 1\nland offloe for tie dlltrlot la which the luml\nUnit nntl*.\nTin. bqmuteader li required to perforra\ntlio oondltloti. oonnejtea therewith umli-r\none of tho following plan.!\n(II At lea.1 six month.' resident pott nml\nriiltivntiiiii nf tin- liitnl ini'iii'li yi-nr for tlirop\nyeara,\n(I) If tin- fiiilii-riiir mother, 11 th- father I.\nih ceaied), of th* homoateanor reaide. upon \u00E2\u0080\u009E\nfarm In the vleltrity of the land enteral for,\nlhe ii\"iiiiri.in(.iii- nn to reildenoe may be eat.\n1 iflod by nmi-Ii pernn realdlni with the father\nui mother.\n(I) II th ttli-r ti..-. bit permanent reel'\ndonee upon forming Imnl ow I liy liim lu\nth.. vlolnlty nl Ink liiimi'-tiM I.iln- reqtilre.\nmepteaa to\u00E2\u0096\u00A0re.luenea may i>\u00E2\u0080\u009E -....^ii.-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 1 hy\nreildenoe upon tin- i.iiil inml.\n.-is liimitli.' niiliri. Ill lyrlllnir mIhiiiIiI Iih\ngiven the Commliilotier of I [nlon Laud.\nut Ottawa nf intention in apply for patent.\nQoal\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ooal mining riuiiti tnav be leaied\nfor a period nl iHi.iity-uiii> year, at an an*\nnn 1. 111 I'.l nf .-l.im linrm-ro. Nnt lllnri'tlnin\n2.Mnii-r..s -.Im.II In. li.tiM.il In nm. indlvlililill nr\nI'liiiuuitiy-. A mynlt.i at the rate of Civ. nt,\nper ton iball In' OOlleoted nn tlm iiii-ri'liiint-\nable ooal ralued.\nW.W.CORY,\nDeputy nt tlii< Mlniater of tlm Interior.\nN.n.-Unnuthorlaed p'ublloatlon nf thi.\nadvertlaeinenl nil! nnt In- imlil fur.\nlwlW^K1 'iM'$M-*'on ll\n\\0&',i ,\ '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .ti-ix;'\nICheapefthaq wood. Will la-.i 1 llfi-tlme.I'.\n\u00C2\u00BBHlillUaiillllV.iJ,ir'i',3i.toi.l,l..l. \\\nf M\u00C2\u00BBv \u00E2\u0096\u00A0c!r^l\u00C2\u00A3WAi57' Imx'noMiiQ.'.w.\'\nClNCIit-'-.l. O. il\n(.v nl !i... P -: ilaun In Ml c\u00C2\u00BB:\u00C2\u00BB-' /\nI Onr 10(1 drill., n\nlo.... lu. b:, ',,, ..-.,,..\nc:l. I\nlac ' .\nY THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. 0.\nMORE\nPINKHAM\nJMS\nAdded to the Long List due\nto This Famous Remedy.\nGlanfordStation, Ont.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I have taken\nI LydiaE.Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound for vears\nI and never found\nany medicine tc\ncompare with it !\nhad ulcers and fait\ning of the uterua,\nand doctors did me\nI no good. 1 suffered\nI dreadfully until I\nI began taking your\nI medicine. It hait\nI also helped other\nwomen to whom I\nhave recommended it.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mra. Henry\nClark, Glanford Station, Ontario.\nGardiner, Me.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I was a great suf-\nferer from a female disease. The doctor said I would have to go, to tha\nhospital for an operation, but Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetaole Compound com.\nSletely cured me in three months.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n[rs. 8. A. Williams, B. F. D. No. 14,\nBox 39, Gardiner, Maine.\nBecause your case is a difficult one,\ndoctors having done you no good, do\nnot continue to suffer without giving\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-\npound a trial. It surely has cured\nmany cases of female ills, such as inflammation, ulceration, displacements,\nfibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic\npains, backache, that bearing-down\nfeeling, indigestion, dizziness, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle\nto try it, and the result is worth millions to many suffering women.\nIf yon want special advice write\nfiirlttoMrs.Plnkliam.I.yiin.Muss.\nIt is free and always helpful.\nToo Late\n\"And you really think, doctor, that\nyou must peiform the operation today?\" \"Oh, yes. There may be no\nnecessity (or it tomorrow.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cleveland Plain-Dealer.\nShiloh&Gure\namiaalj slope coos hs, .\ntha throat aad lunga.\nWomen linve been known to shake\nhands for the purpose of trying to\nshake secrets out of each other.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Garget in\nCows.\nExpect little from those who promise a great deal.\nWorms cause fretfulneas and rob\nthe infant of sleep, the great nourishes Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator will clear the stomach and\nintestines and restore healthfulness.\nIt is estimated tliat over one thousand aeroplanes are being built in\nEngland at the present moment.\nA Mother's\nSacrifice\nMade in kindness is often an injustice\nto herself and to her family.\nIt is u common thing tor mothers\nto sacrifice comfort, strength, and\nsometimes life it-elf. for her family.\nSo common, Indeed, tliat little notice\nis taken oi It.\nII anyone else i* tired or weak or\nsick, intjtlii'r waits tm them. Hut there\nis no time for mother to lie sick or to\nget the much-needed rest. So she neglects her ailments until she gets beyond the reach of human aid,\nThis is an injustice to herself nud\nto her family. Health must bo preserved, lt is a mother's duly to herself and to those about her. >'\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food will restore\nyou. It makes new, rich blood. It\ncreates new nerve force. The feelings of weakness nntl fatigue cannot\nlong exist when this restorative treatment is used, lt sharpens the appetite, improves digestion and removes\nthe cause of headaches.\nYou cannot get well in n day. Nature's cures lire gin dual nud lasting.\nDr. A. W. Chiisy's Nerve Food works\nhand in hand with nature by supplying the elements which go to build\nup the system.\nMrs. H. A. l.oynes, nurse, Philips-\nburg, Que., writes:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I was llll run\ndown antl coul I not do my own work.\nEverything I ate made me sick. In\nnursing others I had seen the good I\nresults of Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve\nKood and resolved to try it. As n result of this treatment I have gained\nten pounds, do my own work alone,\nand feel like an entirely different\nperson.\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDr. A. W. Clinsc's Nerve Food, BO\ncents a box, 6 boxes for $2.50, nt all\ndealers, or Kdmnnson, Bates & Co.,\nToronto. Portrait and signnture ol A.\nW, Chase, M.I)., the famous Receipt\nBook author, on every box.\nCOLOSSAL LONDON.\nSome Facts and Figures About tha\nWorld's Metropolis.\nNo man living has ever yet seen\nLondon as it really is. There are, in\nfact, twelve Londons, one of which\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe county \u00E2\u0080\u0094 is controlled by 4,300\npopularly elected men and women who\nsit on U4 public bodies.\nThe biggest London of all is the\npolice Loudon, covering 602 square\nmiles-i the smallest is Jhe City of London, extending to one square mile.\nYvhen uue speaks of London ono\nmust put an adjective in to describe\nwhat London is referred to. Here are\ntiie Londons with thoir areas as\nknown to the law:\nCily of Loudon, one square mile.\nCounty of London, 115 square miles.\n\tater London, 537 square miles.\nPostal London, 220 square miles.\nTelephone London, 630 square miles.\nParliamentary London, lit square\nmiles.\nEcclesiastical London, ISO square\nmiles.\nGreater London, 898 square miles.\nPolice London, 691 square miles.\nPolice Court London, 114 square\nmiles.\nCentral Criminal Court, London,\n420 square miles.\nCounty Court London, 206 square\nmiles.\nThe smallest population of one London is 26,000\u00E2\u0080\u0094in the City\u00E2\u0080\u0094and the\nlargest population 6,550,000\u00E2\u0080\u0094in Greater Loudon.\nIn the County of London 16,000 companies own property of the yearly value of $70,000,000, the rentals oi\nwhich are about $100,000,000 a year,\naud yet they have no vote for the\nelection of a single person to represent\nthem for their total payment every\nyear of $25,000,000 in rates. They pay\none-third of the total rates raised\nLess than half the people who have &\nvote ior tho rates they pay ever use\nthem. So far as taxation and representation is concerned a third of the\ntax-paying property has no share in\ncontrolling the expenditure, lu Ber\nmondsey and Poplar hall the rates\npaid have no voters behind them.\nEvery year at least 7,000 Londoners\ndie violent or sudden deaths, 300 are\nsent to prison for long terms, and\n120,000 are brought before the police\nmagistrates on various charges.\nWithin the 113 square miles of the\nCounty of London there are 135,000\npeople who have come from foreign\ncountries. Russians number 38.IXK).\nGermans 27,000. Poles 15,000. French\n11,000, Italians 10,000, and American.\n5,000. >\nOn the average there are ten tires a\nday in London. To keep tho metro\nliolis well protected from fire nearly\n$1,500,000 a year is spent by the Coun\nty Council,\nTh water, which is abundant and\npure, is poured through millions ol\npipes daily, by one responsible body,\ninto the homes of seven million people, a population nearly equal to that\noi Norway and Sweden, about the\nsane as lhat of the Dominion of Canada, more than two million above\nthat of Australia and New Zealand\ncombined, and larger than the whole\npopulation of Scotland and Wales.\nThis population of seven millions uses\nup 224,000,000 gallons of water a day,\ndrawn from the reservoirs, in which\nthere are always over 11,000,000,000\ngallons ready for use.\nThe wealth of London is astounding and can only be gauged by taking the twenty-eight boroughs ot\nwhich it is composed and comparing\nthe yearly value of their property\nwith that of provincial towns. Thus\nWestminster is richer than Glasgow,\nthe one square mile of the city than\nthe whole of Liverpool or Manchester,\nKensington is richer than Leeds, and\nLambeth than Bristol, Sheffield or\nNewcastle.\nThe smallest boroughs of London-\nStoke New.ngton \u00E2\u0080\u0094 has more valuable\nproperty than some twenty-eight ot\nthe best-known towns, including Bath,\nExeter, Yarmouth, Londonderry, oi\neven Cork.\nTlixrc are more people in Islington\nthai, there are in Edinburgh, more in\nLambeth and Stepney than ill Brad-\nlord, more in Camberwell than in\nHull or Nottingham. Twenty-four of\nthe Loiraon boroughs have populations equal to some of the thirty greatest towns ol the kingdom, while the\nremaining (our have populations equal\nto some lifly other towns, the smallest ol which is Burton-on-Treut.\nHeard on the Train\n\"Mamma, is 'josh' swearin'?\"\n\"No, hush dear.\"\n\"Say, mamma, would it be swearin'\nif 1 was to spell it with a 'g'?\"\n\"Tommy, everybody in the car is\nlooking at you! If you don't stop\ntalking I'll spank you.\"\nNo surgical operation is necessary\nin removing corns if Holloway's Corn\nCure is used.\nDr. Wines, principal of a boyi\nschool, just before he went on a holiday, had occasion to cane a pupil,\nand it is supposed did the work thoroughly.\nThe lad took his revenge in a way\nthat the doctor himself could not help\nlaughing at. *\nDr. Wines' front door bore a plate\non which was the one word, \"Wines.\"\nThe boy wrote an addition to this\nin big letters, so that when the doctor\ncame home the inscription ran\n\"Wines and other lickers.\"\nWhile talking ol missions, laymen'*\nmovements, etc., it naturally occurs to\nproperty owners who huve suffered\nfrom the depredations of bnd boys\ntliat the most important of all is the\nhome mission. Boys who break costly glass in houses just because they\nare vacant, who disfigure granolithic\nwalks while they are in process of setting, who strip their neighbors' fruit\ntrees and vines and are constantly\ndoing some damage, are as much in\nneed of mellowing influence us the\npeople in distant rlaces. Citizens who\nimprove their properties should be\nprotected and encouraged.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Uxbridge\nJournal.\nW. N. U., No. 825.\nVictoria and the Northerners.\nII rumor be true, Victoria is to be\nvisited by the Hudson Bay Co. The\nfur traders are going to keep store in\nthc Outpost. Victoria is excited. Ix>rd\nStrathcona is said to have cabled an\norder for an eight-storey concrete\nbuilding. The company has such establishments in Winnipeg, Nelson and\nVancouver. Why not in Victoria?\nRetire I factors come down from the\nArctic to bask with Indian army colonels in the charm ol her briar hedges\nam. lotus land gardens\u00E2\u0080\u0094that is all\nVictoria so tar as known ol the lords\nof the north.\nHE KNEW WHAT\nfIXEO HIM UP\nDODD'S KIDNEY PILLS CURED\nS. D. VICAR'S LUMAGO\nHe Suffered three years, but the great\nCanadian Kidney Remedy made\nshort work of his trouble.\nEdenbridge, Sask. (Special) .\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"It\nwas one box of Dodd's Kidney Pills\nthut fixed me up.\" This is the cheerful answer Mr. Sam. D. Vickar is\ngiving his inquiring neighbors in this\ndistrict. Ev rybody around here\nknows thut for three years he has\nbeen suffering from Lumbago. Now\nhe's strong and well again.\n\"My Lumbago developed from a\ncold,\" Mr. Vickar goes on to say.\n\"My head wou'd uclie. I was always\ntired nnd neraous. I had a bitter\ntaste in my mouth in the morning,\nwns troubled with dizzy spells, and\nwas always thirsty. The doctor told\nme I had Lumbago, hift did not help\nme very much. Dodl's Kidney Pills\ncured me.\"\nDodd's Kidney Pills went straight\nto the root of the trouble. They cured his kidneys. The cured kidneys\nstrained the uric acid out of the blood\nand Mr. Vickar's Lumbago vanished.\nDodd's Kidney Pills nre no /cure-oll.\nThey simply sure sick kidneys. They\nnever fail to do that.\nCOLT DISTEMPER\nCan be handled Terr easily. The sick are en rod, and another.\nIn name stable, do matter now \"eipwod,\" kept f rain burin,\nthe dlaeaae, b, o.lo, 8P0H_*S L1UU1U DlBTfcMFKB OUBlf\naire on tho tongue or lu feed. Acta on tbe blood and eipeli\nKnnaofailfunn.of distemper. Best remedy ever knows\nr mares In foul. Ue and It . bottle: N and 111 down, ot\nI dnigitlstsand haraen dealers. Cnt shows now to poultice\n1 t_.r_.__u. Our free BoqKietgWeaeTcrythlne. Largeslselllng\nhorse remedy in existence\u00E2\u0080\u0094lb years. Distributors\u00E2\u0080\u0094AI_L\n WIIOLKSAl.il UBUOOISTS.\nBfOHN MIDICAL CO., Chemists end Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., U. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A.\nA lady, who seemed rnther vain, entered a bootmaker's, ^thop one day\nwith the usual complaint.\n\"Why, Mr. Smith, these boots you\nlast made for me nre much too big;\n1 really can't understand how you\nnlways make thnt mistake. Can you\nnot make small boots?\"\n\"Oh, oye,\" responded the man,\nquickly. \"I can mak' sma' buits, but\nI'm sorry I canna mak' sma' feet!\"\nMinard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.\nSome men will have their little joke\nat any cost. Saitl Badpun, meeting\nhis friend Jollyboy in the street.\n\"Halloa, old fellow, you loole pale.\nWhat's up?\"\n'Had rather a nasty turn.\" was\nthe response. \"Just seen Weakly in\na fit.\"\nIndeed!\" answered B. \"Then all\nI can say is, he must have changed\nhis tailor.\"\nToronto Type Foundry Co., Ltd.\nCALGARY WINNIPEG\nREGINA\nThe Largest Printers' Supply House in Canada.\nWe Carry in Stock Cylinder Presses, Job Presses,\nPaper Cutters, Type and Material. Can Fill\nOrders for Complete Equipment from our Stock.\nWe are the Largest Ready Print Publishers in\nthe West. We Publish Ready Prints from our\nWinnipeg, Calgary and Regina Houses.\nOrder From Nearest Branch\nWfNCHi\n.361 CALIBER\nSclf-Loading Rifle!\nAs its name indicates, this rifle reloads itself, t\nrecoil of the exploded cartridge doing the work.'\nThis places the complete control of the rifle under\nthe trigger finger, which, permits rapid shooting\nwith great ease and accuracy. The .351 Caliber\nHigh-Power cartridge, has tremendoue killing\npower, making it heavy enough for the largest game\nCtolone till, tOsertUnt (Uf rule, \"Tin Ou\nthat ikoots Tkrentk Stilt,** list tpem reeaest.\nWMOMMTM ItleMTINQ ARMS OO., \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HlW HAVIN, OOH*U\nConcrete Fence Posts Like These\nare sightly, strong, permanent.\nConcrete is, in many localities, cheaper than\nwood, for fence posts, and more durable than\nstone, brick or iron. Our book,\n\"What The Farmer Can Do With\nConcreR\" ia sent FREE.\nIt tells how to make, not only fence posts, but\nwalks, curbs, horse blocks, barn foundations,\nfeeding floors, well curbs, drinking troughs, silos,\ndairies, and many other farm utilities where\ncleanliness, strength and durability are required.\nMany of these things are simple and inexpensive to make, and may easily be put together in\nyour spare time. The book carefully and simply\ntells all. The regular price of the book is 50c.\nWe are distributing free, a limited number, however, and charging up the cost to advertising.\nThat's why you get your copy free, if you sign\nthe coupon and send it to-day. Do it now.\nTOU\nFarmer\nNam*\nAddrt.il\nmay\nCan\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0end me\nDe With\na copy\nConcraU\not\nM\n\"What\ntha\nCANADA CEMENT CO., Limited\n81-60 National\nMONTREAL THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nMALLORY'S\nREADINESS.\nStory of a Man Who Always Got\nWhat He Wanted.\nBy BERTHA TREVELYAN.\nIf lt usually happened tbat Mallory\n(ot wbat be wanted ln tbe world It\nwas by no means due to chance. Wben\nhe wanted anything be began by looking tbe Held over carefully, noting all\ntbe salient points\u00E2\u0080\u0094tbe advantages and j\ntbe disadvantages. Tben wltb-bis feet\nup and a cigar between bis lips be\nwould consider all available methods\nof securing tbe thing desired.\nBavlng dually arrived at a decision\nas to tbe best course of action to pursue, be pursued It wltb an energy and\na single mludedness that were open to\nno discouragement, admitting no defeat. And tbe result was tbat, as life\ngoes. Mallory wus accounted lucky.\nHe was a handsome, vigorous man of\nfifty wben, business affairs making It\nnecessary for him to spend a uuiuber\nof months ln New York, a letter of Introduction secured him tbe very delightful privilege of rooms wltb tbe\nFosters, whose story of waning fortunes be bad beard from tbe friend\nwbo sent bim to tbem. Tbe ominous\nlength of bis upper Up was bidden under a short gray tnustucbe, ur Miss\nFoster would btive known from lbe\nBrst tbat lt was useless to oppose bim\nonce bis nilud was set upon anything.\nTbe romance of bis youth was a\nbeautiful memory, a ihlng as faint and\nelusive aa tbe scent of lavender. Bui\nbe bad been loyal to It for twenty\nyears, baring beeu left at thirty a widower wltb two children. Aa be sat ln\ntbe great dim drawing room where\neverything was eloquent of other days\nbe policed several things\u00E2\u0080\u0094touches unusual iu stiff city drawing ruouis, but\nwblcb mude for homeliness. Ue sighed\nwltb a sudden wistfuluesa altogether\nout of keeping wltb bis beigbt, breadth\nand dondnesa.\nin tbe midst of his reverie Miss Foster uppeured. her delicate sllghiucss\nhelghieut-d by tbe massive doorway in\nwblcb sbe stood framed for a iiHiuieiu.\nAs be rose lo greet ber be wondered\nIdly wbat could bave given ber tbai\nharassed look, tbis little womau wltb\ntbe oval face aud tbe piled up hair.\nHer smile, be thought, was oddly shy\nand girlish, und ln a few minutes tbey\nwere tiilklug witb tbe ease uf old acquaintance.\nWltb a businesslike air tbat sat\namusingly un ber sbe showed bim tbe\nrooms tbut she and ber mother rented\nto eke uut their small and uncertain\nIncome, and the next day found bim\nInstalled lu tbem.\nOften during the following months\nhe would speud no buur witb the\nmother nud daughter, noting witb bidden amusement tbe latter's unnatural\nlittle air of elderllness. Sbe would forget aud luugb uud cbat gnyly at times;\ntbeu in a moment she seemed to remember thut sbe was no longer young,\nand sbe became In a trice the prosaic,\ncareworn woman agalu. drawing her\nmantle of years ungraciously about\nber. It waa ns If sbe bad determined\nnot to be surprised by old age aud so\nhad rushed out to meet IL\nHer references to herself were\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0lighting always, as If to one to wbom\nnothing but the dregs of life waa lefl.\nwhom romance could not possibly\ntouch, whose role wai on* of duty untouched by grace.\nAt first Mallory took ber at ber own\nestimate, concluding tbat abe was\nabout bis own age. Tben on* nlgbt\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2be appeared In a gown of filmy violet,\nwith ber brown balr rising In a swirl\nabove ber face, nud be looked at ber\nwith puzzled but admiring wonder.\nShe turned ber head, and the surprise\nof ber profile fairly made him start\nIt was singularly delicate and youthful, with a small, high bred nos* and\nfull llpp.-d moutb.\nHis speculative glance now told bim\nthat she could not be more tban forty,\nIf'ihe were that But by tbe way In\nwhich sbe waa always putting forward tbe young girls of ber acquaintance It was evident tbat sbe thought\nherself too old a womau to be of Interest to any man.\n\"Sbe belongs to the old regime,\" Mallory soliloquized, \"and haa probably\nconsidered herself an old lady ever\nsince sbe emerged from her teens. Bhe\nhaan't been able to assimilate this\nbachelor woman Idea.\" And be smiled\nto himself.\n\"By tbe way, Miss Marlon.\" he aaid\nnonchalantly. \"I have tickets for Ihe\nopera tomorrow nlgbt. Be good and\ncome too.\"\nTbere was a flash of surprise In ber\nface tbnt for one brief, fleeting moment said frankly that he must bave\ntaken leave uf his senses. Tben courtesy prevailed, and after hesitating for\nan appreciable moment. In which tt\nwaa apparent tbat ahe waa casting\nanout in ner mind tor aome piansioie\nexcuse, sbe accepted.\nWhen tbe time arrived sbe wan disturbed by an uncomfortable consciousness. Sbe bad tbe air of a person wbo\nfelt that she was going to be a subject of quickly exchanged glaures and\nhalf laughing comment. All this Mallory divined, and he pnt forth every\neffort to make ber forget herself to\nsucb good purpose tbat by tbe end ot\ntbe evening sbe was laughing and\nchatting as unconcernedly aa If Mrs.\nGrundy did not exist\nWith this excellent beginning things\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2rent smoothly tor awhile. Walks\ndrives and theaters followed, and apparently Miss Foster's fear of appearing \"kittenish\" slumbered. To Mallory eacb hour spent tn ber society\nmade bim long for more. She waa deliriously contradictory.\nTben of a sudden all tbe old prim restraint returned to ber manner. Three\nconsecutive Invitations wero refused\nwltb excuses so filmsy tbnt even tbe \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nmost obtuse person must bave seen\nthrough tbem.\nAs before, be divined the meaning ot\nIt all\u00E2\u0080\u0094same Idle word that had aroused\nall ber dormant sensitiveness, nnd sbt,\nwas writhing under lt Sbe doubtless\nImagined tbat people were saying tbat\nthat old maid. Marlon Foster, was try-\nIne to catch Mr. Mallory, and her manner was her tierce, wordless refutation\nof It. Tbe lines of care were deepening In ber face day by day. and bla\nheart ached for help.\n\"1 want to speak to you. Miss Foster.\" be said ln a determined way as\nsbe was about to pass bim in tbe hall\none day wltb her usual brief greeting.\n\"Certainly.\" she replied, somewhat\nuncomfortably, snd tbey sat down In\ntbe quiet drawing room together.\n\"Something is bothering you.\" be began, fixing bis glance senrcblngly upon\nber. \"Come now. be frank. If there Is\nany way ln wblcb I can be of service\nto you tell me.\"\n\"It's nothing.\" she protested hastily,\n\"or. at least, nothing much.\" Then\nwltb an attempt at lightness sbe added. \"Women who bave neither fathers\nnor brothers to look out for tbem often\nbave to worry, you know.\"\nAnother sort of woman might bave\nadded \"husbands.\" but to Mlsa Foster,\nwbose consciousness upon tbe subjects\nof lore aud matrimony wus ns shrinking as that of a young girl, such u re-\nmurk would have been impossible.\nEven In thut moment Mallory chuckled\nlo hlmseif. yet would have liked to\ntake her In his anus nnd put liimseif\nbetween her und tbe world forever.\n\"Marry me.\" be said softly. \"Olve\nme the right to take care of you. I\nshall count lt a great happiness.\"\nHer race went scarlet.\n\"Sucb a subject seems scarcely the\nproper one for Jest.\" sbe retorted witb\ndignity. \"If you will excuse me. I\nhave duties to attend to,\" and sbe rose\nto leave bim.\n\"tine moment.\"\nHis voice rang a trifle sharp nnd\ncleur wltb command. The Mallory who\nachieved wbat he wanted in life was\nspeaking. Miss Foster seemed to teel\nthis, and she sat down again as obediently as a child, though he itinld see\nthai her bunds were quivering nervously.\n\"Yon hnve misunderstood me,\" he\nsaid In a calm, decided voice which\nsomehow thrilled ber with tbe certainty rnut be would bend her to his will.\n\"I Imve no intention of Indulging in\nthe sentimental talk of a mau uf twenty-live.\" be went on. taking one of her\nslim bauds in bis and looking ut ber\na bit quizzically. \"Love, of course, la\na matter uf'years. A mau and woman\nof fifty would only be ridiculous If\nthey essayed to speak tbat language.\"\n\"Itut I'm only thirty-nine!\" sbe exclaimed, surprised Into protest.\nMallory could bave roared with laughter at the Innocent \"only.\" As be had\nsupposed, tben It was nut that sbe really thought herself outside the pale; It\nwns only as one sensitively afraid\ntbat she ought to tblnk so. He could\nnot entirely banish the teasing smile\nfrom his eyes, and she felt vaguely\nthat sbe had walked Into tbo trap be\nbud set for ber.\n\"Hut of course It's absurd for you to\nsay sucb things to a woman of my\nuge-iuid for me to llsteu.\" she contln-\n. lied courageously, though Mallory uo-\nHeed tbat abe uo longer made aa If to\nleave bim.\n\"My dear Miss Foster.\" he said persuasively, \"we won't talk of tbat phase\nof the matter at all. I should not be\nsaying this to yon If 1 bud not a ter,\ndeep regard for you. and you, I faucj,\nwould not be listening.'\nThere was a little Incoherent murmur which be took tor assent. Then\nhe continued with an anxious air:\n\"But there Is ar. ethical side to lb*\nmatter that persons of our age should\nconsider. You would be doing a beautiful act if yon would take my children\nand me In baud, and I could make\ntluugs so much easier for you aud your\nmother.\"\n\"Thnt will bring ber,\" be exulted te\nhimself.\n\"Cut I tbougbt your children were\ngrown ?\"\n\"They're over twenty,\" he admitted\nboldly, \"but tbat is tbe very age al\nwhicb young people most need the\ncontrolling influence of borne.\"\nHe could see tbut sbe was awaken*\nIng, ami be wisely refrained from fur\nther persuasion, murmuring ouiy, \"We\nneed you. dear.\"\n...... a\nOn the steps of her new home aa the\ncarriage dasbed up tbe drive abe noticed tbat a small group awaited them.\nA moment later sbe was clasped ln \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nbear hug by a bright faced girl, who\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0aid \"My dear little new mother\" eo\nwarmly thnt she loved her on tbe spot,\nas well as tbe manly youth who laughingly took her next pleudlng, \"Me\ntoo.\"\n\"And this is my husband. Ralph,\"\ntbe girl explained as another young\nmnn stepped forward. \"And thia la\nJauot. Harry's wife.\"\nThen a nurse moved forward Into\nthe circle, holding a bulky armful.\n\"Aud tbis. mother,\" continued the\ngirl proudly, \"la your little granddaughter.\"\nSo tbese were the \"children\" who\nneeded her.\nTbe second Mra. Mallory swept the\ngroup wltb an eye tbat sought ber perfidious husband. He had disappeared.\nThen she buried her convulsed face ln\nthe soft sweet smelling bundle containing ber new grandchild to smother\nher laughter.\nFishing In Sydnsy Harbor.\nA tenant ot most ot the shores\naround Sydney is the toad-fish,\ntfhich looks like a toad elongated into\na lish, with a tough, leathery, scale-\nless skin, and a bloated body, dark-\nmottled brown above, an_l white be-\nneath.\nIt is usually about five inches long,\nand disproportionately broad, but\nSwims veiy swiftly, and is, ior its\nsize, as bold and voracious as the\nshark.\n'ihe toad-fish, which swarm every,\nwhere, no sooner sees u bait dropped\ninto the water than they dart towards\nit by dozens, and fight among them-\nselves f..r the honor of swallowing\nyour hook, generally taking the precaution to bite off your line at the\nsame time.\nThis extreme anxiety to be caught-\naiight perhaps be pardoned were the\nijreeuy little wretches fit to eat, but\ntney ure highly poisonous.\nAs they thus effectually put a stop\nto angling by biting off every hook\ndropped in the water before any otner\nlish hud time to look at it, they especially enjoy the benefit of the fishing\nspear, upon which many hundreds, if\nuot thousands, are frequently impaled\nin succession.\nThis sounds wantonly cruel, but let\nao one pronounce it so who is not well\nacquainted with the tond-lish; from\nthose who are, 1 fear no reproof. When\nsj eared, tney directly inflate their\nleathery skins like a balloon, and eject\na stream ol liquid Irom their moutus,\nwith a report as if they had burst.\nH flung again into tne water, however wounded, t.iey instantly swim\nabout, and begin eating; and should\none be a little less active than his fellows, they forthwith attack him and\neat him up.\nKing Edward and Labor Guest.\nKing Edward had\u00E2\u0080\u0094a fact which ia\nrecalled by the recent indisposition oi\nMr. Henry Broadhurst\u00E2\u0080\u0094a most courteous and considerate manner towards\n! the old type of Labor politician. Mr.\nBroadhurst was a member of Mr.\n| uladstone's Ministry. He was, indeed,\n| the tirst Labor member to be admit-\nter to Ministerial distinction; thus\nthe then Prince of Wales invited him\nto spend the week-end at Sandring-\nham. On the night of his arrival, the\nprince and his guest sat up over a\ncigar until the \"wee sma' hours ayont\nthe twal'.\" As a fact, when the pair\nproceeded to retire the entire household was a rest. The prince escorted\nhis guest to his room. \"Ah, Broadhurst,\" said he, as he supplied a\nlight, \"I thought I'd like to see you\nsafe in bed.\" Is there any other Labor\nParliamentarian who cad say he has\nbeen \"tucked in\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094thus Mr. Broadhurst describes the incident \u00E2\u0080\u0094 by a\nKing-expectant?\nWhere Will Manuel Live?\nWhere will the ex-King ol Portugal\nlivef In older times Twickenham wan\na refuge Ior dispossessed royalties,\nand it was here that Louis Philippe\nand the Prince de Joinvilie came alter the Revolution oi 1848 had driven\ntbem Irom France, says The London\nChronicle. Orleans House\u00E2\u0080\u0094Louis Philippe's Twickenham home\u00E2\u0080\u0094is now \"to\nlet.\" By the park gates there is a\npublic-bouse known as the Crown.\nMany years ago a loriner landlord oi\nthis hostelry saluted the ex-King ol\nthe French as he was walking through\ntbe streets ol Twickenham. \"What\nwere you when I lived here?\" asked\nLouis Philippe. \"Please your Royal\nHighness,\" replied the man, \"I kept\nthe Crown.\" \"Did you?\" said the ex-\nKing. \"Weil, you were lucky; you did\nwhat I was unable to do I\"\nThe Useful Crouton,\nThe simplest way to prepare \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ncrouton ts tp cut slices of white bread\nthree-quarters of an Inch thick. Butter lightly on both sides: then cut\nInto three-quarter Inch squares and\nbrown In a skillet over a moderate\nAre. Turn oftci. As soon as lightly\nbrowned put on browned paper on i\ncolander to drain and keep bot Serve\nquickly. ^^\nHam and Cheese Canapes.\nHam antl cheese canapes are appetising tidbits. Spread finger lengths of\nbread wltb butter und a layer of deviled bam. Over the whole sprinkle s\nlayer of Parmcsnn cheese Put thi\ncanapes In an oven to become but Ue\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6ore serving.\nDEVOTED TO PILLOWS.\nOne Day Should Be 8et Aside Fer\nTheir Cleaning.\n\"A whole day for tbe pillows!\"\ngasps the busy housewife, altogether\nunwilling to lavish so much time on\none article out of a houseful, but pillows are precious tn tbe estimation of\ntbe careful householder, and eight or\nten hours spent upon tbe family supply\nof pillows once a year will prove anything but a waste of time.\nTbey require beating with a rattan\nbeater, wblcb will neither cut tbe seam\nnor wear the ticking, bnt If done on a\ndry, windy day, will clear out almost\nMINISTER FIFTY YEARS\nREV. DR. CARMICHAEL OF KINO\nTOWNSHIP HOLDS A RECORD.\nPILLOWS HKtJCIKK BUTHTO.\nas much of the collected dust (and\nwith lt u fair supply of germs) aa tbe\nmost modern vacuum process.\nScrubbing is resorted to wben oltl\nticking covers have been removed and\nare still strong and firm enough for\ncontinued use. Wltb a band brush a\nliberal supply of soapy latber ts rubbed Into the ticking, wblcb Is spread\nout upon a table, preferably out ot\ndoors, and which later Is scrubbed\nwith force and tben rinsed through\nseveral cold, clear waters and sunned\nto tbe point of absolute dryness.\nPillows themselves may. according\nto the latest authority, be treated slm\nllarly wltb tbe exception of the com.\nplete rinse, for It is well to remember\ntbat tbere are feathers within and tbat\nit Is well therefore to use more semi-\ndry lather aud less rinse water, adding\na fair quantity of ammonia for cleansing purposes, fallows thus treated are\nbung In tbe open air and tbe hottest\nsun to dry dny after day until tbeir\nfeathers are dry without a shadow of\na doubt.\nCork dust ta \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 clean filling for tbe\ncoucb pillow, as are also old letters\ntorn Into small bits. Bran and sawdust are too heavy, while excelsior and\nhair are too bard. Rose leaves are\na delight and balsam pine needles\nstand In a class by themselves.\nPutting His Foot In It.\nCharles Dickens once wrote to a\nfriend i\n\"I have distinguished myself in\ntwo respects lately. I took a young\nlady, unknown, down to dinner, and\ntalked to her about the Bishop of\nDurham's nepotism in the matter of\ncheese. I found she was Mrs. Cheese.\nAnd I expatiated to the member for\nMarylebone, thinking him to be an\nIrish member, on the contemptible\ncharacter of the Marylebone constituency and the Marylebone representative.\"\nTwo such mishaps in one evening\nwere enough to reduce the most brilliant talker to the condition ol tbe\nthree inside passengers of a London-\nbound coach, who beguiled tbe\ntedium of the journey from Southampton by discussing the demerits\nof William Cobbett until one of the\nparty went so far as to assert that\nthe object ol their denunciation was\na domestic tyrant, given to beating\nhis wife.\nMuch to his dismay the solitary\nwoman passenger, who had hitherto\nsat a silent listener, remarked:\n\"Pardon me, sir, a kinder husband\nand lather never breathed; and I\nought to know, lor I am William Cob-\nbett's wile.\"\nIncurable.\n\"I do think,\" said Mrs. McGooslc,\n\"my husband is the most persistently\nargumentative man I ever saw. He'll\ncontrovert any proposition, no matter what it is. This morning while\nve were waiting on a platform ol one\noi the elevated railway stations for\na train he saw the sign 'Out oi order'\non one of those chewing gum slot\nmachines.\n\" 'I'm willing to bet a cent it isn't\nout oi order,' he said.\n\"And he dropped a coin in the slot.\nHe didn't get any stick oi gum and\nhe didn't get his money hack.\n\" 'There, I said, 'I hope you're satisfied now.'\n\" 'That doesn't prove anything, Al-\nvira,' he grunted. 'The machine isn't\nout oi order; it's built tbat way on\npurpose.'\n\"But that's Lysander all over.\"\nHe Has Spsnt Half a Century In the\nOns Community Attending to Three\nCharges and Speaking English and\nQaslic\u00E2\u0080\u0094Is Ons of ths First Graduates of Queen's and Is a Hebrew\nScholar of High Repute.\nThe patriarch ol Canadian presby-\nterianism lives in King 'township.\nCounty oi York, Ontario, and he ia\nthe nev. Dr. uuruncituel. tor fifty\nwhole years iu one community he has\nbeen preachiug with tue Scutch tang\nin bis voice. To live generations ho\nhas been sky pilot. He lias baptized\nsix hundred uud forty children\u00E2\u0080\u0094tbe\nchildren of infants whom he hud rocked in the cradle, some uf them. And\nhe belongs to the present just as much\nas the past, he tells tue same story\nto the Hired man with the bicycle as\nhe did forty yeurs ago to his father\nSunday morning iu tue boss's pew at\nthe kirk; one difference: his three-\nhour disquisition bus beon cut to twenty minutes\u00E2\u0080\u0094O tempore, O mores I\n\"The Doc. has kept himself posted;\nhe speaks Greek everyday, he does.\"\nA King farmer pounded his knee with\na hand like a ham fas he made the\nabove remark the other day. Dr. Car-\nmichael is one of Queen's first graduates, with a yeur of Glasgow brushing. He is one of the most eloquent\nmen in the councils of his church.\nA prominent city pastor said the other\nday that Dr. Curinichael could go\ndown to Queen's or Toronto and fill\nthe chair in Hebrew or church history with the savoir faire of the best\nintellectual fibre on the staff ol the\ntheological colleges.\nBut this gentle scholar has given\nthe best that is in him to a small,\nrural congregation. He has shut his\nThe Glowworm.\nPesplte tbe fact science baa been\npuzzling over tbe problem for many\nyears\u00E2\u0080\u0094experimenting and analyzing\nand dlsaectlng-tbe glowworm's secret\nIs still unsolved. We know very little\nmore about lta mysterious lamp-pbys-\nlologlc light the experts call lt-tban\ndid our forefathers. Even IU purpose\nts still hidden.\nBRV DR. CARMICHAEL.\neyes to the lure of fashionable, metro\npoiitun ecclesiasticism; he lias seen\nconfident, young clerics succeed to\ngood jobs with tut salaries which letters in the King postotiice had offered\nhim. Always there was the Call. And\nevery Sunday morning lor fifty years\nhis buggy has been trotted uut, and\nhis horse hitched; and he has jogged\nover corduroy roads and the new highways of macadam to meet his flock\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ntwenty-two miles of a drive, three\ncharges to be visited, three sermons in\nhis black coat to be delivered ill English and the soft speech of the Gael,\nadvice to be rendered, consolation given. Then on the week days toilers\nin the field have seen his buggy\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsometimes long, white ribbons at the\nwhip; and often, too, a weary sufferer\nin dead ol night has heard the hooi\nof the manse horse clicking among\nthe stones.\nNothing ostentatious has there been\nabout Dr. Carmichael's ministry. But\nthere has been a great deuL of sell-\nsacrifice. When wc speak of city\nchaps in this connection we call it\nheroism; Ior we are a nation oi hero-\nworshippers. In the making of a raw\ncountry, wc tend to be impressed alone\nby feats spectacular; if J^ines builds\na railroad he is a \"big' man\"; who\ngives a continental about the wrin- '\nklcd uid schoolmaster or the sympathetic minister at home who first\ninspiretl the mind oi Jones with visions ol mighty deeds? Yet, after all,\nthese unadvertised men are the pillars oi our civilization.\nTable Etiquette.\nTbe little difference between lifting\na dish and shoving It aloug makes\ntbe btg difference between a sloven\nand tbe punctilious observer of good\nmanners at the table and has an effect\nIn marring lbe harmony of tbe table.\nwhereby In congenlalness and table en-\nJoyment all are best conserved.\nSucking lbe fingers ur teeth, picking\ntbe teetb al Ihe table before all are\ndune eating, gazing about tbe table\nwhile drinking, tipping bark Ihe chair\non two leg*, taking any uf Ibe dessert.\nas fruit, nuts ur swseimeals, sway\nfrom tbe table. Is tbe worst possible\nform.\nA Man's Arm.\nNowadays It Is nol tbe custom for a\nwoman to lean upon the arm uf the\nman wbo Is walking beside her during\ntbe daytime, and she seldom accepts\nthis support after nightfall unless she\nla Infirm or elderly or tbe mau Is ber\nlance or husband. THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nWhen You Think\nOf the pain whioh many women experience with every\nmonth it makes tbe gentleness snd kindness always associated with womanhood seem to be almost a miracle.\nWhile in general no woman rebels against what she regards at a natural necessity there is no woman who would\nwit gladly be tree from this recurring period of pain.\nDr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes\nweak women stroni and alck woolen\nwell, antl fives them freedom from pain,\nit establishes regularity, subdues Inflam.\nmation, heals ulceration and cures le.\nmale weakness.\nSick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce hy letter,\nfree. Ail correspondence strictly privnte und sucredly\nconfidential Write without feur and without fee to World's Dispensary Med*\nicai As ociation, 11. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N, Y.\nIf you want ti book that tells nil. about woman's diseases, end how to cure\ntlnsr.. uf borne, send V one-coilt stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost ol mailing\n0,.i., ,,.,. ir, ,.;ti ...n(i you a free copy of lib great thousand-page illustrated\n1 A Ivlscr- revised, up-to-date edition, in paper covers.\n. i . . ' : \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" stamps.\nB. C. Fruit Growers\nAt the recent meeting of tlte\nBritish Columbia Fruit Growers' association at Victoria it\nwas made abundantly clear\nthat tlie principal market for\nBritish Columbia fruit for at\nleast tlie present will he the\nprairie provinces, and particularly }lie non-competitive ter-;\nritory on the Canadian Pacific\nnnd to a less extent on the\nCanadian Northern, where\nBritish Columbia has an advantage as to freight rates.\nTlie report of Mr. Metcalfe,\nmarkets commissioner, was\napproved and will he issued\nby the department later.\nWith regard to transportation, tliere was considerable\ndiscussion on the need forcer-\ntain reduction in rates and\ncertain improvements in sei'-;\nvice. The association passed\na resolution asking for the appointment of a strong' transportation committee to deal\nffeetively with these problems by thta means. Experience has also shown that\nwe cannot secure from tbo\nrailway companies any considerate improvement through\nthe medium of general meetings.\nOn the lahor question and\non the need for more rapidly\ncolonizing the province by. a\nworking class of agriculturists,\nthe resolutions were exceedingly strong. It ishopedtbat\nthe provincial government will\ndo something in this matter in\nthe near future.\nThe association closed last\nyear witli the support of practically every prominent fruit\ngrower in the province. It' is\nexpected that the coming year\nwill see it very much stronger\nand much more fitted to carry\non the work of securing the\ngreat reformations necessary\nto the continued progress of\nthe fruit industry here.\nCHURCH SERVICES\nIIhi.yTiiinity Ciii'ui'ii.lli'iirv Steele,\nRobtor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sunday Burvlcos: llolv communion, ri-ssis n.in.; morning prayer\nnnd st'i'itutn. 11 a.iii.: cvciislinw und\nsermon, 7;80 p.m.; Sunday school, !i\np.m. First Sunday of tbo month\nholy communion will he celsbratbd at\ntha 11 a in. survica us well1 ns ntS.\na m. Week day ami speeiul services\naa they are announced from,'.time to\ntime Yuu arc cordially invited to|\nworship with us, antl we would bo\npleased to met you. ' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 '\nKnox Piiksbytkhian Chiucii\u00E2\u0080\u0094'\nSabbath Bervioes at Iln. in. and Tj30 p,\nin.; Sabbath sohool and Hible class at\n9.4l. a.m. All arc cordiilltainvited,\nHeats fire. Hev. M. L). MeKee, pustor,\nBoundary Hockey League\nJan. 27\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Grand Porks nt Phoenix\nJun. 30\u00E2\u0080\u0094Phoenix at Grnnd Forks\nFeb. 3\u00E2\u0080\u0094Grand Forks at Green\nwon.i.\nFeb. fi\u00E2\u0080\u0094Greenwood nt Phoenix.\nFeb. 9\u00E2\u0080\u0094Greenwood nt Grnnc\nForks.\nFeb. 134-Phoenix nt Greenwood\nIndigestion\n' If you arc suffering from indigestion\nand tlie attendant distressed stomach\nvou should give Mi-o-na, the guaranteed remedy, a trial. Mr. William\nShafer, of 230 Qneens St. S., Berlin,\nOnt., says: ''For years 1 have been a.\nsufferer from acuie indigestion, which\ncaused the most distressing pains in\nmy stomach, 1 decided to try Booth's\nMi-o-na 'tablets and they have done\nnie more good than anything 1 have\never lined. 1 am now more free from\nthis trouble than 1 have been for\nyears. 1 am pleased to endorse ami\ni econiinend this remedy to all who\nsuffer with .Uiinnch trouble.\"\nKatneitiher Mi-o na Tablets are\nguaranteed to cure acuie chronic indigestion and turn the old stomach\ninto a new one in a few weeks. All\ndruggists, 50c a box or postpaid from\nThe H. T. Booth Co., Ltd., Fort Erie,\n.0 nt. Std and guaranteen by H. E.\nWoodland il Co.\nFor Sale\u00E2\u0080\u0094Two bedroom suites,\nsolid walnut, inclndine poring* and\nmattress, nt 815 and 822. Apply\nMrs. J. Brantleyi nenrG. N. depot,\nMining Stock Quotations\nRoston, .Tan. 26.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The follow-\ning nre today's opening quotations for\nthe stocks mentioned:\nAsked. Bid\nGrntihv Consolidated. 45 Of) 3800\nB. 0. Copper 7.25 6.50\nFor Sale at a Bargain\u00E2\u0080\u0094Two-horss-\npower gasolene engine. Apply J. H.\nPlath; box 10, city.\nDon't forget thnt The Pun nns the\nhest job printing depnrrment in the\nBoundarv country.\nSituation wanted hy young lndy\non fir\u00C2\u00BBt of February, March or April;\nbookkeeping or tenchini! preferred;\nspeaks English, French, German\nund Dutch. Address P. O. Box 31 li,\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nParisian Sage Will Grow\nMore Hair\nParisian Sage will stop falling hair\nin two weeks\u00E2\u0080\u0094cure dandruff in the\nsame time nntl stop scalp itch at once\nIt makes the hair soft, silky and luxuriant. As u hair dressing Parisian\nSage is without a peer. It contains\nnothing that can harm the hair\u00E2\u0080\u0094It is\nnot sticky, oily or greasy, antl pre\nvents as well as curet diseases of the\nscalp.\nWomen and children by the thousand use it daily as a dressing and no\nhome is complete without it. Money\nhack if it fails.\nDruggists and stores everywhere\nguarantee Parisian Sage and will refund your money if it fails. Ask II.\nE Woodland it Co., druggists, what\nthev think of it. They sell it at 50e\nper huge bottle or you can secure it\nby mail postpaid from Ginmx Munn\nfacturitlg Co., Fort Erie, Out. Sec\nthat the girl with the auburn hair is\non each package. Sold ami guaranteed by 11 E. Woodland k Co.\nMetal Quotations\nNi.w V i, Jim. 26.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Silver. 51J\nstandard copper,812,20(\u00C2\u00AB 12.25.steady,\nLoNDON, .bin. 2fi.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Silver, ib\\nlead, 1. Wl os.\nHyomei\n' MwilolilsT CHURCH J. Hey. Culvert, 1J.I> , I'tisioi-.-Sunibw .services,\n11 n.in. and 7:30 p.ui.;Sunday \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'clmol,\n2:80 p.m.; Epworth League, Monday\nat 8.00 p.ni.; prayer meeting, Wed-\nnesdavs, s p.m.; Junior League; Fridays, 7:00 p.m. Everybody will be\nwelcome,\nBaptist Ciiuhoii, ftey, 11. W,\nWriglitj pastor.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Servioes mi Sunday\nat 11 a. in. awl 7:30 p. in.; Biblu\nnidus und Sunday sohool al 2:30 p.m.\nThe lliealheiilili' Remedy for Catarrh.\nThe rational way to combat catarrh\nis the llvoinei way, viz, by breathing,\nScientists for years hnve heen agreed\no'i this point, Init tailed tuget au itn-\ntiscpti\" strong enough tu kill eatanh\ngei'ms and not destroy the tissues of\nthe nieiiihrniit. at the same time, until the discovery of Hyonii'i (pronounced High-o-nie.)\nHyomei is the most powerful yet\nhealing antiseptic known Breathe t\nthrough the inhaler over the iiillaineil\nami germ-ridden membrane fp.ut ur\nRye times a duv, nnd in n few days tlie\ngerms will disappear.\nA complete flyomei outfit, Inolud\ning the inhaler, costs 81.00, and extra\nhottliw, if afterwards needed, cost, but\n60 cent. Obtainable from your druggie! or postpaid from the li. T. Booth\nCo., Ltd., Fort Erie, Ont; Hyomei\nisgu minted! to cure asthma, crimp.\nsure throat, eoimhs, colds or grip ur\nrefund yonr money buck. Sold and\nguaranteed by II, E Woodland A Co,\nTake your repairs to Armson's\nBoot and Shoe Hospital, Bridge\nstreet, Grand Forks.\nA new lot of latest, tlesigns of pro\ngram an I menu cards just received at\n'I'he Sun job office.\nORE SHIPMENTS\nThe following are the returnR of\nthe ore production of the Boundary\nmines for the week, anil also for the\nyear to date:\nGranbv 21,831 66,484\nMother Lode.. 6,498 22,022\nJackpot 413 1,242\nKaw.iii.e 5,712 12.903\nSnowshoe 2,250 6,610\nXo. 7 180 655\nTotal 36,964 109,868\nSmelter treatment\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGranby 23,060 05,915\nB. C. Copper Co...12,215 37,096\nCERTIFCATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\nNOTICE\nNew York Mineral CliOum. situate In the\nOrnnil Forks Mining Illusion of Yule Dis-\ntrlet.\nWhere located*. In Brnwii'snamii.\nTIKE NOTICB tlmt 1. William A. I'owniler.\nI Kfi'B Miners' t'ertlHcutc No. H2H..1II, In-\ntotal, sixty ilio's from the ilnte hereof, lo imply to the Mitilni. Recorder for u CertlHente\nol Improvement, forthe purpose of ohtuln\nint. n Crown ' limit of tlio above 1'lnlinn-\nAtnl further t.ilte notioe llmt notion, Hurler\nRCOtion 81, must he oiimnii'noe'l hefore the\nissuance of tnioh Certiticute of Improvement.\nllnteil this 21st ilny of January. A n WU.\nWILLIAM A. POWNDBB\nHOTEL PROVINCE\nBridge Street,\nQRAND FORKS, B. G\nThe bent uml niost\n-nlittiuiti.il iirt-i.rdwcoUly. tnrdest ctr-\nculuuon of any IfllWHlflfl Joumiil. TerpU Ior\nCanatln, ^:t.:ri n yoat, fustiuto vrt\u00C2\u00BBialil. gold by\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0U DffVMMlQr<_\n861 Btouhity,\nin. rU rp Hu waahiai:\niniitcri. p. c,.\nWe carry the most lashionablo stock\nof wedding stationery in the Boundary country. And we are tho only\nolliee in this section that have the\ncorrect material for printing it. The\nSun job otlice."@en . "Titled The Evening Sun from 1902-01-02 to 1912-09-13

Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13

Titled The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-09-20 to 1929-05-10"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Grand Forks (B.C.)"@en . "Evening_Sun_1911-01-27"@en . "10.14288/1.0342110"@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 .