"b2018752-08da-4f37-a98f-60983bff5698"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2017-01-30"@en . "1908-05-15"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0342146/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " i 1.\n^\nJ\u00C2\u00B1\n\u00C2\u00BBun.\nSeventh Year---No. 29.\nCD Co\n^ / \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*<\n-*\u00C2\u00BB!\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n00\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0#=\nGrand Forks, B. C, Friday. May 15, 1908.\n$1.00 Per Year in Advance.\n$20 PER SHOVEL\nIngencia Placer Fields Re-\nported to Rival the\nKlondyke\nDistrict Capable of Being\nReached in Twenty Days\nFrom Hazelton\nAlex McQeen, of Victoria, who is\nwell known in Grand Forks, having\nformerly been a resident of this\ncity, has received word from George\nBarnes and Gus Rosenthal, two experienced miners whom a Victoria\nsyndicate sent into the Ingencia\ncountry last February. Their wire\nfrom Hazelton states that the new\ngold field is another Klondyke and\nthat pay dirt averaging 820 per\nshovel is being taken out on McConnell creek.\nThe men located claims for the\nsyndicate sending them and then\nhastened to Hazelton, which is 220\nmiles distant and capable of being\nreached from the creek in twenty\ndays by pack horse.\nMcConnell creek seems the best\nspot, and here seventy men are located. The greatest depth yet attained is thirty feet, and bedrock\nhas not been aeacbed. Sluicing is\nexpected to be in full swing shortly.\nBREVITIES\nThe secretary of the local lodge of\nKnights of Pythias has received the\nfollowing letter from Victoria: \"The\nSecretary, Knights of Pythae, Grand\nForks, B.C.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dear Sir: I beg to acknowledge receipt of cheque for\n$340, being the results of an entsr-\ntainment given by the Knights of\nPythias and Oddfellows of Grand\nForks. The money has been placed\nto tne credit of the Sanatorium\nbuilding fund. On behalf of our\nsociety, I beg to thank the members\nof your lodge for their generous donation. I have the honor to be,\ndear sir, your obedient servant, Dr.\nC. F. Fagan, Secretary British Col-\nlunibia Anti-Tuberculosis Society.\"\nMrs. Isabella M. Parsons, of Minneapolis, who with Harry H. Shallenberger, of Spokane, owns the Moreen mine in South Deadwood cun p.\nhas entered suit against Mr. Shallenberger for $50,000 damages for\nletters written, she alleges, for the\npurpose of injuring her. Mrs. Parsons was in Greenwood about six\nweeks ago, and this suit apparently\nfollows a threatened one for misrepresentation. Mr, Shallenberger is\nwell known in camp, being one of\nthe original owners of the Crescent\nmine.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Greenwood Times.\nThe Dominion Copper company's\nmines are all being kept in shape,\nand tho smelter in readiness, to\nstart up when ihe necessary instructions come. Manager \V. C.\nThomas, of Boundary Falls, has returned from a business trip to Spokane, but has no inf n tii > i . > impart as to thc copipany resuming\nwork.\nThe new passenger coaches for the\nGrand Forks-Phoenix run on the\nGreat Northern have been released\nhy the customs officers hy the payment of over 81000 duty, and are\nnow making regular daily trips up\nand down the hill. One is a first-\nclass coach, while the other is a\nleather - upholstered' compartment\nsmoker.\nTie-makers complain that the C.\nP. R. are refusing to inspect more\nties in the Boundary until Septem-\nrj? Sjfon\eof tpe liJcrfare being left\n7}f liugiripiiiiilitri** ft ties on bund,\nnd'to b***B>'iiipcl|Cn,/t> wait so long\n\"-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2money wUenStiet have to pay\n'Vn&Ss is creiiwra/ii good deal of\nfeip*\n*sat deaJ^Tf work of a general\ncharacTTJFWs lately been done at the\nEmma mine, and the property . was\nin very good shape for opening up\nlast week. The water had been kept\npumped out. and many improvements had been made to the fittings\nof the mine.\nLast week thirty tons of ore were\nshipped from the Crescent mine, in\nthe Skylark high-grade camp, to the\nTrail smeller. The ore was from\nstoping done on the 225-foot level\nearlier in the year, the mine not being in operation at present.\nAbout eighty men are now em\nployed at Tierney & Co.'s railway\neamp in Deadwood. The right of\nway is being cleared, but the main\npart of the work is being held up for\nsome necessary materials which the\nC. P. R should furnish.\nIt is reported that the plans of thp\npronioti rs of theGreen wood-Phoenix\nlong and deep tunnel are being\nshaped up, and it is thought that\nthe launching of the project, in its\nii i'itl slage, will soon be succes fully\naccomplished.\nThe men who go to work at the\nEmma mine will ha*/e a postoffice at\ntheir door, as the Dominion government has established one at Denoro.\nThe postmastership has been given\nto William Phillips, who conducts\nthe store there.\nRecently a strike of some 500 men\nemployed by the International Coal\nand Coke coinpany at Coleman,\nAlta., took place. The strike lasted\nonly a few days, the men returning\nto work lust week.\nRobert Scott, of Caledonia, Ont.,\nbrother of O. T. Scott, bookkeeper\nat the Emma mine, arrived at the\nQro Denoro a few days ago. He is\nhaving a ranch cleared along Eholl\ncreek.\nAccording to a oeport from Phoenix, the Granby and British Columbia Copper companies need several\nhundred-more miners to keep the\nextensive works in operation to their\nfull capacity.\nWork on the addition to the Province hotel has been considerably retarded of late on account of the\nshowery weather, but henceforth\nrapid progress will be made until it\nis completed.\nJ. E. Miller, internal revenue\ninspector for British Columbia, has\nbeen in the city this week arranging\nmatters wilh the new cigar factory\nhere so tbat it can market its product.\nP. D. McDonald's new West end\nhotel is now finished with the exception of the interior work.\nHe expects to be able to open the\nhouse about the 20th of next month.\nW. H. M. May, principal of the\npublic school in this city, waB elected second vice-president of the teachers' institute at the recent annual\nmeeting in Victoria.\nIt is reported from Phoenix that\nthc Snowshoe is likely to open in\nfew days. The mine will give e\nployment to about 300 men.\nDuring tbe past week the Great\nNorthern has sent a number of auditors on its passenger trains between\nSpokane and this city.\nMrs. W. S. Horton died at the\nhospital in Greenwood last week.\nDeceased leaves a husband and six\nchildren.\nA large force of men was set to work\nWednesday morning repairing the\nC.P.R. bridge at tbe smelter dam.\nJ., A. Chenier, tobacconist, of\nGreenwood, has assigned for the\nbenefit of his creditors.\nThe new addition to the Valhalla\nhotel is now nearly completed.\nThe assizes open at Greenwood on\nthe 26th inst.\nHow the Hindoos Are to Be\nKept Out of British\nColumbia\nMackenzie King's Report\nSubmitted to Parliament\nThe report of Mackenzie King on\nthe result or his mission to England\nto confer with the British authorities\non the subject; of immigration to\nCanada from India \u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd the Orient\ngenerally was presented to parliament a few days ago, together with\nthe orders in-council just passed giving effect to Mr. King's recommendations. It marks the satisfactory\nsolution of one of thc largest and\nmost complex problems confronting\nthe mutual interests of Canada an I\nthe empire. A lull and frank interchange of views between the British\nand Canadian governments has resulted in the adoption oj a mutual\npolicy of cooperation in which Great\nBritain's policy of protection of the\nnative races of India harmonizes\nwith Canada's policy of keeping the\nDominion a white man's country,\nwhile at the same time there is obviated the necessity of legislative\nact'on which might reflect on Great\nBritain's subjects in India, and render still more critical there a situation already pregnant with danger.\nThe solution of the problem of restricting the immigration of Hindoos\nis based on a clause of the Indian\nimmigration act which prevents natives leaving India under contract to\nlabor in any outside country unless\nthe said country is on the list of\ncountries scheduled in the act as being those which have made Jaws considered by tbe lieutenantgovernor-\nin-council as adequate for the protection of natives of India to' stay in\nthat country. Canada is not on this\nscheduled list. Therefore the bringing in of contract labor from India\nto British Columbia, the main source\nof alarm for a future inllux, is contrary to the laws of India. The\norder-in-council just passed makes\nall immigrants liable to deportation\nwho come in violation of the laws of\ntheir own country. This shuts out\ncontract labor immigration from India. Those who came voluntarily arc\nthat the arrangement as set* forth is\none which finds its justification on\ngrounds of liuniiiiiitv as strong as are\nthe economic reasons by which it is\nsupported. The liberty of British\nsubjects in India is safeguardi d\nrather thnn curtailed. The Irnil.i-\ntional policy of Biituin in respect to\nthe native races of India bus been\nkept in mind, and the necessity ol\nenacting legislation either in India\nnr in Canada which might appear lo\nreflect on fellow British subjects in\nanother part of the empire has been\nwholly avoided. In this, -as was to\nbe expected, Canada has not only\nthe sympathy and understanding,\nbut the hearty co-operation of the\nauthorities in Great Britain and India as well.\"\nExamination of Employees\nGlenn E. Votaw, formerly a Grent\nNorthern conductor in the Boundary\ndistrict, arrived iu the city lust Sunday in a special cur attached to tbe\nthrough freight. Mr. Votaw wns accompanied by two other Great North\nern employees, the three constituting\na board appointed by tho company to\ntravel over the entire system to examine and instruct employees in the\nrules recently issued by the road.\nOn their arrival here a \"school\" was\nheld in the passenger station, tliere being about thirty \"pupils\" present.\nThose that had to go through the examination included conductors, engineers, firemen, station agents,\" telegra\nphers, in fact everybody connected\nwith the road. The examiners stilted\nthat tile employees at this point\nshowed a better familiarity with the\nrules than any other set uf men they\nhad examined since they left the Pacific tenminus. The examiners left\nfoi the west over the V., V. it E. immediately after the close of the\n\"sehool.\" They are due to arrive in\nSt. Paul about the 1st of July. Railway men in this city consider Mr.\nVotaw's selection as one of the members of the examining board a great\ndistinction for this section of the country, although they recognize the fact\nthat no man better fitted for the position could have beeu chosen.\nBowser at Greenwood Assizes\nHon. W. J. Bowser, K.C., provincial attorney-general, will conduct\nthe assizes which open a Greenwood\nshortly. Mr. Bowser will represent\nthe crown in the well known Cedio\ncase. Ceilio is the Italian who must\nstand his trial on the charge of causing the death of Louise King when\ntho Niagara hotel was dynamited.\nIt will be remembered that Cedio was\nshutout ot Canada by a provision | ciiptured in Salt Litke City last win-\nwhich requires them to have in their ter, extradited and brought baok here\npossession an adequate sum of money I f\u00C2\u00B0r trial-\nto prevent the liability of his becoming a charge on thc public. The\nminimum sum, now S'2.r), may be\nA. C. Flumerfe'.t Addresses\n\" Canadian Club on Our\nRe?ources\nThe Wealth of the Piovince\nWill Take It to the\nForefront\nA. C. Flumerfelt was the guest of\nhonor at the Canadian club luncheon\nin the Pender hall, Vancouver, last\nMonday night.and his thirty-minute\naddress nn the resources of British\nColumbia was crowded with facts.\nBritish Coliimbiu had greater advantages than any other area on the\ncontinent of America, said -the\n-speaker, and Vancouver wns without\na parallel in the history of Oanadian\ncities. They had only to look at the\nbank clearings, building permits,\npostage statistics and inland revenue\nreturns to realize the wonderful\nstrides the province was making!\nAmong other things needed by the\nprovince was a refinery to treat not\nonly our own mineral wealth, but\nalso a large proportion of that of the\nwestern states. British Columbia\npossessed the largest area of timber\niu the known world, but Mr. Flumerfelt urged tbe necessity of a properly constituted forestry department\nto preserve this wealth.\nHe dealt with the mining and\nfishing industries, and advocated\nthe creation of what might he called\nn sinking fund to get expert opinion\nas to the best method of utilizing the\nwealth of the timber and the fish.\nLiberals Meet\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A meeting of the Liberal association wus held in tile association rooms\non First street last Monday night for\nthe purpose of discussing matters in\nconnection with the selection of a site\nfor a public building. There was a\ngood attendance. A committee consisting of Messrs. H. A. Sheads, N. L.\nMclnnes, John Donaldson, B. Le-\nquiine and Geo. Rutherford was appointed to inspect a number of sites,\nand to secure options on tbem, and lo\nreport to the association at a meeting\nto be held in Alberta hall on Wednesday evening, May 20th.\nMarried at Nelson\nFrank E. Franson, C.P.U. road*\n. ,, .,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,., ,. , i . master, of Eholt. and Miss Albertina\nraised to *200 if not found adequate _ ^ \u00E2\u0080\u009E .- ,\n. , ., T ,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E .. IC. Fransen, of Sirdar, were united in\nto keep out the Indians. Further, , ' ,, ..\n. , ,. ,, i marriage liy Hev. 11, Newton, pastor\npreventive measures, including the, .;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:,..,*, , '\nj.,., .. ,,.. , , ., , i ot the Methodist church, at thc rest-\ndistribution of literature by the In-!, , ,, , ,, ' , . ,\n,. , . ,, deuce of M r. and Mrs. Johnson, Mill\ndian government, warning the na-1 ., , ,, , .\n.. . r, , . . a . j . street, Nelson, Monday afternoon,\ntives tbat Canada is not adapted for ., /,, _ ,\n., ., . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i .t \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . I Mr. anil Mrs. l'l'iinson have gone to\nthem, the recent regulation prevent- , , , .\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,\n., . ,, .l i j- i tho coast, where they will spend two\ning the coming, other than by direct; , , ' , , . ,\n, ..... '. weeks before returning to their future\npassage from their native country on , _, ,\n&:, . .... , , * , home at Eholt.\nthrough tickets and warning to i \t\nsteamship companies that both the Rhodes Scholar\nBritish and Canadian governments, H p. Lof,aIli 80n 0- llev j A\nare adverse to any encouragement to Logan, of Eburne, B.C., graduate in\nnatives to take passage to Canada, arts, McGill'08, has been chosen as\nThe report concludes as follows' tl,\u00C2\u00B0 K1,0an\nPublished nt fraud Porka, British Columhin.\nG. A. KVANS ..\n....Editor nml Publisher\nA file \"f this impel* enn lie seen nt the offleo\nof Messrs. li & .1. Hardy & Ue., 311, 111 nnd 82.\nFleet Street, B.O.i London. Bnfrittlld, free of\ncharge, nml thnt firm will he glad to receive\nsub-i-ri|.lions uud nilverti.einetitu ou our behalf.\n8UBSOKIPTION HATES I\nOne Yenr $1.50\nOne Year (In uilviinee) 1.00\nA Ivertlstna* rotes fnrnlshel on alio\nl.e ml notice., 10 nnd 5 oents per line.\nAddress nil communications to\nThe Evening Suit,\nPhoxe B74 Giiand Fohkb, B.C.\nFRIDAY, MAY 15, 1908\nThe \"thin red line\" is not such a\nfrightful bugbear as the Conservative press is endeavoring to make the\npublic believe it is. It simply means\ntbat Liberal ollicers have erased\nnames that did not belong on voters'\nlists witb a thin red line. There is\nno crime in this, as the names could\nbe readily read alter their erasure.\nIt is an infinitely better method\nthan that employed by the Conservatives, which is to use a thick black\nline\u00E2\u0080\u0094complete obliteration of the\nname\u00E2\u0080\u0094making rectification impossible in the event of a mistake.\nThe revelations which are daily\nbeing made in the case of Mrs.\nLeila Guinea!?, the Indiana murderess, are of such a horrible character\nthat is again opportune to question\nwhether civilization ennobles or\ndegrades human nature. This woman, to whose door fifteen murders\nhave already been traced, appears\nto have practised homicide simp y\nfor the lust of gold. It is n strange\nand gruesome ciise,iinilthc details nie\nrevolting. It is also strange, as an\nAmerican paper puts it, that in the\ncountry and in the era which boast\nof woman's highest development a\nwoman should bear the obloquy of\nbeing the nation's worst example of\na moral mobster.\n'I'm: Nelson News .(Conservative)\nobjects tn Ayleswiirtli's election bill\nnn the ground that it would tlm w\nthe prepnii tion nf the lists into pni-\ntisnn baiids. We cannot construe\nthe proposed net into this light.\nUut supposing it did. why not even\nthings up a little, 'I'he lisls in this\nprovince have heen in the hands uf\nthe bitterest kind of partisans for a\nnumber of years.\nrequirements of expanding trade.\nPublic money is being wisely expended, not to enrich the few, but\nfor the benefit of all the people. This\nis tbe surest test of honest and wise\nadministration, that public money\nis expended in the public interest\nand Ior the general good. The government, with the many problems\nin tho older part of Canada, is not\nunmindful of the west. The building of the Grand Trunk Pacific is\nbeing pushed on with all possible\nspeed. Everything that the govern\nment can do to further this enterprise has been done in response to\nthe mandate of tho people ex pressed\nin the general of 1904. The Dominion is of vast extent and the needs\nfrom various points are diversified.\nTo solve the problems presented and\nmeet the desires of thc people from\nthe Atlantic to the Pacific is the object of thc present government.\nPEES0NAL\nIt is to be hoped that the members of the loeal Liberal association\nrealize thc importance of taking\nprompt steps in the matter of\nthe selection of a site for a\npublic building. It is therefore\nessential that all members attend the\nmeeting in Alberta hall next Wednesday evening. It would also be\nwell if everybody cast aside their\nsectional jealousies on this occasion\nand acted for the best welfare of the\ncity.\nTiik Hedley. Gazette, referring to\nthe attempt of the editor of the Vancouver Sunset to knock the prospects\nof railway connection to the coast\nforsoulhern British Columbia, says:\n\"The lust issue of the Saturday Sun-\nsot contains a sensational story of J.\nJ. Hill's intentions concerning the\nVancouver, Victoria & Eastern.\nWhatever grounds the Sunset may\nhave for claiming betrayal of McLean Bros., whose cause the editor\nhas taken up, the article falls down\nliy when it enters the domain of\nprophecy and declares that Hill will\nnot complete the road to the coast.\"\nThe citizen who told us about the\nfierce thunderstorm the other morning\nmust have had a brain storm during\nthe night.\nMr. Lowkhy wishes to know if\nfrogs die when they croak. If they\ndo, they have more lives than a cat.\nBREVITIES\nMrs. A. D. McMillan has removed\nto Greenwood for the summer.\nRev. W. C. Schlichter is attending\ntho Methodist conference at the coast\nthis week.\nR. H. Carley, a well known commercial man of Nelson, was a visitor\nin the city yesterday. ,\nGrand Chancelloi Jeffery Hammar,\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Stendal, Mrs.\nGeo. Chappie and Mrs. W..T, Stewart\nare attending the convention of the\nGrand Lodge of Knights of Pythias in\nVictoria this week.\nFred H. Knight, of Spokano, arrived in the eity on Wednesday, and\nyesterday he visited the Little Bertha\nmine, in which property he is interested. He states that the work on\nthe improvements at the mine is progressing very favorably.\nWe are still offering The Sun and\nthe Toronto Weekly Globe and Canada Farmer for $1 per year in advance. The illustrated supplement\nthat accompanies the Globe is worth\ntwice the money we ask for the two\npapers.\nGood, Clean Seed Potatoes for sale.\nM. Miller, Grand Forks, B. C.\nThe Sun and the Toronto Weekly\nGlobe for SLOOper year.\nBioyci.es and Repaid Work\u00E2\u0080\u0094A\ncomplete line of 11)07 models. A few\nsecond-hand wheels cheap. Wheels\nto rent. Geo. Ciiapple, opposite\nPostoflice, First street.\nWe have some of tlio highest grade\npaper and stationery for up-to-date\ncommercial printing every brought to\nthe Boundary. .Sun Job Olliee.\nAgonts Wanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094l(ix'20 crayon\n-portraits 40 cents, frames 10 cents\nand up, sheet pictures one cent each.\nYou can make 400% profit or *?'!'i per\nweek. Catalogue and samples free.\nFrank W. Williams Co., 1208 W,.\nTaylor St., Chicago, 111.\nMining Institute\nThe western branch of the Canadian\nMining Institute convened in Rossland yesterday, and the meeting will\nclose tonight. There is a good attendance of members from the Boundary,\nSlocan, Nelson, Ymir and other districts. A number of interesting papers are to be read. Mr. A. B. W.\nHodges, of this city, manager of the\nGranby Consoliil\"**eil, was over in\nRossland last week and mild,! arrangements for the meeting, A committee\nof Rossland engineers is looking after\nthe entertainment of the delegates.\nFruit Lands\nA Bad Memory\nThe Saturday Sunset's zeal for McLean Bros., whose brief it has taken\nup, has led it to make some bold assertions that will be veVy difficult to\nback up. To hold that because J. J.\nHill, in 1902, expressed unwillingness\nto build through British Columbia to\nthe coast, he cannot intend to carry\noutan agreement which he made in\n1906 to do so, is to talk rank nonsense. People are allowed to change\ntheir minds in three years\u00E2\u0080\u0094and why\nnot J. J. Hill? And, again, when the\nSunset says that neither J.J. Hill nor\ninyone authorized to speak' for him\never said that the Great Northern intended to build over the distance ly\ning between the Similkameen and\nHope, it conveys the idea that it must\neither confine its reading wholly to\nthe columns of the Sunset, or its editor has a very bad memory for things\nhe has read.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hedley Gazette.\nThat Canadians may reap the\ngreatest benefit from the material\nadvancement and prosperity of the\ncount ry at large, and avail themselves of their natural advantages\nand opportunities, the federal government has entered upon great\npublio works in the general interest.\nHallways have been assisted, wharfs\nbuilt, canals deepened, hnrbois\ndredged, ami public buildings erected; all ot this for the general advantage ol thc people and lo meet tbe\nCaptain Disbrowe returned this\nweek from Shields station, where he\nholds a position with W. P. Tierney\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2fc Co., the railway contractors. Mr.\nDisbrowe states that ubout :)00 men\nare nt present employed at this\npoint making a big cut. Wall &\nCreelman, the bridge contractors, are\nalso putting in bridges at this place.\nTierney tt Co.'s contract at this point\ninvolves tlm handling of some 166,-\n000 yards of material, and the work\nis stretched over a distance of some\nseven miles. The same firm also\nhas a contract going on at Fife in\nfixing the roadbed.\nThe bazaar given by the Altar society nl the Roman Catholic church\nin the opera house on the I Ith, 12th\nnnd 13th IllSt. proved a grent slices, and the society ft els very gr.ite-\ntiii to the public for their liberal\npatronage. It is estimated tlmt\nabout u thousands dollars was cleared\nby lie entertainment, The receipts\nare lo he used towards defraying the\ncost of establishing ;i Catholic school\nhere.\nMcCullum A* McArdle this week\nsold seven lots in blnrk 0 to The\nSun man. Tbey will make a valu-\nah'e addition to the Sun's cherry\norchard, vineyard and experimental\nfarm.\nThe Yale-Columbia Lumber company's sawlogs up the Nortli Fork\nhave started to come over tbe smelter dam.\nIn the popularity contest nt the\nCatholic bazaar Miss Ella Lydon\nwon the gold watch.\nA big gang of rivoi drivers reached the city yesterday from the upper\nmain river.\nMining Stock Quotations\nNew Y*ohk, May 13.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The following are onlay's opening quotations for\nthe stock mentioned:\nAsked. Bid\nGranby 92.00 S5.00\nDominion Copper 1.50 1.37\nB. C. Copper 5.00 4.50\nA 95-ACRE FARM\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fu)ly equipped and improved. Excellent fruit land.\nA 19-ACRE TRACl\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well improved and equipped.\nFRUIT LANDS\u00E2\u0080\u0094In largo and small tracts, improved and unimproved.\nA I0-R00MED HOUSE\u00E2\u0080\u0094With modern improvements; centrally located; at a bargain.\nA 5R00MED HOUSE cheap.\nMcCALLUM S McARDLE\nCor. First and bridge Streets\nP. BURNS C& CO.\nLIMITED.\nDealers in all Kinds Heated Rooms. Entirely re-\nfurnished ...nl renovated throUffnout\nFlri.t.riu*.'. board by day- weeh or\nimiutli. Speeiul mien to -ti'inly Imuril*\nart, American mul European plain..\nPtnett Uar in -in In Connection-\nBRIDGE STREET GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nNEW YORK\nCLIPPER\n18 THK OREATEBT\nTHEATRICAL I SHOW PAPER\nIN THE WORLD.\n$4.00 Per Year. Single Copy, 10 Cts.\nISSUED WBEKLT.\nSample Copy Free.\nFRANK QUEEN PUB. CO. (Lid),\nALBFItTJ.nOBIE.\nPUBLISHERS,\n\u00C2\u00AB W. 18tu St., Kiw TOM\ni\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGE\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nReceive i><-ti. Ladles and Gentlemen a* retl*\ndent or duy student*: hae a completeCoirt*\niiurelulor Busfneu Couriei prepare! st***-\nilfiit-.il ruin Tern-lieu' Certificate!, of nil\nL'rnileti; u'Ivcb tlm four jeum' OOUIffl for tlie\nH. A. i.i'uree. nnd tiie tlt-t yenr of tlio Sellool\nof Bcleuoe course, fn affiliation with the Toronto University; hat a \u00E2\u0096\u00A0p'.-cinl prospectori-\n0011*16 for miuum who work in u.c. (nitruo*\ntion Im also ulvuii in Art, Munlc, Physical Culture uud Elocution. Term open-. Septal Ui\nline'., For Calendar*, etc, add row\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGE. tm\nm.\njjpBull Dod Suspenders\nrTilEPTAKTtART.beciin.othe!* fit, btnUH the**-contain own\nmij battel rabbat tian other urnl-ei, Bll-'wlntc ssss, frcu\nmovmnont ol ttWwil] \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00ABar> potlfioa: bw-Mu** they hftvo K'iil--*iii\nmuUl p.rt*. **wnnt**M Dot to riiiturUrnUh. ami MWtlH tlio O0rd\nV efuhfiroftn'tiiuTtliin 11-.11--.ll-- (mind fu mi-ioudon- pravouliuctkaiu\nfnimtruj-Miifami wwrlngthtonibi.\nK. TOW Ot'TWEUi THBBB miDINAltV KIND.-:, WHICB MBAltB\n** THKEE TIMES TIIE SERVlCl Ot VSOit, DO CENT SORTS.\nTTib Mmt Ootnfottlbl'i Soiptnd.ri Hadl tor Man. Yottth or Ilny\nIn llL'lil. HiTivyr Eilrnlktivv Wfiftiln. KMr*** Ijiiib-N\" l.strr. Colt)\nHorn Xrt**, liiimpeusivoOilU Kvorj Mod ami Buy Will Gladly Hvculvo\nFOR Tllli DEST INSIST ON UODBL B BULL DOO 8USPENDEH*.\nHEWES & POTTER. Dent.\n87 Lincoln St. Boatoa* Mm*.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2or uiofnl Bun. Hwi Snranm Ciiiib A*i> Cm milM f<>r inc. poiloc-*.\nIii-itrui*tl-.B bfuklot. \"\"Jtyle, or How to PrtM Correctly,\"\ntm t( you menti.'ii tht*' pttbUMtion.\nThe Granby Consolidated\nStevens' Copper Handbook is nn\nannual volume whose appearance is\nwelcomed by copper workers the\nworld over. As the work is of one\nman, it is a monument of industry\nand intelligent discrimination. It\nis reliable and comprehensive. Of\ndubious enterprises it expresses its\nopinion unhesitatingly. Hence it is\nof extraordinary value to the investor.\nIt is pleasant to read Mr. Stevens'\nwarm praise of a Canadian copper\nconcern. In concluding a detailed\ndescription of the Granby Consolidated Mining and Smelting company's\nmines and works at Phoenix and\n(irand Forks, B.C., Mr. Stevens\nspeaks thus of the company's execution:\n\"Both mine and smelter have been\nbrought to a high state of efficiency,\nand the cost sheet is one of which\nany directorate well might be proud.\nThe Gin11by is one of the few copper\nproperties of the world of which a\ncareful investigation leads to the ver\ndict that there is nearly everything\nto commend, and scarcely anything\nto criticise.\"\nMr. Stevens' praise is worth something.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Canadian Mining Journal.\nThe Brehany Company\nThe appearance of the great\nAmerican soprano, Louise Brehany,\nand her talented associates in a ballad ind operatic concert at the\nGrand Forks opera house, Friday\nnight, May 15th, will be a rare\nmusical feast that is seldom enjoyed\noutside of the metropolitan cities.\nThis charming soprano has long been\nrecognized as America's greatest\nsongstress. There is no other soprano, not even in the grand opera\nranks of Italy or America, that can\nboast the marvelous range of Louise\nBrehany. The other members of\nMiss Brehany's organization are\nequally famous, both in Europe and\nAmerica, in their respective parts.\nMiss Edith Adams, violin cellist, a\ngraduate of Hansman, of Berlin, is\none of the world's greatest cellists,\nhaving been cello solist with Thomas-\nPRINTING\nWe are prepared to do all kinds of\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING\nOn the shortest notice and in the\nmost up-to-date style\nBECAUSE\nWo have the most modern jobbing plant\nin the Boundnry Country, employ competent workmen, and carry a complete\nline of Stationery.\nWE PRINT\nBillheads nud Statements,\nLetterheads nml Envelopes,\nPosteis, Dull.- .iinl Dodgers,\nBusiness nnd Vipitwg Cards,\nLodge Constitutions nnd B.'-lnvs.\nShipping Tugs, Circular* and I'lucnrds,\nliill- uf Pure nud Menu L'nrils,\nAnnouncement*! nud Counter Puds.\nWedding Stationery,\nAnd everything turned out in an\nUp-to-date Prinlery.\norchestra. Maximilian Dick, who\nhas heen in our city once before, is\nalso a member of the company, and\nlast, but by no means least, Miss\nAlice McClung, piano soloist and accompanist, a graduate of Walter\nSpry's famous school in Chicago.\nThis concert will fill a long felt want\nin the artistic line, and from the advance sale of tickets promises to be\nthe greatest success of nny entertainment ever given in Grand Forks.\nThe Mason & Hiseh people will furnished for this occasion.\nIn our council report Inst week n\ncipher appears to have shrunk to less\nthan nothing by making a mysterious\ndisappearance, The hoard of work's\nestimate of the amount of lumber required for a footbridge at First street\nshould hnve rend 35,000 feet, instead\nof 3500 feet.\nRoman Catholic Church\nRev. Father Lawrence, an active\nmember of our missionary stall, of\nBuffalo, will preach a mission in the\nRoman Catholic church of this city\nfrom May 24th to May 29th. To all\nCatholics, a very pressing invitation;\nto all non-Catholics, a very friendly\ninvitation. A mission is an occasion for every one to hear, in a series\nof sermons, what the religion of\nJesus Christ is from the standpoint\nof the Roman Catholic church; a\nmission is a special time God gives\nto make us realize more vividly\nwhat conditions we must comply\nwith if we want to go to heaven in\nthe home of Jesus Christ our God\nand Saviour.\nRev. Father J. Hartman,\nRector.\nSHOP TALK\nShow cards for widndws and inside\nare a fine form of silent, salesmen.\nMake them brief, terse and pointed.\nPrint them plainly, to he read at a\nglance.\nLocal advertisers should make a\nnote of the fact that Tiik Sun is the\nmost widely read paper in Grand\nForks.\nA new lot of latest designs of program and mena cards just received at\nThk Sun job otlice.\nWe have a large supply of all kinds\nof visiting curds in stock, and the\nmost fashionable styles of type tn\nprint them with. Thk Sun Job Office.\nThe Sun and the Toronto\nGlobe for 81 per year.\nWeekly\nc^A Snap\nS1450\n-BUYS seven-acre\ntract adjoining the\nsouthern boundary\nof the city limits; three-room\nhouse and \u00C2\u00ABood well; thirty-\nseven hearing fruit trees and\na quantity of small fruits.\n$500 cash; balance in three\nyears. Best fruit land proposition in the valley.\nFor full particulars call at\nWe SUN OFFICE\nBOUNDARY ORE SHIPMENTS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'Pffc'n.ri PUi^TiMfi-the kiml -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2' d\u00C2\u00B0--\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ln it'\",if \"\"\nVJUUU tlVlLtllL'tU advertisement, and a trial order\nwill ciiiiviiirt* vim that our stuck and workmanship are of\nthe be*.t. Let us estimate on your Order, We guarantee\nsatisfaction,\nijJP\nWe\nGrand Korks Sun\nJob Department\nApplication for Transfer of Liquor\nLicense\nvO I ICE is here! y glvon that I intetltj\n1 to apply, at tlu next meeting of thi\nBoard of Licensa Commissioners ofthe\nCorporation of the City ofGrandForks.\nBC, for the transfer of the license to\nsell liquors it ri-tnil on the premise**\nknown as the Queen's hotel. Lots 5 aim\niv\"s: hall of 6. block 4. on Governmenl\nt vmue, lo the new building on Lot- 6.\n? uild 8. oloek 1, Government Avenue\npermission is also asked to change th\nnnme of th* house from the Queens\nHotol to tho Hotel Colin.\nDatod at Grand Fonts, B.C., this Is\nday of May, 1908.\np. d. McDonald.\nThe following table gives the ore shipments of Boundary mines\nfor 1905, 1906 and for the past week:\nam\nGranby Mines, Phoenix.: 613,637\nSnowshoe. Phoenix 135,001\nMother Lode, Deadwood 208,321\nB. C. Mine, Snmmit 1,712\nEmma, Summit 18,2*?+\n7905 Past Week\n377,925 23,173\n367\nOro Denoro, Summit Camp.\nBonnie Belle, Deadwood\t\nBrooklyn-Stemwinder, Phoenix..\nIdaho, Phoenix\t\nRawhide, Phoenix\t\nSunset, Deadwood \t\nMountain Rose, Summit\t\nSenator, Summit Cnmp\t\nMorrison, Deadwood\t\nSulphur King.Sumniit\t\nWinnipeg, Wellington\t\nBig Copper, West Copper\t\nCarmi, West Fork\t\nSally, West Fork\t\nHumbler, West Fork\t\nButcher Boy, West Fork\t\nProvidence, (Ireenwood\t\nElkhorn, (Ireenwood\t\nStrathmore, Providence\t\nPreston, Skylark\t\nPrince Henry, Skylark\t\nSkylark, Skylark Cam))\t\nLast Chance, Skvlark Camp\t\nE. P. U. Mine, Skylark Camp... .\nRay, Skylark\t\nMavis, Skylark\t\nDon Pedro, Skylark\t\nCrescent, Skylark\t\nHelen, Greenwood\t\nRepublic,Boundary Falls\t\nMiscellaneous\t\n14,481\n43,295\n12,258\nfit. 173\n81,270\n31,266\n\"m\n80\n700\n20\n55\n30\n130\n50\n30\nTotal, tons 1,148,287\nSmelter Treatment\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n(iranby Smelter 637,626\nB. C. Copper Co.'s Smelter 341,952\nDominion Copper Co.'s Smelter 153,439\n378,422\n309,992\n23.203\n21,763\nTotal treated.\n 1,133,017\nBOUNDARY DIVIDKNDS.\n369,992 21,703\nName ofOomi'any.\nGranny Consolidated-Copper.. .S19,U0U,0QO\nCariboo McKinnej-Oold 1,210,000\nProvidence-Silver S08.00U\nll.O. Copper-Copper 8,000,000\nAuthorlM' -\u00E2\u0080\u0094shakes\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\n1'apital. Issued. Par.\n-DIVIDENDS .\nTotal to Latent Per\nDate. Data. Share\nPaid\n MOD,\n135,1100 *l(al S1,62II,IHK> ff'.llliS.lillO Sept. 1907 J3.lt\n.,250,000 $i 64ii,s:n;Koli. iw'4 .0\"\n81000 $5 10.000 IIS.22I Sept. 1006 Jt*\nJ.08.000 $5 201,200 ISept. 1B4I7 .4\"\nGeo. Taylor\nGeneral Contractor,\nExcavator, Etc.\nAll Orders Given Prompt and Careful\nAttention.\nGEO. TAYLOR,\nGrand Forks, B. C\nDRAYING\nHeavy and Light Dray Work\nAttended to Promptly. Passengers and Trunks to and\nfrom all trains.\nTelephone A129\nORAND FORKS TRANSFER COMPANY\nRuTiiRiiFoun Bhos., Profs,\n60 YEARS'\nEXPERIENCE\nTrade Marks\nDesigns\nCopvbiohts Ac.\nmar\nYale Tranfer Go.\nLight and Heavy Transferring ti> and from tho diipota.\nA, Mackintosh\nOfficel Windsor Hotel. Phone A08\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 aa\nCommunlca*\n ctlyroniiiioiiniil. HANDBOOK on Patent*\nBunt f roe. (tlili'st apency for aenurlngpatent\u00C2\u00AB.\nPntcntfl taken tbroufth Munn * Co. recelw\nracial tiotlc*, without oharR-f, iutne\nScientific American.\nA handsomely Illustrated wcoldy. Largest dr-\nglatton of nny BCtemliio Journal. Term* (or\ninula, f.\.','. a year,/postage prepaid. Hold by\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ll newsdealers.\n)\u00C2\u00AB, PS Tf BU Wellington, \"\nWhen remitting money get an express order. Cii-sh on demand of\npayee. To all parts. 8. T. Hall,\nbrunch agent Dominion Express Co.\nBefore closing your contract for\nreading matter for the coming year,\nread the tempting clubbing offer we\nmake on the third page.\nPalace Barber Shop\nKazor Honing a Specialty.\nA. Z. PARE, Proprietor\nVictoria Hotel,\nUndue Street, Grand Forki, B. C.\nFoo Lee\nLaundry\nFINE LAUNDERING.\nCOLLARS, CUFFS AND\nSHIRTS WASHED CLEAN AND\nNICE AND IRONED BY\nMACHINERY, NEV/\nMEN EMPLOYED.\nNEkYT CHINESE STORE\nRIVERSIDE AVENUE.\nPacific Hotel\n0PP. C.F.R. STATION\nFirst-class in every respect.\nSample room* lor cummer*\ncinl travelers.\nHot mill Cold Hatha.\nBar In Connection. *\nFinest Brands of U'lnes.\nLii|iiorsaiidOI*-ari.\n(.HAS. PETERSON, Prop\nDRINK REPUBLIC BEER]\nThe Purest and Best In the City.\nOn Draught Exclusively* at\nTHE VICTORIA HOTEI"@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_1908-05-15"@en . "10.14288/1.0342146"@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 .