@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "ada15fe2-3530-4061-a2a1-ec7db3830b5d"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2011-09-09"@en, "1915-04-16"@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xgrandforks/items/1.0179339/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " /: ������������������Zegisiaiive r ;������,'��������� v -; >. ..'.\\4*.. -. y1 OJ:ary o-, \"���������,;-; - ^lorarv-, r Kettle Valley Qrchardist V t 1 . N - ^ ��������� >f4 \"1 to t o FOURTEENTH YEAR���������No. 24 GRAND FORKS, B. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1915 $1.00 PER\\YEAR I i IRI SESSION OF EITY COUNCIL The' session of the city council last Monday evening was brief, there being a paucity of important - questions to come before tbe board. The business transacted was mainly, .of a routine, nature,, inclnding the allowance of the monthly accounts. Mayor Gaw and- Aid. Bickerton, Bonthron, Donaldson, Manly, .McCallum and Smith \"were granted. Returning Officer Huton reported ^he^reBult of the poll on the hospital aid bylaw; ��������� ' , - \" \"Mr.\" Santano addressed tbe coun- ��������� cil -'and asked for a rebate of his ' \"water .bill to the minimum\" rate, owing to sickness and out of em- ,' plopoaent. The .request was granted: ^ . On motion of Aid.. Manly anc ' Bickerton; .the bo lrd of trade was voted a grant of $150, payable-after the 1st of Augustr Aid. Bickerton, in speaking on. the resolution, said -' he' supposed it would be necessary \"to give the board K something for . publicity work,' even though the eity might afterwards be compelled \\to support some of the people attracted \"here.. ��������� ~7 The abairman of the board of ''works reported.- that .satisfactory, ar- [' rangements had. been made with Mr Larsen for the,.construction of a cement, sidewalk, in front-of the Hotel Province, and the work of - laying the same \\\\a< now in progress. Mr.~Larsen had paid into the eiiy treasury the amount of the cost above a board walk. He also reported that Mr. Dinsmore had refused $50 for the gravel on his lot. The final adjustment of matters in.connection with the fill on Winnipeg avenue was referred to the chairman of the board of works.. The chairman of the health and relief committee reported that recently he had been compelled to re-^ fuse aid to a number of applicants. He also stated that the resiients of '\"Little Eholt\" had deposited large quantities of rock, taken from their properties, in the strerts. He wished to know if the city team would be justified in removing them on cleanup day. The other members of council thought tbe owners \"of the properties from w hence they came should be requested to remove them'. He recommended that the health officer be instructed to inspect milk and dairies twice monthly. On motion, the chairman of. the health and relief committee was instructed to notify, the health officer to inspect creameries and muke milk tests monthly. The hospital aid bylaw was recon side red and finally passed. The chauman of the cemetery committee reported that he bad not yet obtained an estimate of the cost of a permanent fence around the burial grounds. During a discussion on relief The Rainbow and Niobe , In \"an interesting review ot the naval activities on the Canadian Pacific and Atlautic coasts Hon. J. O. Hazen, minister of the naval Bervice, referred in appreciative terms to the work of .the Rainbow and Niobe as well as .the auxiliary craft\" which were taken over by the admiralty. The'Rainhow, it will be remembered, was in commission-when the war began, but. unfortunately the Niobe was lying dismantled in Halifax and it -was almost two months before she 'was made ready for service. Finally she was attached - to the North Atlantic squadron and has been doing duty ever since. The Rainbow was able to render service of the greatest importance from the very start. She was despatched to the south to protect the sloops Angerine and Shearwater, then proceeding north, and since that time has been associated with the Newcastle and Idzurno in guarding the Canadian frade routes It was the six-inch guns of the Rainbow that kept the Leipzig at a distance during the first few weeks of the war, and undoubtedly were it not for her presence in the Pacific some of our liners would have suffered from the depredations of the kaiser!s cruiser which now lies at the bottom of the Atlantic. When the\" war is over \"both the Niobe and Rainbow probably will revert to the status of training ships, for which they ' were acquired, but, whatever happens them they never again will be targets for the ridicule of a lot of c ieap politicians NEWS OF HE CII? The board of trade, at its meeting Tuesday nighty discussed matters in connection with the growing of sugar beets in the valley and the ultimate establishment of -a beet sugar factory here. The secretary was instructed to gather ajl the data obtainable on the subject, and a committee was appointed to interview E. C.Hunt, assistant provincial horticulturalist, and requesl bim to induce the government to plant small plots of sugar beets in different parts of the valley in order to ascertain where the best results can be obtained Two new members were elected to the board. ' The Red .Cross society has ap pointed ^Tuesday, April 20, as the date on which socks will be received for the soldiers. A committee of the Daughters~nf the Empire will be at tbe old McKim & LeRoy store, on First street, on that day from 10 to 6 o'clock to receive gifts of. these goods. While out driving last Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Mann and her mother, Mrs. Rutherford, m^t with an accident .and received slight injuries. ^The horse took fright at an auto and overturned the buggy, throwing the ladies to the ground. Mrs. Mann-received-a cut on the head and Mrs. Rutherford was stunned. Theyrecovered sufficiently in a short time to return home. mary of Results, 1914,\" Dr. Charles E. Saunders, Dominion cerealist, recommends the following varieties of grain for the\" province of British Columbia: Winter \"Wheat���������Kharkov or Turkey Red (aspecially where the winter is dry), Egyptian Amber, Dawson's Golden Chaff, the last .mentioned for pastry or biscuit flour. Spring Wheat���������Red Fife, Marquis and Huron. Oats���������Banner, Ligowo; for very short seasons and fair rainfall, Dau- beney and Eighty Day. Barley���������-Manchurian, Odessa and Ontario Agricultural College, No. 21, six-rowed varieties; ^Swedish Chevalier, Early Chevalier and Canadian Thorpe, two rowed varieties. - -Peas���������Arthur Selected for early ripening; Chancellor, Golden Vine and Prussian Blue among the best other varieties. Owing to the varied climates-of British Columbia, only a few general suggestions are here made. The Stoned Strait A progranrof high class music by a number of Grand Forks vocalists and instrumentalists was rendered in splendid form at Tuesday evening's musical arabesque in the Bap tist church. A Hindu was recently detained at Marcus for passing a cheque in Keremeos that did not belong to him. Chief Simpson, of Greenwood, went down after the prisoner last Thursday. A. Dundee, of the Canadian Bank of Commercfi at Greenwood, has been transferred, to Vancouver. J. Campbell, formerly of'Grand Forks, Is filling his place in Greenwood. work, Aid. Donaldson expressed the l opinion that, instead of handing out of gr.aft and cuPidity ^ ������tlawa with -������������������',-���������' ... ! relation to supplying of equipment for our soldiers in the field. The A Forty-Two Word Speech That \"brevity is the sou] of wit\" is a statement re.idily accepted by all, but how many of us ever stop to contemplate what a golden treasure this quality of brevity really is��������� the power to express one's thoughts clearly, forcefully, but concisely withal? In these days of eight-hour parliamentary speeches and seven hundred and fifty page court briefs, it is very refreshing to note that there are still to be found those -who .ap preciate the value of brevity. The f ������rty-two word speech of President. Ciolidge of tbe Massichuselts .state senate, in thanking hi:? colleagues for his eleci >n to the post of presid ing officer, has won sincere praise both for its length and its subject matter. \"My sincerest thanks I offer you Conserve the firm foundations of our institutions. Do your work with the spirit of a soldier in the public service Be loyal to the commonwealth and to yourselves. And be brief; above all things, be brief.\" Only one word, the first one, could have been left out, observes the Springfield Republican, but this is not said in-criticism. The Sun man had the pleasure of attaching a war tax stamp to a The following from the Winnipeg ! cheque today. The financial crisis Free Press expresses the sentiments' 0f the war is over. of the great majority of the people] of Canada, in these critical times:' The new war tax stamp arrived in '���������The people of Canada are literally , Crand Forks this week on our civic sick over the disgusting revelations clean-up day At the last meeting of the board of school trustees R. F. Petrie was awarded the contract for furnishing the school with its stationery supplies. . ��������� ' Mrs. James Blake has returned from a visit with Mrs. G. A Kendall at Greenwood. W. B Willcox, formerly publisher of the Phoenix Pioneer, is visiting friends at Marcus. What a wealth of \"classic myth and ancient legend lies behind the pomp and wreck of history that tbe shores of the Hellespont, or Dardanelles, have witnessed! Why is it called- the Hellespont? Because \"pontua\" means a sea, and because the Greeks- named this particular sea for Helle,the goddess who fell into its waters while she was riding through the air above them on the ram of the Golden r-leece. Through the same strait at a later time sailed Jason and the Argonauts, in search of the Golden Fleece. Why the Dardanelles? In honor of Dardanum, a city that Greek colonists founded on the strait not far from ancient Ilium, the Trov of classic history. Ilium! The walled city of- Priam, the descendant ot Dardanus, that the Greeks captured by craft the ten years' siege of which Homer sang. The plains w'here Agamemnon led his Argive hosts echoed last month to tho thunder of guns on the British battleship Agamemnon. Near by towers Mount Ida, where Aphrodite won the golden apple, the prize of beauty that led to the war and woes of Ilium; and where the gods gathered to watch the embattled Greeks and Trojans. Farther along stood A bydos and Sestos, facing each other on the mile-wide strait that Leandcr swam once too often to meet his sweetheart Hero, who found his body on the shore. Thither, in 334 B. C, Alexander the Great led the Greeks who sought more worlds to con- PERFQRMANCl The production of \"In Gay Bohemia\" at the Empress theatre last Friday evening by local talent was a social, artistic and financial triumph. Many professional so-called comic opera companies have visited the city whose performances have not. been as meritorioue as the one presented by our own people. The bouse was crowded, all the available standing room being taken early in tbe evening. All those who took part in the entertainment acquitted themselves in a most creditable manner. There is censure for none, but praise for all. E. F, Laws, who trained the performers, and under whose personal direction \"In Gay Bohemia\" was presented, deserves an extra plaudit for the thoroughness of Jis work and the pleasing manner in which the play- was rendered. The treasury of the Daugh ters of the Empire has been swelled by this entertainment. the ratepayers'money as charity, I f people in need of aid should be re-1 diriy hand of the corrupt heeler has week quested to render the city some ser-' taken toll from everybody. The re- vice for it. After an expression of sponsibility for the disgrace rests the views on this subjact by the upon the Borden government. When James McGregor, mine\" inspector, visited the Boundary camps this .. , . ., . , ,. , -it made the fitting out of the con other members of the board, all of Ungent an oppo*turjity for the ex- Varieties of Seed Grain In Bulletin No. 81 of the regular series issued by the director of the whom agreed with Mr. Donaldson, ' ercise 0f . party patronage it made'Dominion experimental farms and the council adjourned. these scandals inevitable,\" ''entitled \"Division of Cereals: Sum- quer; and there, a century and a half before, Xerxes had crossed on the famous bridge of boats, with his Persian millions���������a force that, a year later, went straggling back in overwhelming disaster. There also, in 1355, the Turkish torrent poured across into Europe. \"The sea! Ths sea!\" cried the Greeks who, under Xenopben, bad reireated from Persia, and wbo at last bad reached the \"Pontus Euxinus,\" the \"hospitable sea,\" as the Greeks euphemistically called the Black Sea. Not less grateful is the sight of the Sea of Marmoja to the Knglish and the French as they leave the demolished forts of the Dardanelles behind them. Payment of War Tax The post office department, having given notice a week or two ago,in connection with the war revenue act, that all letters'and postcards mailed in Canada for delivery in Canada, the United States or Mexico, and letters mailed in Canada for delivery in the United Kingdom and British possessions generally, or wherever the two-cent rate applied, should in addition to ordinary postage carry a one-cent stamp as a war tax, and also having notified the public that such war tax, while it should be paid preferably by tbe postage stamp marked 'war tax,\" could, if such stamps were not available, be __ paid by an ordinary one- cent postage stamp, is now issuing further notice to the effect that postage stamps may be used for the prepayment of war duties on bank cheques, bills of exchange, promissory notes, express money orders, proprietary or patent medicines, perfumery, wines or champagne, as well as upon letters and po=t cards, postal notes and post office money orders, the intention being to provide facilities in those portions of the country where excise stamps are not readily available. This in view of the fact that postage stamps may be obtained at all points over the whole country, in many places where there is no collector of inland revenue and no inland revenue stamps could be obtained, is a distinct convenience to the public, and no Joubt will be largely taken advantage. METEOROLOGICAL The following is the minimum and maximum temperature for each day during the past week, as recorded by the government thermometer on E. F. Laws' ranch: Min April 9���������Friday 32 10���������Saturday 33 Max. 07 11���������Sunday, 12���������Monday 42 13���������Tuesday -1������ 11���������Wednesday... 34 15 -Thursday 31 73 ()(! 00 Gi) 70 llll'lll Rainfall 0.26 Assizes will be held in Greenwood Youths' Companion, on June 11. \\^ . _~���������. We ship on approval to \\ any adflrrssln Caniria, without ony It will not cost you one cent If set ' satisfied after nslng- bicycle lo day*. \\D0K0TBUY^ajC j or sundries at anypricevaxW ������o������ get ourlattsttpijlllujiratsd catalogue 1 acd learn all about our special prof*. I siti*n.TaoIoirpHcesmllastonlsliTO defended me was assign- er e\\ex clis^erect, inese puts acui e(l to the case b v0U1.se]f.������ Human Nature is Prone to Ignore Essential Truths ^_ \"Fresh air is always'better than air which is not fresh. The best winter air is outdoors. The best night air is the air which is most nearly as nature made it. Cold, clean air is better than, j^t. ^ ,.UUn.i u^ ue nuuuui, u n tne warm air, which is not so pure, al- price was one dollar a bottle, I mean Fairville, Sep. 30, 1902. . Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,���������We wish to inform you that''we consider your MINARD'S LINIMENT a very superior article, and we use it as a sure relief for sore throat and chest. When I tell you I would not be without it if the ways provided that there shall be siu- ficient clothing and food to maintain the heat and strength of the body. -\"L.These facts are to veil understood by physicians and students of health problems that there is hardly need of publishing, such axioms of personal hygiene���������or there would be none if human nature were not so prone to forget the truths, which are most necessary to keep, in mind. And because fresh air in winter often means more or less monuntary discomfort the temptations tto avoid it, or fail to| seek it, is especially strong at this season. Health ami vigor are common in the most inclement seasons among men much exposed to the elements. Consider the lumbermen of northern forests, the fishermen of winter seas. It is stated by careful observers that the French troops in the highlands of Lorraine and Alsace, living out in the snow and sharp, cold midwinter, have gained, on {he average, five pounds apiece since their hard life in the trenches began, and they are pictured as ruddy and sturdy in the highest degree. Such examples of outdoor living in winter can be found in great numbers. They abound in America. Their lesson is plain. With dry feet, warm clothing and gootl food, the human body not only defies winter cold but thrives upon it.���������Cleveland Leader. it. Yours truly, s'-x CHAS. F. TILTON. Why Germany Hates England The reason is so simple and has nothing whatever to do'vith any \"betrayal of Teutonic cultfire.\" It is that against Russia and France, Germany believed she had a fighting chance, but that against Russia and , (|Saiers or may uc nan oy man at cm France and Great Britain\" she knows j cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from she lias none. Our navy, our incotn-1'pjle j)r_ Williams' Medicine Co., parable resources in men and wealth, Brockville, Ont have turned the scales against her e'r ever discovered. These pills actu ally make new, rich, red blood; they bring brightness to the eyes, and the glow of health to pale cheeks. They have literally saved thousands ot women and growing, girls from the grave, and wha t they have done for other? they can do for you if given a fair trial. Here is the proof. Mrs. Wm. Kierman.Watrous, Sask, says: .'1 have used Dr. Williams'-Phut Pills with wonderful re.Mlts I suffered for upwards of two years with anaemia in a severe form, and was doctoring all the time with no benefit. I was ?o weak I could scarcely walk. I suffered frpm severe headaches and at times from'backaches ��������� that \"were almost unbearable. The trouble affected my digestion, and this caused additional discomfort. Finally through the persuasions of a friend I began 'he use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I shall ever be grateful that I did so, as after using nine boxes I was fully restored to health. I would earnestly urge all anaemic women and girls to use Dr. Williams'.jEink Pills for I feel confident from my own experience that, they will renew their health.\" These pills are sold by all medicine dealers or may be had by mail at 50 -_ . ��������� . __ ��������� . i . r���������.. e>e* \"-a f Man of His Word Wifey���������You've changed dreadfully-- Before we were married you said that you'd lay down your life for me. Hubby���������Well, I did���������my life of single blessedness. And Hair Fall Out and made her task impossible and. her failure certain. That is why Germany hates us beyond any of the Allies,' and with a Quite peculiar ferocity. We do not reciproc .te it, and therefore it comes all the easier for as to grin and bear it. There is hardly a trace cf hostility in the sentiment of the British people toward the Germans. There is, on the other hand, a strong and just antagonism against the German war caste and its spirit and its leaders.���������Sydney Brooks In, the Independent Teacher���������Ilave you ever seen bananas gro.wi''.,';? Archibald���������No, ma arc , I never had time to stand and watch them. W. N. U. 1042 The ease with which corns and warts can be removed by Holloway's Corn Cure is fts strongest recommendation. It seldo: i fails. \"Why. didn't you toot your horn if you saw the man in the road ahead''' \"I figured,\" replied the chauffeur, \"that it would be more merciful if he never knew what struck him.\" Granulated Eyelids. Eyes inflamed by exposure to Sun, Dust and Wind quickly relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort. A* Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Ey������ SalvcinTubes25c. ForBookoHheEyefrceasIc Druggists or Murine Eye Kennedy Co., Chicago Mamma's Little Helper When unexpected company came to dinner, little Betty was told privately that she and mother would have to have oyster soup without tho oysters. The young lady was much flattered at her share in this sacrifice to hospitality, and apparently disappointed when she found one small oyster in her plate. Holding it up on the spoon, she inquired, in a stage wnispor. \"Mother, shouldn't Mr.*. Smith have this oyster, too?\" - ' The late Archbishop'of Canterbury, dropping into a London East Kinl church, sang with all his. force in a hymn with whose time and tune ho had not the faintest acnuainta.ice. A working man in his pew whispered hoarsely to him at the conclusion: \"Gaffer, if you can't sing, don't upset the whole blooniin' congregation provin' it.\" Because DandruffaMEczema? Probably Not The Truant���������Wonder will ma declare an armistice 'til wo get supper. Promote hair-growing conditions when all else fails. ' Samples Free by Mall Cutlcur.t 5:oan ntid Ointment sold throueliniit tM world. I.lbcrul ������ampli; or each mailed frc������ wltli'l0-* book. Addrcij \"Cutlcura,\" I>ei������t. K, Uoston, \\}<&ju THE SUN, ORAND fOR^S, B.C. Sty? (&mnh$tivk& ������>nn G. A. Evans. Editor and Publisher SUBSOKIPTION KATB8 ! One Tear fl.50 One Year (In advance) 1.0(1 One Vear, in United States 1.60 Address all communications to The Grand Forks Sun, Phonk R74 Grand Fokks, B.C FRIDAY, APRIL 1G, 1915 Under the caption of \"Gen. Sam Shoes,\" the Rossland Daily Miner prints the following editorial: \"The minister of militia is de- that some of them have made vio- lent protests against joining the con- '< tingents that are now, or shortly i will be, on the firing line. But in i the meantime these pseudo patriots have accepted the salaries that at-,., taches to their commissions,\" while, spending nearly all their time attending to private business affairs. For the sake of the good reputation of Canadian manhood we hope.that these accusation are untrue, or at least that cases of this nature are rare. To genuine patriot the people willingly gfve the best that Canada possesses, but they' can not be blamed for vigoorously protesting T Don't wait too. long have that to clared by his friends to have been . ... . , J . . against paying war taxes to enrich sincere and well meaning m award-! ���������rafterg ing the government contracts for. footgear to supply the contingent The people of this province will which Canada sent to aid ' the not be satisfied until they smash motherland. Like the road to a the machine.\" And no good gov- certain unmentionable region which emment can be expected until it is is stated to be'paved with good in smashed. The Tories tell us. there tendons, the Hon. Sam is however is no such a thing as a political ma- open to the most severe criticism for chine in British. Columbia. Thsse his negligence in his regard. denials mislead no one. The ma- \"Developments at the enquiry chine is too much in evidence in instituted at Ottawa have revealed every walk of life, and in every cor- the fact that a manufacturer named ner of the province. It dictates the Slater got, a plum of $15,000 for employment of labor on government supplying\" boots which,��������� in many works, and domineers over the pro- cases, dropped apart on the first wet ceedings of boards of trade and day. 'They were of the consistency other civic organizations. xIn towns of. blotting paper, and when I wig- not far from Grand Forks there are gled my big toa I made a hole in boards of trade which are merely one,' was the authenticated- state- adjuncts of the local Conservative ment. of one soldier appearing - be- associations. Their members are fore the inquiry. ,- merely solicitors of funds to drop \"It was the duty of the minister into the insatiable maws of- the of militia to see that competent in- Tory organs. If the same_ state of spectors examined this footgear and affairs exists here? the local board found if it was in accordance with should in future refrain from asking reset. .< Your diamond set while you wait. - - We have a S������ | ������^ nice line of Hffl.i 11 mounts in stock now A, D, MORRISON JEWELER-OPTICIAN GRAND FORKS,'B.C. to exert themselves.. There is ,no guarantee that the war will be over by , nexT fall, and next winter the city may be either unwilling or unable to assist the needy. Mr. Blnkemore's Doukhobor oom- tnis-ion cost the people $-4712, and today the Donks know no more about the laws of the province than they did before he visited them. TAKES OFF DANDEUFF, HAIR STOPS FALLING TO ARRIVE In \"a day or two : . a car of seed Grain Seed Potatoes���������Early 'Jio.se, Early Six Weeks, Carmen No.'-.' 1 arid' 'American Wonder:' Field and Gar den Seods of all kinds\" on hand at right prices. TERMS CASH PHONE 95 FIRST STREET, GRAND FORKS P. 0. BOX 610 John Wamunaker says in Judicious DR. DeVAN'S FRENCH PILLS^^S- Advertising: \"Advertising ' doesn t suilUing Pill for Women. $5 a box or three for ipi-lf- ih milk Tfc hp������ins verv \"fiiitlv I *10, Sold at all Drug Stores, or mailed to an> jerK, tc puns. Ji oytib sf.Y &������\"^ address on rccciptof price. The Scobeli Dim'. at first, but the pu.l is stead V. It in-: Co., St. Catharines. Qntnrio. ��������� creases clay by day and year\" by year, ' PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN. ' $���������������������j until it exerts an irresistible power.'\" ! Vitality; for Nerve and Brain; iucrensos \"rrr<^ : ... -' I matter\"; a Tonic���������will build you \"!>. JJ n b<������. i,r -' . __ ' wo for $%L Jit drill? stores, or,by uvi'! om ;��������� < ti. I ���������Accept no substitutes, but get the original���������The Grand Forks Sun. It gathers and piints the news of the city and district first.\" Save your Hair! Get a 25 cent bottle -of Danderine right now���������Also . stops itching $calp. specifications. \"At this time when every individual in Canada should be.doing all possible to assist the boys-who are on the continent, fighting the nation's' battles, we find the despicable grafter making money at the expense of the army, and, in fact, of all Canadians. Bhe boot inquiry has only revealed a smail portion of the existing evil.\" The Miner is probably correct in its surmise that there are other evils. It has been charged���������and we have never seen the charges con- dieted���������that at a number of recruiting centres men totally unfit for the positions have been given commissions through political in fluence. These men, it is claimed, have no intention of \"volunteering for the front���������it is asserted, in fact, for-any of the ratepayers' money, because its methods, if it pursues tbe course indicated, would be antagonistic to the'interests of some ot the taxpayers who have paid that money into the city treasury, it would be- equivalent to furnishing an enemy a weapon with which to slay you. Thin, brittle; colorless and scraggy hair is mute evidence of a' neglected scalp; oi dandruff���������that awful' scurf. There is ��������� nothing so destructive to the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair of its lustre, its strength \"and its very life; eventually producing a fevejish- ness and itching of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair root- to shrink,\" loosen and die���������then ti hair falls\" out fast. A little Dander' tonight���������now���������any time���������will s-'- save your hair. . - - Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a little Danderine. ' Save your hair! Try it! It has cost Vancouver \"$175,000 to feed its-unemployed during^ the -past winter. Eveay enforced idle man thinks it is time for a change. Vacant lot farming does not ap pear to be making much progress in this city this spring. There are large numbers of vacant lots that could used for this purpose, but the peo pie who should be looking out for a rainy day apparently are unwilling THE NO FORKS FEED & PRODUCE GO Carries a Complete Stock of Cement, Lime and Plaster Seed Grain and Garden Seed ridge Street Grand \"Wits, B. C, Granby's Production , The combined outputof the Grand Forks and Anyox-smelters of the Granby Consolidated for February was 1,798,373 pounds of' copper, against 2,170,130 pounds in the preceeding month.\" Extreme cold weather cut down production at the Anyox smelter. The copper production from the two smelters during the first two months of this year was asjpllows: January, Grand.\" Forks 775.986 pounds, Anyox 1,394,353, total 2,- 170,130;\" Febpnary,\" Grand Forks 1,029,885, Anyox 763,-188, total 1,793,373. Total of Grand Forks plant for the two months, 1,S05,C71 pounds; total of Anyox plant for same period, 2,157 8ll; grand total, 3,963,512. The-precious metals values vcre 19,514 ounces of silver and 3012 ounces of gold from Grand Forks, and 7438 ounces of silver and ounces of gold from Anyox.- The Sun, at SI a year, is superior to any .f 2 a year papei printed jn the Boundary.- This is the' reason why we do riot-have to resoi t to gambling schemos to gain new subscribers or to hold those, we already have. White Wyandottes TTiat Lay and Win I won at fall show 1st and 2nd cockerel; 1st, 2nd and 3rd pullet. 1st and 2nd pen. At winter show I made four entries and won 2nd cock\", 1st cockerel, 1st lien, 1st pen and silver cups ��������� Eggs from the above are S���������2..00 - for 15, and special prices given on more than' 15. White Orpingtons [ won at the winter show, mak. ing five, entries, 2nd cock; 1st, 2nd and 3rd hen, 1st pen and silver cup. T have one pen of these mated up at $1.50 a setting of 15. ��������� I have two crosses mated up, Bed pullet with Brown Leghorn' cock and White Orpington hens . with\" White -Leghorn cockerel. Egcs $1.50 for 12. 1 LIVERY AT YOUR SERVICE ,, Modern Rigs and' Good - Hor&es'Vit All Hours at \" -the .\" ' '.. _( , : Model Livery Barn . Burns 8 O'Ray, Props. Phone 68 . Second Street Grand Forks Transfer PHONE 129 ' -��������� Sole Agents for 203 THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF SECOND STREET, NEAR BRi\"DGE. Fresh and Salt Meats, Poultry always pii hand. Highest market price paid for live stock. PHONE 58 and receive prompt and courteous attention. Girls! Try it! Hair geto soft, fluffy and beautiful���������Get a 23 cent bottle . of Danderine. E.E.W-MILLS GRAND FORKS, B. G. I I 1 GENERAL TRANSFER WORK WOOD AND ICE OFFICE AT PETBIE'S STORE PHONF 64 GRAND FORKS, B. C. Teaming of. All Kinds. ^ ��������� Bus and Baggage at-All Trains. . ��������� - Mclntyre & IVIdnnis, Proprietors Yale Barber Shop Kazur Honing a Specialty. riartinriullen All Kinds of Dray ing DEALER IN Wood and Coal P. A.- Z, PARE, Proprietor Yale Hotkl, First Street. If you euro for heavy hair that glistens with beauty and la radiant; with life; lias an Incomparable softness and is fluffy- and lustrous, try Danderine. Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it immo diately dissolves \"every particle of dandruff. You can not have nice heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very lifo, and if not overcome it produces a feverishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the hair falls out fast. Surely get a 25-cont bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store and just try it When doing that work in .Franklin and Gloucester Camps this season, Qet jom Supplies at tfie Gloucester General Store A full line of General Merchandise, Groceries, Boots, Shoes and Dry Goods, Hardware. Prices very reasonable. Quotations on request. THOMAS FUNKLEY, Prop. Tho Sun only costs SI a year, prints all the news. It HANSEN 8 GO CITY BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER Bay Your Gait Coal N- ow Office ! F, Downey's Cigar Store Tklkpuonks; Office, Kf>6 HANSKVH JtK8II>ENCE.R38 <>���������.��������������� Ffrst Street OFFICE AT ������������������.-:. The Mann DrugCo. 's Store PHONE 35 RESIDENCE PHONE R 18 * ' Marriage Prohibited Without a proper license If you issue Marriage Licenses, tell the young folks about it in ourClassified Ads. They all know a license is necessary, but they don't all know where to get one. This paper ispopular with the young people. Geo. E. RIassie' Fashionable Ladies' and Gentlemen's TAILORING of Every Description Bridge Street Grand Forks, B. G. THE LONDON DIRECTORY (Published Annually) Kunlilos traders throughout tho world to communicate direct with English MANUFACTURERS ������ DEALERS In each class of goods. Besides bolng n complete commercial guide to London and Its suburbs, the directory contaiuB lists of EXPORT MERCHANTS with the Goods thoy ship, and the Coloninl and Foreign Marltots they suuplyj STEAMSHIP LINES urranged under tho Ports to which they nail, and indicating tho approximate Sailings; PROVINCIAL TRADE NOTICES of loading Manufacturers, Merchants, etc., in tho principal provincial towns and Industrial of loading Manufacturers, Merchants, etc., in sipal pr centres of tho United Kingdom. A oopy of theourront edition will bo forwarded, freight puid, on receipt of Postal Order for $5. Dealers Hooking Agcnolos can advertise their trade cards for $5, orlurger advertisements from ������15. ', ��������� THE LONDON DIRECTORY CO., LTD. 25, Abchureh Lano, London, EC. a Pays for The Sun for an entire year. It is the brightest paper in the Boundary country A THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B. C. K: The following is,the platform of the Liberal party ��������� of British Columbia, which principles we pledge ourselves to bring into ^operation when.elected, to power: ��������� ������������������ 1���������Free? Lands for Settlers��������� None for Speculators. - (a)'We believe that agricultural land should be disposed of only on .such conditions as will insure its-continuous use and occupation,, , (b) We will utilize as far as developing,-, and making , accessible the agricultural and other latent wealth of the province by good roads ��������� or water communication where neces '-��������� sary. . . (c) Free homesteads to actual settlers. ; Holders of pre-emptions to be given benefit of.this provision. .(d) Advances to settlers on easy terms to assist in clearing, dyking, ir rigation and other permanent-improvements. (e) Surveys of all ���������Bcce3sible agri- * cultural lands to be rapidly completed and survey sheets and all necessary . information to be made easily available to the public. . (f) Settlemeni en block to be djs couraged by the removal of reserves which \"scatter population and greatly increase the,costof roads, schools and , other nacessary facilities.' (?) No public lands for the specu lator. ( \" ' . ; - 2���������Transportation ��������� (a) Co operation with the Dominion government , in securing all-rail connection betwaeu the railway, systems of Vancouver island and the railway systems of the mainland. (b) The construction of a line owned and control led'by the government to give direct communication by the best route as to grades and distances be tween , the Similkameen and other interior points and the coast. (c) The husbanding of the provin cial credit to assist lines that will open up new territory. (d) We oppose prouincial credit and reserve being wasted in paralleling existing lines.\" (e) Abolition of the system of giv fng away crown lands for townsites, iree of taxation and under railway control.' (f) All fraricises for the construction, operation, and ownership or leas- ' ing of government; aided roads to be open to public competition. ~ (g) The province to co-operate with the Dominion in aiding highway con- a,,l| ' .1 - , i( . P'ac. I \\>t ine puopie oo control r.ne rail- SSSnSn, e8������TS ������lt,ie Pr������VmCe.J.\" 1 Wa^' and ������* <*��������� ������Hw^ the people, developing,.', and making ju>.rp������u;hlA ������ m ��������� , ������ n> J , r r. struction. ��������� (h) The prevention of over-capitalization-of railways. (i) \"Aid to railways not to exceed what is reasonably .necessary to secure construction. . (j) Freight, passenger and express rates and telegraph .tolls . of. all,government-aided roads toNbe under the furisdiction of the Dominion; railway commission. ^ ' ;��������� - >-\"r (k) With a view to meeting the demand for the transportation of grain from Saskatchewan and Alberta, the imipediate construction'of government owned elevators., (I) The people to control the rai' equal (a) 3���������Timber, (a) We condemn with out reserve the wholesale disposal of timber lands to speculators which has been the. only timber policy of.., the presenF government. (b) The survey', cruising and valuation of timber lands by the govern ment. before alienation, and the disposal of all such lands by public competition to actual users. (c) Improved methods of preventing timber, waste, and systematized reafforestation. (d)' Hand loggers1 licenses' to be granted where conditions warrant (e) Stability of tenure, crown dues and ground rents to be fixed for definite periods. 4���������Public Protection in\" Respect to Coal, (a) Coal lands not toL be alienated, but leased under conditions to be fixed periodically by the legislature (b) Wherever practicable and necessary, government operation of coal mines to be at once undertaken with a view to the protection of the consuming public. 5���������Practical Education- (ii) We commend the appointment of a representative advisory board in educational matters; such as exists in all other provinces. (b) The present school curriculum is so overloaded with subjects as to render , thorough education in any branch impossible, . (c) The increase of manual and agricultural training Establishment of an efficient system of technical schools. (d) The present school system bears unjustly on settlers in unorganized districts and should be immediately adjusted. __. ' (c) All political partisanship should be eliminated from the education department. 6���������Representation, (a) Personal registration and regular periodical system of redistribution (b) We are pledged as a party to ument In your favor is good printing. It starts things off in your favor. People read your arguments, reasons, conclusions, when attraclively prer sented. It carries weight. Enterprising men use GOOD printing because it GETS BUSINESS. If you don't already known our kind of printing, let us show you. It's a certtinty that we can save you money, too. Phone R 74. re Sun Print Shop The Sun gathers and prints the news first. It is not a pirate. NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION NOTICE is hereby given that the partnership heretofore subsisting be tween us the undersigned as Livery Stable Keepers at the City of Grand Forks, B. C., has been dissolved by mutual consent. All debts owing to the said partnership are to be paid to M. H. Burns and all claims against the said partnership are to be presented to . the said M. H. Burns, by whom the same will be settled. Dated at Grand Forks, B.C., this 16th day of February, A.D. 191a. Witness: W. B. Cochrane. M. II. Bt/H.vs. D. O'Rav. provide for the women with men. ., 7���������Taxation, (a) - Exemption of improvements on Jail, lands paying taxes to the provincial government. (b) A readjustment of the system of taxation whereby the province will receive a fairer proportion of-the unearned increment. ��������� ' (s). Immediate reform of the present-costly, cumbersome and inequitable system, of collecting school taxes in unorgdnized districts , 8--Labor���������Workmen's Compen sation Without Litigation, (a) The creating of a provincial department- of labor and free government labor bureaus. t.b) A thorough and frequent inspection of all industrial premises to insure health, sanitation .and safety. , (c) The complete ��������� prohibition of child, labor .in factories and shops ,(d) The establishment by tthe government of a permanent industrial insurance commission, independent of politics. This commission to have full charge of a system providing positive compensation to employees for. injury received during employment, without recourse.to litigation; and giving em ployers the benefit of accident insurance at minimum cost. (e) The extension of the workmen's compensation act to cover all hazard ous employments. ; (f) The payment.of wages ���������at least .���������fortnightly.1-' ,vu \"C��������� . '- (g) The minimum wage, the eight- hour day and :six day ..week on all public arid'government-aided work. 9���������Oriental Immigration (a) We stand for a white British Columbia and advocate continuously increasing stringency in immigration laws unti this result is attained, and the total exclusion of Orientals from the prov ince (b) We insist on enforcing strict sanitary regulations in congested dis tricts. 10���������ExtEx\\sion of Municipal Pow ERS (a) Increase of local control in municipal matters (b) Election of license and police commissioners by popular vote. 11���������Public Ownership of Utili ties. We adhere-to the principles of public ownership of all public utilities, the limitation of terms of franchises to corporations, renewing the same , if in the public - interest on equitable terms. 12���������Local Control of .'Liquor Traffic, (a) The complete removal of the liquor question from party politics. (b) Control of the traffic by mu nicipalities, or in unorganized territory, in locally elected authorities (c) The adoption of a local option law. (d) The regular inspection of all liquor offered for sale. 13--Public Accounts We insist on'providing for an absolutely inde pendent public auditor general, ap pointed and controlled absolntely by legislature. 14���������Fishery Control, (a) Imme diate steps to restjre the fishing industry to white.fishermen. (b) The protection of British\" Col umbia fisheries from foreign poachers by adequate policing of Canadian waters. 15���������Protection of Water Supply. The retention of all timber lands on watersheds tributary to cities, towns and municipalities, and the recovering by the government of the present alienated properties 16���������Torreks System of Registration of Titles. The present system of land registration is expensive and cumbersome and we pledge ourselves to the adoption of the Torrens system of titles and the reduction of registration fees. ^ 17���������Non Partisan Civil Service. The organization of the civil service commission for both inside and out side service, so that ihe appointments will be based on fitness and not on partisan service. oXlICS More Victories Are W on by Siege Tactics Than by. Assaults o_Apply thi? to-business and see what it means: It means that continuous and steady advertising is more resu.tful than campaigns that come and go, come and go with long intervals in betwaen. For an advertiser with goods to sell to suspend his selling efforts now is to make conditions worse for himself, and is no sign o/������ that courage which is supposed to possess eveiy Canadian heart in these war times. The Sun affords the merchant an excellent medium for advertising his goods. It is read by everybody in Grand Forks and the surrounding country on account of its Superior news service, and has, besides, a large outside circulation. Win and Hold! Your Position in Business By Steadfastness in Attack P Thi Jv&*Si THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B: .C. <������ Everybody���������' young and old ���������loves the rich, ~- delicious flavor of Austrians Want Colony '������A It is a daily treat���������the perfect sweet. Just what the children should hav.e on Bread���������costs far less than butter or preserves. Delicious with Hot Biscuits, and Batter Cakes. Gives a new delight to Baked Apples, Blauc-Mauge and Puddings. Makes theNbest Candy you. ever tasted. \"LILY WHITE\" is a pure white Corn Syrup, not as pronounced in flavor as \"Crown Brand\". Yow'Groccr has both Brands, in 2, 5, 10 and 20 pound tins���������or can easily get them for you. The Canada Starch Co. Limited, Montreal IT STAMPS 0! OF w To use White Phosphorous Matches 1 It is now Illegal to make \" White Phosphorous '���������' Matches. In a year's time it will be unlawful to sell them. If you're strong for Efficiency,��������� \"For Made in Canada\" ��������� and \"Safety - First\" you will use 9 Ses-qui Non -poisonous J I Ifyoufeel'OUTof SORlS\"KU.N DOWN' \"GOT theBMJF.S* 6UK.FER from KIDNEY. BLADDER, NERVOUS DISKASES, ���������CHRONIC WEAKNESS,ULCERS.SKIN EPXPTIONS.FtLES. writa for FREE CLOTH BOUND MEDICAL BOOK ON ' theao diseases and wonderful CURES effected by THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. Nol No2 N.3 1 anddecidefor _ I yourself ifiti's' .MuMmedy for YOUR OWN'ailment.' Absolutely FREE No'follow up'circulars. No obligations. Dr. LeClekc Med.Co.Haverstock Rn.llAMi'STRAn London,Eno. W* WANT TO PROVt THERAPION WILL CUIE ������OW. Tumors, Lupus cured without knife c. piln. All work guaranteed. forFli^BooK* < ���������. DR. WILLIAMS. Soectali.t on Concert I 2985 University Ave. E. LI. Minneapolis, Minn. I Before the Days of Firearms Old Stone,hammer���������.Hey. Don't you see that sign? No hunting allowed. Young Bonechisel���������I'm using a bow an.' arrow, you old boob. That's not hunting aloud. , For years Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator has ranked as the most effective preparation manufactured, and it always maintains its reputation. When is a Citizen Not a Citizen Casuistical and altogether deceitfully continued is the German Empire's citizenship law, which was adopted by the Reichstag and Bun- desrath and signed July-22, 1913, by the German Emperor at BalUolm, .on the yacht Holienzollern. The text of this law reads as follows: \"Citizenship is not ' lost hy one who, before acquiring foreign citizenship has secured on application the written consent of the competent authorities of his home state to retain his citizenship. > Before v this consent is given ..tho German ''Consul is to be heard.\". ��������� Which means that a man may take out naturalization papers and pass among us as a Canadian citizen while by secret arrangement he is really yet a German. FAR SUPERIOR TO CASTOR OIL Baby's Own Tablets are the best medicine a mother can give her little ones. They are absolutely safe, pleasant to take and never fail to cure stomach and bowel disorders. Concerning them Mrs. A. Sauve, Sheer- way, Que., writes: \"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for my three children and can truthfully say that -I- know of no other medicine to equal them. They are far superior to Castor Oil, and I would hot be without them.\" The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at, 25 cents a box from The Dr. William's'\"Medicine\"Co., Brockville, Ont,' Prisoners in Canada Direct Appeal to to* Dominion Government ��������� Thirteen hundred ' Austrians signed a petition which wa's' presented to Wm. I-I. Bradley, United States consul for Montreal,..praying his intercession of a plea to the government that they be allowed to form a farm colony. The petitioners state that they are kept in /this country on account of tlie indefinite state of non-imprisoned prisoners and \"are treated- without any- regard to internatiomvl law, -being neither, allowed 10 leave the country nor given tho opportunity to forestall the horrors and miseries of hunger and cold.\" Tlie\" petition se'ts forth that the signers were induced to come to the country to work, and tlioy brought an abundance of good will. They have been discharged because of the war, although willing to work, they claim. In conclusion, they beg to be given a chance to become agriculturists. \"We have liearo,\" says the petl-, tion, \"about the suggestion ��������� to send us together to a bush, to found tliers a village with farms. We beg you to say to the government of this dominion that we are anxious,.to carry on as soon as possible the execution r.f that suggestion, and we shall submit ourselves to the authorities of that place.\" ���������l ... * i unnesitaUngly p recommesid Magic Baking | Powder as being the best, purest $ and most healthful-- baking \"p6W- fj der that it is possible to produce, ^ CONTAINS NO ALUM ' AH ingredients are plainly printed ��������� -,.b complete rebuilding and redecoration, pay for restoration and a bit over. The more she 'keeps destroying the more crushing shall be her national debt. She shall pay indemnities to those who have.survived the\" destruction of their homes in Belgium or in France,' pay for the support of (he widow, the parents, the children ot\". all whom her soldiers'' have barbarously and unjustly slain; pay for robbing tlie western world needlessly, inexcusably, of two years of happiness, pay for the destruction of tourist carrying French railroads, for the interruption of our North Sea fishing industry, for the loss of every penny occasioned by enforced idleness or foreign imprisonment, for ; every ship and life she has destroyed among our fishing, folk and those of France and Belgium. And none will press more mercilessly this demand for indemnification than the former friends and advocates in this country, the men and . women who sought fair play for Germany in the councilsof Great Britain; ��������� and obtained it, who desired that her reasonable and justified ambitions should be satisfied, and had secured that adequate satisfaction some months beforo this war brolte out. But how is Germany to pay, some will ask. She will soon be bankrupt, even if by some perverse turn in the wheel of fate she recovers . lost ground in France and her unopposed occupation of Belgium. Even her colonies are only worth so much, nothing near the ������100,000,000 she will bo asked to pay to Belgium,\" the ������200,- 000,000 she will owe to France, ana as yet uncalculated sum she will (in addition, to her war fleet) be required to make over to Britain and Russia. Well, she will onlymeet. her obligations, which will have to be enfercr-d by territorial occupation \"on a large scale, by a virtual revolution. All the German states must go into the melting pot, Prussia most and first of all. The private estates of all her rulers and princes���������first and foremost of the Hohenzollerns-���������must be escheated by the revolutionary government and be applied to the redemption of Germau territory. If Germany likes to retain,,, after war is over, her present, or something near her present, territorial divisions and dynasties she must allot to her chosen princes, kings and emperor a . reasonable civil list, payment for value received. But all their private estates, their vast domains, their house treasures and trusts and concealed funds must beconio national s property. / Once Germany is purged of Prussia, once the Hohenzollerns are exiled on modest annuities, once she is made a really democratic empire or republic, \"she will soon recover from her woes���������as' soon, perhaps, as Franco did after 1S71. But it will be long before the treatment' of Belgium is forgotten, and Germany is admitted to diplomatic relations and equal brotherhood by~the states she has wantonly injured. ;, Austria can point to her as a ruin of the Austrian empire; and perhaps the only separation she can make in that direction after the death of the Emperor Francis Joseph is the incorporation of all German speaking Austria into a fully enfranchised German realm. . Russia must have the'fullest satisfaction and security she cares to demand, that the Bosphorus and Hellespont shall be no more a padlock on her trade and enterprise and on the world's need for Russian grain and Russian oil. The least the western world can do for her in return for saving western civilization and restoring Poland to nationhood is to provide her with that free access to the Mediterranean which is necessary to her development. Belgium must have territorial enlargement in several directions, France a Rhine frontier, the. international character cf the Baltic Sea must be secured for all its limitrophe nationalities. And last, but not least, In the day of reckoning Britain must see, shall see, if the press can make her (for politicians' memories are notoriously unretentive), that her soldiers and sailors (the rank and file anU not only the officers) are amply rewarded for the efforts they have made and will have made to secure for the British empire\" a, satisfactory and lasting peace. They must be handsomely paid for their time of war service and be provided afterwards with lucrative careers. We must and shall treat them as the United States (laughed at, at it was, In this land which then let its soldiers die in the workhouse) treated the veterans and the widows and offspring of the fighters who reestablished the Union of the North American republic���������Sir H. Johnston, in London Chronicle. Rambling Waggles���������I was robbed last night, and I reckon that about fifty-three articles were stolen from me. Everything I had in tho world. Policeman���������Fifty-three articles? Rambling Waggles���������Yes; a pack of cards and a cork screw. Belgian Scholar Coming- Ontario Government Has Decided to Appoint Commission to Mske Full Inquiry The Ontario government has taken action to have made a thorough investigation of the nickel industry in the province, with a view to having all nickel refined at home. Hon. G. Howard Ferguson, minis'iex of lands, forests and mines, has announced that in order to ascertain all the facts and to acquire a full knowledge of the situation, it had been decided to appoint a commission lo investigate. \"If the report of the commission makes clear the practicability of refining nickel in the province the necessary steps will be taken to see that this is brought about,\" stated the minister. Tlie commission will have plenary power to exhaust every possible 'course of information and to make a careful study of every phase of the situation. \"Up to the present the government has not been convinced that any action preventing the export of nickel would not have the effect of transferring the nickel business, or a substantial part of it, from Ontario to New Caledonia, Norway or elsewhere,\", .stated the Hon. Mr. Ferguson. \"Up to the present there does not appear to have been any known process of refining the Sudbury copper-nickel matte that would have permitted of the operation being a commercial and economic success in Ontario. \"It is in order fo ascertain all the facts that this commission is being appointed.\" I Dr. Sarolea Will State Belgian Case in \"Simple, Unexaggerated Lauguage\" Dr. Charles Sarolea, tho noted Belgian scholar and author, who is at present head of the French department in Edinburgh University, loft England for Calais for an audience with the King of tho Belgians preparatory to proceeding to America on an official mission. Discussing bis coming trip, Dr. Sarolea said to a correspondent: \"My object in America will be to state in simple, unexaggerated language the Belgian case. I shall try and got in touch with all sections of America and all layeru of public opinion, but I do not yet know how I shall proceed to do this.\" Since the outbreak of tho war Dr. Sarolea has been frequently in Belgium, and lias been received in audience several times by KJng Albert. \"Why, that rich old fool doesn't know he's living.\" \"True, but his relatives feel it keenly.\" They say that kissing is dangeroua. Do you believe it? It is at times; but papa isn't at home tonight V THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B.C. NEWS OFTHE CffY Tracklaying on the Kettle Valley railway is now half completed between Osprey lake and Princeton, and it is expected that it will reach the latter point next Monday. The bridge over the Tuiameen is making good progress and will be completed in time\" for the tracklayers. It seems probable lhat trains will be running by June 1 from'Nalson to Vancouver via Merritt. 'the city council had made a grant of $200 to the . Grand Forks board of news\" never If you see it trade. This alleged appeared in The Sun. in The Sun it's so. -��������� The Riverside Nurseries' snipping season is drawing to a close. A satisfactory business during the present spring is reported. A device with the object of saving values which otherwise would be counted as loss is in course of construction at the Granby company's Hidden Creek smelter, says tbe Phoenix Pioneer. This new arrangement will make possible the treatment of the flue dust which, it is said,-contains 4 per cent copper, or about eighty pounds of the metal to the ton of dust. ���������In anticipation of the above, the management is said to have' been saving all flue dust. Ed Ciayton and family will make their home at Christina lake during the summer months. The prospects of a bumper peach crop in the Sun orchard were never brighter than at present. Wm. Beach, the Christina' Lake postmaster and merchant, was in the city last Monday. John Leamy returned.to the city the latter part of last week from Ot tawa, after an absence of \"seven or eight yea;rs. He was accompanied -mother.. They have rented Ed Clayton's house, and will remain here during the summer. ^A. D. McKenzie, of Phoenix, was a Grand Forks visitor on Monday. Miss Helen McEwen, who visited her mother in this city during the .Easter holidays, returned to Phoenix on Mondav. The Liberal nominating conven tion for the Grand Forks riding will be held in this city on Wednesday evening,\" April 21. Liberals and supporters of the Liberal cause are invited to attend. The Granby Consolidated is increasing tbe force in the ..mine at Phoenix as fast as the mine can be put in shape, and will soon be-up to normal. Nell Matheson- returned on Fri day evening from-'a month's visit to' Rochester, Minn , and Manitoba points.- Mrs Matheson is still in Rochester, where she underwent a surgical -operation at Mayo Bros.' hospital. It would be interesting to know where the alleged \"news\" items appearing in the provincial press from Grand Forks originate. A few weeks ago we read in every country exchange that the provincial government had made a loan of $10,01)0 to the Grand Forks Canning company, and last week there appeared an item in the same papers saying tha'. For Sale���������Team,\" gelding, weight 2350, age 7 and 8 years;sound.good workers; one 3������ wagon, one set double-work harness; price $375. One team, gelding, 8 and 9 years old, weight 2000; heavy spring wagon, one set harness, all in good order, price 8250. Apply Sun office. For Sale���������Good tnilch cow; fresh. Apply H N. Morrison, near Frache Bros. ��������� The Grand Forks Concrete (Jo. announces that, after a long hunt, it has secured the best reinforcement made:-for cement fence p.osts, and will soon commence to manufacture these indestructable posts for the trade. The company is also prepared to make, to order, all kinds of cement well cribbing. Use this material in your well, and it will last forever. Highest cash prices paid for old Stoves and Ranges. E. C. Peckham, Secondhand Store. 'Soliloquiesjof the Devil I pied a galley here, the other day, Before the bloomin' paper went to - press; . . 1 picked the measly thing up right away, Andjjput it back together just by guess. Tlie make-up man he chucked it in the form; The thing went through.- Oh, golly, what a storm! \"John Smith will-sell \"at 20. Prospect street, At'the bride's home, on VVendesday at high noon, An only deughter, beaurit'ul and sweet��������� With spotted feet and -coining two , next June.\" So help me, that's the way the darn thing read. I saw it and I nearly fell down dead. That ain't the worst. The thing went on to say: \"Mike Dolan died last night at half-past eight; No fire insurance carried, so they say; Loss total, but the value was not great.\" -~- You'd ought to heard the widow tear and rave��������� It makes me'sick the way some skirts behave! \"A son was born to Dr. Richard Vose, A gloasy blacKf, and weight a thousand flat; His mother was by Dan by, out of Rose��������� With gloves.to match, and wore a picture hat.\" The foreman threw three fits and clawed the air; For once he got so-' mad he couldn'.t swear. \"The Park House burned to ashes , Tuesday night, The cause, they say, was softening of the brain; The noble firemen made a gallant fight English 3-Speed . Gear and the High-Grade Cleveland Wheels I have opened a hicycles store next the Grand .Forks Garage, and keep .these celebrated wheels in stock.' - -. . ��������� Bicycle Accessories. Repairing a Specialty\" . R. Mooyboer First and Main Grand Forks, B C. multure In satin duchess, made with'fish tail train,\" Ain't that the everlasting limit? Gee! The way the whole darn bunch jumped on to me! The boss he had me on the carpet, too. ��������� Gosh! He can dress a feller to the ground! ' I sneaked his office feelin' ,-mighty blue, When all at once I heard a funny sound. The boss was all alone���������-I'd give my hat To know just what the 13 CilOSS, FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED Look Mother! If . tongue is coated, cleanse little bowels with \"California Syrup of Figs.\" Mothers can rest easy after giving \"California Syrup of Figs/' because in a few hours all the clogged-up waste, sour bile and fermenting food gently moves out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. ' Sick children needn't be coaxed to take this harmless \"fruit laxative.\" Millions of mothers keep it handy because they*\", know its action on tt������ stomach, liver and bowels is prompt and sure.- Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot- -le of '-California Syrup of Figs,\" which .owtairi.'t directions for babies, children t\" :ill ages and for grown-upa. 'hi' 1,11 mfl \"H*s*l:r GOOD MORNING! WE ARE INTRODUCING American Silk American Cashmere American Cotto HOSIERY They hnve stood the test. Give real foot comfort. No seams to rip. ..Sever becomes loose or baggry. The shape is Unit in���������not pressed in. GUARANTEED\" for fineness, style, superiority of workmanship. Absolutely -tainless. Will wear 6\" months without holes, or new ones free, OUR SPECIAL OFFER to evory one sending us\" fl.OO in curiency or postnl note, to cover advertising and shipping- expenses, we will send post-paid, with written guarantee, backed l>y a five million dollar company, ei her 3 PAIRS OFOUR 75C. ALUE American Silk Hosiery. OR 4 PAIRS OF OUR 50C. VALUE American Cashmere Hosiery, OR 4 PAIRS OF OUR 50C. VALUE American Cotton-Lisle Hosiery, OR 6 PAIRS OF CHILDREN'S HOSIERY Give the color, size,and whether Ladles' or Gent's Hosiery is desired. DON'T DELAY -Offer expires when a dealor in your locality is selected. THE INTERNATIONAL HOSIERY GO, P. O. BOX 244 DAYTON, OHIO. U. S. A. ������������������kgjj. -^ fptf i-jsf .PICTURES AND PICTURE FRAMING EJurniture. Made to Oder.* Also Repairing of all Kinds. Upholstering Neatly Done. R.C.McCUTCHEON WINNIPEG AVBNGB A Home for tbe Summer . It will not cost you much more to be really comfortable for the summer vacation than to \"rough it \"In a tent A small Want Ad. in our classified columns will bring you replies from people who have desirable places to rent"@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 ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Grand Forks (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "Grand_Forks_Sun_1915_04_16"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0179339"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.031111"@en ; geo:long "-118.439167"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Grand Forks, B.C. : G.A. Evans"@en ; dcterms:rights "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 ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en ; dcterms:description ""@en .