find t | Peeeninaanamees | a ne i ge as } and Sample Rooms in connection European Ptan.” Rates $1.50 per day up. be BE. E. Orchard, Owner 4 European or American Plan| The headquarters for the Bulkley valley. Tourists and Commercial men is a grand hotel to stop at. - All trains met. Autos, livery or rigs saddle horses provided. Smithers. B.C. batt iaeernictemneaton an | | “Omineca, Hotel C. W. Davrson Manager Best attention to ‘tourists: and to. tommercial men, Dining room in connection . Rates reasonable. Patronage is solicited ~ - -- - Hazelton _ B, C. SHACKLETON. Hotel USK, B.C. a : New, clean and comfortable - First-class Dining Roam in connection RaTeS ARR ATTRACTIVE THOS. SHACKLETON - Prop. — an steed HE a Special. attention’ ‘to. travellers = | arriving or departing on : at ; , might trains ie ) b antriew Hotel South Hazelton, B.C. i , H, CARVATH.- PROP. “- 1 U { Dining Room | ad Fat tes cuitumementeiaeronnaes | «BOYER & CARR: Z ax Transfer Co, LB. G. UNDERTAKERS: ‘Hay and Oats ALWAYS ON HAND LARGEor. SMALL QUANTITIES ‘ seietinowem SMITHER! B.C. 7 yy EMBALMENG FOR SHIFMENT A SresAtet a... ee ee fracdcnovea ‘BO, wlll being a" Prince Rupert, B.c. {| | ized our greav ~.ilway.” completion of the transcontinental ‘volume entitléd “Here and There .¢his number are French-Canadians » | and that Monireat'is the second port |. [aa - "Asst. ‘Gen.. Publicity’ “Agent. of the |. “rail Ridera of the Canadian’ Rock. des, held at. Yoho Camp,. Was.a great J euccess. . to gather round the sacred fire in| sonian . Institute ' vf ‘D.0.; honorary president of the ie $| Trail Riders, addressed the~gather-| ° dng, .8 poem: written cmpecially for| ' ‘tthe occasidn- by Slice Carmen was| sy read; ‘and. -Chiegs | Walk-in-the-Rosd | .. ta | “snd Baftaio Child Long ‘Lanes pery| ae formed an Taian denen, men nk Harry Church, a: af that town, Is the owner. cf a Ealetein cow which has just given eal thriving. | ‘On aly 4, Her Majesty. the Queen of Spain’ and her two daugh- ters vigited . the Canadian Pacific Railway's ' pavilion at’ the British - Empire - evinced deep interest in all: she saw ‘and declared the exhibit to. be* “pare fectly lovely.” _ Although the present season of ocean travel hos reached the period. usually associated with a falling. off -in the number of pasoengers, steame ship companies report that little de. “erease is apparent this year and _ that the total volume of passenger ‘traffic in 1924 will probably be the _ largest - ‘of any year since the war. ‘ee ‘World production of silver for the first half. of 1924 is 117,650,000 . ounces, as against 118,250,000 ounces in the first six. months of 1923.. Canada accounted for a pro-' duction of 10,300,000 ounces in’ 1924, as against 10,500,000 ounces in the first half of. 1923, being the third ‘produger afte. Mexico and the United States, bth of which show- ed a decline. a ee Baskatchewaa's output of cream- _ ery butter in June. amounted to 1,« 787,056 pounds, as compared with 1,746,000 pounds in June, 1929, an increase of 41,056 pounds or 2,4 per cent, From January to June, 1924, the provines has produced 5,109,090 pounds of butter, . a against 4,423,016 pounds in the same period’in 19238, an increase of 686,074 pounds cx 16.5 per cent, Edmund Osler, vt the Canadian Pa- cific Railway's directorate, was one trom C, R, Hosmer, for many years a fellow-director. It was addressed to Vice-President Grant Hall and Tread as followe ‘He was the last living of the great men who organ- “The late Sir Edmund became a Railway in 1885, che year of © the line. _ . A vost interesting and attractive | in Montreal’ has just been, publish- ed by the Musson Book Co. of To- ronto, The book is well illustrated tion. is. 900,000, . that ‘two-thirds of of importance in North. America. The author is. Chayles W. Stokes, Canadian Pacific Railway. - The first annual Pow Wow af the | Over. 200 “internationally | © known writers, artists, ete., rode in the Sun Dance Lodge... Charles D, ‘Walcott,. secretary - of. the. Smith- ‘of Washington, meade tf Mr, and, Mra.’ ; ‘DeBeek, who are farmer residing five miles north |J -. | tah Hoes sae All are alive ee conceivable brane | ‘Farming, Home | | $2000 1 IN’ PRIZES. xbibition’" Her. Majesty |[) The} prize list is the |. most comprehénsive . yet devised... Class- .. “es: embrace | every’. Craft, ‘Mineralogy. - Smoker : Thursday : ——— August _ Dance Friday Night, Aug. 29 _ : Fair Two Days of Sport - Fall’ Wednesday Thursday Friday Horse Races, Foot - Races, Baseball and _ Football are among. the features carded. Get your exhibit entries in an ; early, Apply to the Secre- - - ‘|. tary for full information and copy of prize -list. Drawing for Ford Car at the Big Dance Friday _ oy ; Fare-and-a-third, August 26 to 31, | between Prince Rupert and Vanderhoof - with maps and pictures in color and}. & brings. out many noteworthy facts,|.. f auch as that the city's total popula- |.” mh Among the tributes to ‘the late Sir |- a director of the Canadian Pacific] [0 in Terrace on: businiess, are'living:| : a |. ! 'foE atime in'the‘homeof Mrs.’D.|: 'Satherland, of-Prinee, Rupert... wd —_ . Vendors —.have te. in _ your: oe his edvortnemént ig not, published 6 or diplayed by: ; * the, Boy vernment -BRE'S. the ‘drink for you, for your! i "wife, for your guests—the drink to." have. always on hand for any ‘sOcial “ occasion, “Cascade” is the proud product. ~ of British Columbia’s model - brewery, 2° LE equipped with every aid that modern’. - | » brewing science can devise to produce the: best beer possible. It’s brewed to- ‘pera. “fection,.a aged to a ripe mellowness, bottled _ _at.the brewery in sterilized amiber-colored ~ bottles: that keep out the light and keep) - in the delicious “Cascade” flavor.’ That's 2: why it appeals to more British Columbia’ 22.4 a people than all other brands of beer, = 4 ca at the i 7 . “Insist 0 on . “Cascade” ° home—serve i it to your gue a!’ q eo at Contenbi, came ie