om Upyer- - i Rackres, before the motor car age. meee, (Lower Lejt-—-Modern sight-seeing cars of today. ee Lower it yat—Motor cur of 1902, sed im the opes Canadian Rockies. g the evening shadows began to lengthen across the Bow Valley in the Canadian Rockies on the wee, last day of May, a dimmutive tlme-worn, rust-bitten, Mee two cylinder motor car of 1902 vintage . chugge ™ through the portais of the Rockies into Banff, there F to join the throng of motor cars on Banff Avenue and unwittingly form a historic pageant indicating | & the developments in motor transportation during twenty-four years. As it happens at such times, the shades of the past arise to refresh the memories of vid-timers and bring forth reminiscences indicating the progress made within recent years. And so with the shades of the past evoked by one of the first “horseless car- riages.” mingling with tts ehtwering brothers of the modern age. ; When it too ghitered with newness the mountain valleys knew not tae vider uf gasoline and the or- dered roar of the exhaust, the old-timer onlookers said, No fine pavements such as at present grace Ma. the streets of the famous mountain resort, smoothed Me ont the irregularities. The dirt surface of Banff Avenue knew only pedestrian. saddle and pack-ponies, ‘and the iron tired wheeis of the lumbering ieather gpring coach, used as the first sight-seeing vehicie - in the Rockies. ; ‘In 1916, the Canadian Government opened the park gates to motor travel. ku 1925, the motor sight- weing equipment, used to carry passengers by motor Lvuéng) sytoaey coun asta cy érapel throngh the Rockies from the Banfi Springs ated to the chain of other Canadian Pacifie railway hote.s and bungalow camps, numbered a hundred modern motor cars and sight secing busses. In iyz6, the system carried 220,000 passengers a total of ap- d{proximately a million miles in three of Canada’s mountain national parks. Thirty-six thousand motor cars, carrying 126,000 holidayers, passed through the ates of the Kootenay and Banff National Parks dur- ing the same season. ; On June 16, the new Lake Louise to Field Highway was opened to the motorist, uniting the three na- tional parks by motor road and increasing the grand total of moders: highway in the mountains to approx- “uately 280 miles. But when the diminutive motor vehicle was the latest creation in automobiles. the mileage of roads in the mountains could be counted on the fingers of both hands. The day following its arrival in Banff, R. Stacey, Kelso, Washington, filled the gas tank of the 1902 ear and set out over the Banff-Windermere Highway. enroute for home. He is driving the ear from Ed- monton, Alberta, where it recently won the first prize in the light car class of the old car contest con- ducted by the Edmonton Journal. ‘ Y In crossing the two summits on the highway, 4 modern car was called into action to aid the anv‘ent vehicle over the top. By afternoon it reached Rad um Bungalow Camp at the south end of Kootenay ‘a- tional Park, where the gwner called it a day ast covering ninety miles, BTAGWILGET SPORTS DAYSwPis 4, SATURDAY, JULY Afternoon, at 1 o’clock: ‘aney Dress Race. | Basebali Game at 10 a.m. Good Hay Year Before the end of the week many erates of raspberries will 17 The year has been an exeéptional one for small fruits, both in point A] . , Sack Race. | berries have been in such num- i7oung Men’s Race. Three legged Kace. | hers as to be a drug on the mar- mm oung Women’s Race, 3ovs’ Race, ten to fifteen years. . Climbing the Greasy Pole. | ket, and, as a result, bushels of Tug-t’-War, them will not be picked this sea- gaiirls’ Race, ten to gfteen vears.| Football Game at about 5 30, and/son, Some orchards are suffer- ing from a species of blight that Bucking Horse Contest will eut down what: promised to SEE THE WILDEST ANIMAL: IN THE NORTH! Evening, at 7 o’clock: be a bumper crop of tree fruits. Haying is well advanced in . the district, accompanied by ideal _ weather conditions. A remark- able growth of vegetation has has sprung up most luxuriantly, Big Indian War Dance _|tsiex piece ths rear. Glover Boxing Contests iadies of the Church will have Refrestiment Booth. Jack Joseph wil] haye Kefreshment Booth. even in seemingly impossible places. Consequently, grazing attests, me Everybody come and have a good time! gona in your subscription now va oo 4 Spade Work “That Gets The Trade To get steady sales in satisfac- tory volume you must build up con- fidence in your store and its service, ADVERTISING in The Omineca Herald and The Terrace News will lay the foundation of such confidence. Advertising does the spade work that leads-to bigger sales. It will tell the folks about your store, its service. ~, It will tell them about the goods you have to offer. Let your advertising in The Omineca Herald and The Terrace’ News be a standing invitation to the people of the district. Progressive Merchants Advertise Issued by Canadian Weekly Newspapers Assoc’n have been shipped from Terrace. | of quality and quantity. Goose- |. has been excellent, as the sleek} appéarance of well-fed livestock |" PURE BEER Zh PURE BEER <- <> PURE BEER GG Te - PURE BEER SG Gq PURE. BEER. se rg JPURE BEEF Beer Analyzed By Experts LL the Beers purchased by the Liquor Control Board of B. C. from the Van- couver Breweries Limited, Rainier Brew- ing Co. of Canada Limited, Westminster Brewing Co. Limited, Victoria Phoenix Brewing Co. Limited and the Silver Spring . Brewery Limited, who are all members of the Amalgamated Breweries of B. C., for sale at Government Liquor Stores and the Licensed Beer Parlors, have been and will be analyzed from time to time by differ- ent expert firms of the continent for the protection of the public. HE substance of these various anal- yses instigated by order of the Liquor Control. Board shows that the Beers are perfect, the taste agreeable and malty. The foam is creamy and stands up well, The alcohol by weight is about 4.25 per cent. and the extract 5.49 per cent, with an original gravity of about 13.20. These analyses indicate further that the Beers are of good quality, whole- some and free from any foreign substance. O make a good Beer with such health-giving qualities ft requires 9 skilled brewmaster and an up-to-date hygionic plant, such as maintained by the above mentioned Brewerles, These plants are open for inspection ond visits of the, public are gladly soHolted,. Only the best materials ‘obtain- able are used in the manufacture of the Beers, ~ HE Brewing capacity of tho above Brewerlos, members of the Amalgamated Breweries of Bb. C., is about efght times as largo as the present output, which gives best assurance to the public . of recelving only fully matured and properly’ aged Beers for many years to come. PURE BEER : PURE BEER i 7 Mag Bund ——, e . £uata aund