the Unvarying Quality of delicious ALADA Advertising and Circulation Telephone Editor and Reporters Telephone - - Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION Keeps Whit6 Shoes WHITE The perfect dressing for Canvas Shoes and Belts It dot net rub off or soil ihi cloth A tubstitute niill disappoint you. 98 86 B63S id a continual joy to users. Note the rich flavor of the tiny leaves & buds. Try SALADA. The Daily News PRINCB RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA . Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, the Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. II. F. PULLEN, Managing Editor.- SUBSCRIPTION RATES: City Delivery, by mail or carrier, per month .......... $1.00 By mail to all parts of the British Empire and the United States, In advance, per year $0.00 To a) other countries, in advance, per year $7.50 "Monday, June 29, 1925. Exceeding The Speed Limit Is Dangerous. . . Everybody exceeds the speed limit sometimes unless he Is a snail or lortoise. There are times -in everyone's" ifTe when it would hare been better to go slow. Yet if everyone thought iminiui.ai, n icii Miuoe, enus io necome siacK and now and then we have to shake ourselves and see that we are keeping up the pace, but not loo fast. British Columbia People Well Off. Some days ago we published statistics to .41iow that British Columbia had higher per capila wealth' ihau any other province of Canada. Now wc have just received word from AlI.eHn nf'n v r?f'. y rw si l iiiir 5 I i !: . Wednesday and Thursday "The King of Wild Horses." Comedy: Pal lie Heview. Friday and Saturday Harold Lloyd in "Hot Water." Comedy. Tonics f the Day. WEEK AT THEATRE Monday and Tuesday "The Heritage of I ho Desert." Comedy: "The Helping Hand."' International News. HERITAGE OF DESERT SHOWING TONIGHT Zane Grey Yarn Filmed Into Thrilling Western Drama Xanc ftrcy never penned a more Lthriliing (ale than "The Heritage of the Desert," a story of the Utah desert here tonight. H is packed full of all that which makes a good Western rides, fights;" a romantic love story, a sense of the bigness of Ihe outdoors. In type, it is close lo Ithe story of "To the Last Man." Prince Rupert Loses There is the same sense of in- Valuable Citizen. evitaldc conflict which nmst be At the week end Prince Rupert lost one of her valuable: ".UJrnl an1 allied somehow, citizens. W. E. Williams, w ho has now finally moved 'to Van- T"ere " a similar, formidable corner, was a man who always spoke well for Prince Rupert andiranir outlaws with the odds backed up his opinions by his actions. He was essentially a man'3" irf ,,eir avor- 'r,,c hero fights who did things. He look a prominent part in public life and was an uPhH battle all ihe way one that people looked to lo help any forward movement. jjelhToiiKh, and wins out by sheer will be missed a great deal. I manhood. The theme of Ihe story is Hie coming of law and civilization lo the desert, and deals with that part of American pioneering of about forty years ago .when (he ; deserts of Utah ami Arizona were of that all the time the world would slow down onti! bejng transformed into tillable would became forty-eight hours. , - , ' is:il,in- ''mvcrf'd draniaJ and If we slow down wt get Ihe slow habit and cannot do any- gPldng ,mv interest are inr thing ele.. If we speed up. we gel the speed habit and Qsibly. corpurated in the tale. may become careless. Between ihe two lies the safe way. j YHu11 ee, Navajo Indians by In some big cities a person may not drive slowly because it 'h$i"iidreds. western ranch life siows mnvn jtie .whole traffic or Hie sjreet. It is the duty of as 11 was ,n ,Uf ,,as 01 Ulft la"' each oiiffojst'jyit4iMhe Way behind. t-. i- - - . j eveiijie4-and-Uia .moM -specJUyx.- . Prince Hupert W u eil-muslX-en im in ih iW. irJ"lar .screen battle ever waged In premncy. In a place far removed fntnf other places there' is a'XvfJ'c" tendency to low lown and that we cannot afford la do. Each.0"1' an entire town is wiped Something Unusual There is unfolded a wonderful horse story. The outlaw stallion, Silvermane, leadinc a pack of wild horses, is one of the principal character in the slory. John Hare, the herb, . captures Silvcrmane and tnmes him. The horse takes up' his master's bat- nurse who went from Vancouver lo AlWrta and who wriles ofl11 anfl . (,iarfrc "Ion the out- cinumious there. She says: "This is surely 4back of beyond.' Tliis place is' nine miles from n au(o road, ten miles fc telephone, twelve miles from a railroad and sometimes sixtv and at least 35 miles from a doctor. The. schools are open oniv in the summer months. They are a greal distance-apart and "i have to Visit them on horseback. 1 have been to two communilv, dances lo which the molhers and babies nil come so that a dance is a gogd-opporiunily to meet the people. ' There possibly are places in British' Columbia, where people are ns badly handicapped As nt this Alberla point, but not many. Notable Parliament For Prince Rupert. Parliament has prorogued after a Ienglby nnd somewhat contentious session. Sessions lend to become contentious as election time draws near. ,This particular session has lieen of Ihe greatest moment to Prince Rdperl. It has passed over a million dollars in annro- piations ifor,.he levat6r,Jieji.ai'til the. lrtcal member, Fred Slork. has had a sirehuiins lime liiliSlinff'il' thiviiif u . ti set from rival intcre'stf WkTlI&U has all been voted, the contract is let and the -work 'well under! way. It seems as if the elevator would be ready by autumn, and' Story of irr;im Cfmiir .mi m ni iii.c mmi rri.:j. 1 t o c p .-.. j...... hii- ... i . in;- nai wc nave iiecn iook- ing Tor, wishing Tor, praying for, agitating for and voting for. It means an immense lot to the port in that it is the beginning, of a belter era. Even those bUterly opposed lo the 'policy of the present government and to the silling member wjll admit that great credit is coming to Fred Slork for he results he ha obtained. Olhers have undoubtedly Iwlped, bul Mr. Slork has been on the job all the time and, afler all, we judge largely Jy results. During Ihe last election we supported the. randidafiire of Mr. Slork,-urging that he be elecled. not because of bis personality or politics but simply because ,il was likely the Liberals would be elected and "it would be good lo have a Liberal of ngni lype in me House so U(at we might gel consideration. We did elect the Liberal, the parly came into power, and ihe result has been beneficial. law Dene is one of (he most tlirillin? and Unusual encounlers ever portrayed upo,n the screen. Then, too, there is a fight lo the death between Wolf, the sheepdog and a cumbersome bear. . Accdrdinf? to an Indian legend "The lleritape of the Desert" is a slnry of a battle that must continue, till the end of the world the struggle for water rights must go on until the end of the world. The Indians, wie in the lore of their traditions, engapred in the picture slruwrle with amusement, Mievn'ngl that this battle can neither be won nor lost. UNCONQUERED HORSE IS NOVELTY DRAMA Chase of Wonderful Wild Stallion Shown in Picture As its title implies, "The King of Wild Horses." the Pal he pic ture, showing ednesday and Thursday at the Westholme TJieatre, is the story of a horse an untamed, unconquered, fiery spirited, magnificent horse. Hal Roach wrote the story, which tells of a stallion Hint is the! the leader of a pack of wild horses that roams through Ihe mountain fastness of a south weslern slate. Powerful, fleet of foot ani) untamed, he has never felt Ihe hand 6t man nor known the feel of a rope around his neck. He maintains his leader ship by fighting off other slal lions that seek to usurp his throne. One of these, fightn is one A f the thrills in Ihe produc tinn. Then a cowboy, spurred by ad miration for, the mngnlflcenl brute, decides to capture him (Olhers bad fried and failed, but lllilly Blair had never known de featneither had. The lilark! The chase of man after beast. jr. a Mmmmmmm me w ' mimm. .owyyraste la The Vacant Chair WfHAT OF TO-MORROW? To-day you arc alive.. well ..happy. But suppose a summons sounds in the darkness and tomorrow your chair stands vacant. What then, of your wife? Your children. .what of them? Will your vacant chair spell a double tragedy to the loved ones left behind ? Your own personal loss will be unavoidable. Not so, the lack of foresight which will leave them unprotected. When your presence is no longer there to provide for them --to help them over the rough places of life--even then your care need not cease. Even then your forethought may guard f them against want and adversity. Life Insurance truly stands as the Guardian Angel of :i stricken homes --as a living testimony of man's faithfulness to -his loved ones, even in death. Think ! Think of those dependent upon you. Think 1 and act. Get in touch with a Life Insurance representative to-day. To-morrow may be too late. Sidney Do firey, Charles parrot t and Pat Hartignn. Fred Jack-man, who directed "The Call of the Wild," Jack London's dog story, put horse and actors through their paces. BUTTERFLY 6 GIVES HOTWATER THRILLS Harold Lloyd Builds Car For Laughter Purposes Only No Harold Lloyd picture would be complete without o thriil of aim mcitrit XmSMrMJ aIT K J " The Loce thai Ncccf 'Dies' Idly could happen to it. did, and then some I This, episode is only one of the three big laughing factions into which "Hot Waler" is divided. There s Just enough plot in the new Lloyd opus to hold the incidents' together In one (rend)f thought, hut. that is just what Lloyd and his staff set out to do. "Hot Wafer" Is one continuous string of "gags" with the imagination being heavily drawn upon for their originality, ' Johyna Hnlslnn, Lloyd's beautiful leading lady in "Why Worry" and "llrl Shy," heads Dm SlinriOI-llllL' rll .Tntnnlilnn one nature or another. And "Hot! Oowell a veteran of the screen Wafer," which is showing here! and ono of its ujreat artists, is in i lie ween end Is no exception the mntjier-in-law. Charles up danserouR frails through alto this rule. Although a slory dfj Slevenson, best known for Ills maze of caverns, across chasms, domestic life, "Hot Water" con-! work as the Dully in "flrand- and through a blazing forcsti tuins several incidents deslinedl mus Hoy'' and the conductor In fire is said to contaih somo of to send a chill through Ihe most"Olrl Shy" portrays the lay the most remarkable scents of a(ldase audience, as well as lo brother-in-lnw, and Mickey Mc-horse in action ever filmed, arouse the loudest laughs heard Ban his brother in- reJ life, n-Tho story,, however, Is not'in a theatre since Ihe ide-plil ! terprels Ihe part of a trouble-alone concerned wtili Ihe horse,! tins chase episodes in "OlrL making youngster. thouigh he plays an important' Shy." ' j part in the forking out of llio , In one sequencftor Ihe picture, FA RMFR I flT All HK tdfll id WIilMi U u-nvnii Inlpicn.n' 1.1ivil l.iu i,lf- ..ml l.nr nllHIIilX LUU 1 ILL and romance. Edna Murphy lendsj family nut. for a ride in his new her charm, beauty and talent to; Itutlerfly Six, and what happens the only feminine role. Leonito that machine J a saution lo nary as a rouch-riding cowboy! behold. Kverylhiiiig thai possi- and other1! parts, nre played by HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS IN FIRE THAT TOOK HOME SMITIIKHS, June 29. The farm home of John Dnleson win burned to Ihe ground on Wednesday night, Ihe family narrow ly escaped from being burned alive, and did not.' have a rhaiice lo save any of their household effects. The fire started about 2 a.m. supposedly from a smudge pot that 'had been used In ihe evening In drive .off the mos-quilos and was left by the back door. The flames were seen by Ihe dancers who were at Hie Driffwood school nnd a nuui'licr or men rushed over In cars and assisted in saving the olher buildings, The deslilUle family is being assisted by neighbors and friends In town in efforts to make urt-olher sfarl. Mr.' Daleson i ' soldier settler and served in the navy In the Great War. ; V 4 SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS EASTERN CANADA, UNITED STATtS. And to . JASPER NATIONAL P"K ''or ' due1 way via Vain direct rail both di i'n- Informal .n ! l'or fUll "'f R. F. IWcNAUCHTON, District Passenger Age Prlnoe Rupert, n- DON'T MISS . BENT'S Dollar S!!? save you money