ndi; Aga 8 1927 fitstom Dealers ARE PIONEERS IN BALLOON TIRE SERVICE Another Reason Why They Serce Motorists Better and Sace Them Money advent of the Balloon Tire required an expansion in repair ,ods. To meet this situation Repair Schools were opened at the Firestone factories where the Firestone dealer; and their repair mm have been instructed in the care of tires and the use of the jjpecially -designed Firestone Balloon Tire equipment. iin each territory inrougnout me country ueaier rxiucauonai Meetings have Deen ncio i nese nave Deen aiienaea ay most 01 tnc Firestone Service Dealers who have obtained the latest information regarding tire construction, care and repair methods. Firestone Dealers are kept up-to-date on ttre development and service- -continually progressing and improving their ability to jerve you better and save you money. cec the nearest fircstonc Dealer to-day and let him handle your tire" requirements. FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY OF CANADA. Limited HAMILTON, ONTARIO MOST MILES PER DOLLAR FIRESTONE BUILDS THE ONLY GUM-DIPPED TIRES Cr own JUST AHRIVKI) FROM ENGLAND! A shipment of samples of the famous Sf.Ulamaret 11 rand Boys' Jerseys Boys' Underwear Boys' Golf Hose Baby Socks all li lie disposed of at fractional prices Acme Importers Third Avenue Colo Days P.O. Box 667 ny Away back in the late sixties thousands of acres of British Columbia's timber were sold for one cent ner arm wtiinVi lnnknrl like a fair price then. Today similar timber is worth from $150 to $200 per acre, so tremendously has timber appreciated in "alue within the scope of an average lifetime. What the young growth of today will he worth !;ity years from now is beyond computation if it is protected from fire and allowed to reach maturity. The moral is'obvious. PREVENT FOREST FIRES YOU CAN HELP IIIUTISII COLUMBIA FOREST SERVICE THE DAILY NEWS PAGE THREE m ,1 HI Auditorium Dane. Wednesday. Aug Local and Personal 10. 1M Mclaughlin 'BUICK slue. Sre Tim wlodew far August Sale 184 Arthur's Tui Phons 878. Tat aItrmooaa train carrying mall to reported on a ' 10. BC. Undertakers. Phons 41. vr iro Omet Watt arrlrtd on Um Prince "hum. or. J. R. oetM. Phone 680, Oeorge Oris morning from Ketchikan. lirspefle at off at Tile .luguf Mle. m llHN furlMaa at Mt dhx-ouut at. Tile's August hale. 1st Ott the Bag Htbttl When tainting Tait. pfcaat . tf D O. Stewart retunsad ao the pas senger train on Saturday. Hfda Traaaler aw agent tr Lad? snita-weuiagion Goal. Fmm 50. U Harlaii I tut. la spanrtlna a fur day mllwellr in oatUMCtkm with ala work. Um. h. W Kergln and faanlly who neve bran holidaying at Ua Kathiyn 'Hamia 16 UMrn 00 Oatus day's train. Ulta Pat Tremayne who has bran at Detroit Hospital training Is home bat-lag come In an Saturdays train. Mrs Quitch left on the Oataia last evening tor norths rn aotata. Saw will eoanaet wKh tat rnaaw will return on Thusadey Mag at their beat but tn water ao that if there art In My at Umbo the water will at. CUSord a Ham of MaRae Drathiri toft at the wee -end for Veneouver where he will he aaarrlad to Mia Cameron until rataauy of Mrs. St. Amours artaM ton want. They will re turn hare to Use. Staff Captain W. J. Camrthere of Um Bel ration Army am red on Um Prince Oeorgf this morning tram Ketchikan sooompanlad by his mother. Mrs. wu llaoi Camitfcera of Wetaeklwto. wo has been visiting with Htm for acme tune at Wrangeil. on Um Cardans going south on Saturday were Mrs. A. O. Mc CuUougb. Mrs. J. Case. Haeel Wlkon, O. Sunde. Mrs. Sunde. J. Q. aad Mrs, Wrlgtey; D. Unanmond. O. Qui stetson A. D. MacDanatd. A. T. Soon. Mi. Messrs. Aaaaraou. Dwyer. Mr. aad Mrs. W. J. Crawford aad daughter. Miss Marto Crawford and Miss Helen Crawford. Who here been on a brtef trip to Ketchikan, arrived on the Prince Oeorge ttUs morning from Alaska and will proceed to their home In Stewart on the Prtaae Charles this afternoon. Two anportant matters taken up with Sir Henry Thornton when he was here at the week end was the Installation of a sprinkler system at the new dock ao that salmon could be stored there without having to pay eahorhl- tant tnauranoe rates and Um making of aiTaagenMota for better stop-oper ! acuities at the port. Both the matters will to taken up by Um respective departments of the railway aad It to probable tbey will be arranged for. J. E. Miller. Inspector of customs, and E. H. Pollard, assistant inspector, arrived m the Prince Oeorge this morning from Skagway after having spent the paat month on official duties In Um Yukon territory. Tbey espect to pro ceed south on the Prtnoess Charlotte Wednesday afternoon. One of the Interesting sights of their trip was Um migration of a herd of some 60.000 or 75.000 caribou southbound across the Yukon River near Dawson. Forest fires are believed to have driven the animals out. Miss Iraia L. Peterson and Mis Kath leen Peterson, daughters of A. McD. Paterson. MXA. for Delta. Vho have been making the round trip to Skagway. are returning to Vancouver on the steamer Prince Oeorge which Is In port today. Mlas Gertrude Paterson. R.N., Miss Mattie Mack. TIN.. Miss Ray Mo-Nat). R.N. and Mlas Kathleen Conn, I B N who went north nAtl th nart.v have gone Into Atltn and, on their way south next week, will atop off at Prince Rupert to camp at the Salt lake for a fortnight. 4 ANNOUNCEMENTS Canadian lglon Picnic August 21 Established 1923. Pi 1 4 rt -a Office Hours: 9 a.m. to G p.m. Saturday: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Any evening by appointment M P Kenny DENTIST Exchange Block. aV U. NvtanWxk(d to aaU on the I'ifcwt Ohirtea Sodiy for the Qun CtMrtatU IsUndi. Maw E. M. Earle U luring on the tore George this afteraooa for Van gaamr on business. Bab Stewart of the PuMia Works (PllBiiSt aaUt for Fort Clements on the fcrtnee Charles today. oa the Prince Charles tbia for Prince Rupert were U Laird aad Mr. ralrbatrn. Um. Albert Moore aad son of Buckley Bay regnraed home on the ' Prince Onettta ted-ay from the south. B. B. A Man of the Forestry depart sent la saJttag on the Prtace Oeorge for Oseea Fan today on offlsial busl. Meeting of Prince Rupert Assembly No. it Native Boneof Canada, tealgni at 8 aja. Important business. All please attend. Mr. aad Mrs. Bostram. the former of whom has been employed at the loci diydoak, sailed far Vancouver on the Prtaae Rupert on Saturday evening. The Prtace Charles arrived In port this morning with a full passenger . 114 aaeay of whom went east on the pas to which were attached extra Mr. Tttrebull of toe Provincial For department was a passenger on the Prtace Charles as fsr as Pointer Is land wttere he disembarked on depart' duties. Mrs. William Rot is, whose husband Is manager of the Whaling Station Nad en Harbor, accompanied by Mrs, Heater are passengers on the Prince Charles to Naden Harbor. R. W. Kennedy. Stewart .barrister, and Mr. Kennedy arrived on the Prince Oeorge this morning . after a visit Ketehlkan and will proceed ncrth on the Prtace Charles this afternoon. -4- Mis Oeorglna I. Hunter. R.N. of the Prtace Rupert General Hospital nursing staff returned to the city ontheCatsls ysewrday afternoon after having spent a month on vacation In the south. A party of 14 Knights of Columbus under the care of 3. J. Mitchell, travel ling pasMuger agent for the Southern Pacific Railway of. California, continued their Journey east on the passenger train this morning. James MoAleenan, who made a trip to Ketchikan with the Hyder baseball team, arrived from the Alaskan city on the Prince Oeorge this morning and will proceed to Stewart on the Prince Charles this afternoon. Mlas Beetle Nlven, Miss Margaret Nlves, Mlas Clarke Ward and Miss Florence Qray .comprise a party of Vancouver young ladle returning south on the Prince Oeorge today after mak ing Um round trip to Skagway. Passengers on the Prince Rupert southbound on Saturday included A. Robey and son, Pete Black, Ben Llpsln, Mia. H. O. Crewe and Joan Crewe, A. L. and Mrs. Pattereon. Joe Scott, J. and Mrs. Gurvtch and Clifford Ham. Mr. and Mrs. Wills and eon. the for mer of whom is general manager of Cook's Tours for clllfornla, were east-bound passengers this- morning en route to Jasper and then to England. They sail on the new ocean liner La France. Staff Sergeant A. McNeill of the Provincial Police was a passenger on the Prince Rupert southbound on Saturday to Investigate the shooting at Bella Coola when Constable Williams was shot through the hand by an Indian named Whitewash. Passengers booked to sail on the Prince Charles today on the round trip to Stewart. Anyox and Queen Charlotte Islands are' Mr .and Mrs. Maasey, MLss Olive Munro, Mlas Bu&hby, Miss West. Mlas Dunbar. Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Arnott and R. O. Creech. Dr. Charles A. Payne, special representative of the Northern Pacific Railway, Is a passenger on the Prince Oeorge today returning to Seattle after a trip to Alaska. He went In Seward and the Alaska Railroad and boarded the Prince Oeorge at Skagway.! Mrs. J. H. PaTklnson, wife of the general claims agent for the Canadian National Railways with headquarters at Winnipeg, is a passenger aboard the steamer Prince Oeorge today bound for Vancouver after a trip to Dawson and .tAUln. "The trip from Whltehorse to Dawson was a marvellous one which I mill never forget" states Mrs. Parkln- leon. With some 200 odd passengers on board, C.N.R. steamer Prince Oeorge. Oapt. Harry Nedden. arrived on time at 1030 that morning from Alaska and will sail at 4 o'clock this afternoon for Vancouver. About sixty passengers dis embarked here to proceed East iby this morning's train. A similar number will jnrrlve on this afternoon's train from Phone 109 the Ei to $o iwuUi on the vetaei Smartness WELL KNOWN COAST MARINE ENGINEER DIED ABOARD SHIP Aboard the Canadian Government Merchant Marine freighter Canadian Rover enroute from Los Angeles to Van couver, the death occurred suddenly Isst week of Harry O. Mulvane, a well-known coastal marine engineer wh served with Canadian National Coast Steamships for many years and who was a former chief engineer of the steamer Prince Jorn. The remains were brought for burial to Vancouver where deceased Is sur-vtvled by a widow, formerly Mrs. Black of the Yukon. WK.VTIIKK REPORT. Terrace. Clear, oalm, temp. 68. Rosswood. Clear, calm, temp. 68. Atyanah. Clear, calm, temp. 60. Alice Arm. Cloudy, cahn, temp. 62. Anyox. Cloudy, calm. temp. 56. Stewart. Cloudy, calm, temp. 55. Hazelton. Clear, calm. temp. 68. Telegraph Creek. Clear, calm, temp. 60. 8mlthers. Clear, calm, temp. 78. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY -. - - ttlTVVTT LOST. SATURDAY NIQHT. ON Second Avenue, opposite post office, j ladles' mink choker. Reward. Phone I 776; j FOR SALE. B SWING MACHINE, i cheap. Also Oxo Gas heater and ' pictures Phone Blue 195 185 SlThe 11U1LI) B.C. Institutes' Help HI ur i 1 JvPMTf9 The Women's Institutes are taking an interest in the Vancouver Exhibition, British Columbia benefits by these institutes and B.C. products decidedly feeltheir help. Pacif it-Milk appreciates sincerely the good these patriotic women do. PACIFIC MILK Head Office. Vancouver Tactorle at Ladner and Abbotsford. "BUILD B.C " ialN-a0avei Thrilling the world again with McLaughlin-Buick value p owe r Colo 1 Dashing new Bodies by Fisher . . . swung smartly low without any loss of head-room or roadclearance and without resort to smaller wheels . . . fleet, slender radiator lines . . . style and beauty equalled only by the finest custom creations. Power to pass on any hill . . . power to conquer the roughest going . . . power to maintain high speeds hour after hour . . . resulting from brilliant advancements in McLaughlin-Buick's famous valve-in-'nead six-cylinder engine . . . vibrationless beyond belief. Getaway like an arrow from a bow . . an exhilarating rush of power when the signal changes . . . unmatched flexibility in traffic . . . and the effortless speed of flying birds when you're out on the open r.ad. Form-fitting tailored seat cushions as restful as an easy chair . . . hydraulic shock absorbers front and rear, providing pillowed riding ease over any road . . . and interiors resembling exquisite drawing rooms in luxury of fittings and appointments. Colors unrivalled by the rainbow . . . exteriors finished in rich new Duco combinations . . . Harmonized interiors the new vogue in closed car decoration . . . Walls, ceilings, seat-coverings and carpets all blending into one perfect ensemble. ' Heads turn in admiring tribute whenever a McLaiigh-lin-Uuick for 1928 flashes by . . . for it is richly endowed with that rare quality . . . that elusive toueh of personality . . . that indefinable characteristic called "smartness". wtss KAIEN GARAGE - Dave Ross Third Avenue, Pi 1 nee Rupert WHEN BPTTTR AirrOMOniLES ARB DUILT McLAUGI ILIN-nUICK WN.L mm I) THEM A New Experience Awaits You When First You TRY I'UHDY'S FAMOUS CHOCOLATES Home-made Purdy's way from golden creamery butter and finest country cream. Purdy's Famous Chocolates bring you a candy satisfaction you never knew before. Their rich deliciousness, their home made goodness, will surprise and delight you. We receive fresh shipments of this most famed of B.C.'s confections every week. PUKDY'S FAMOUS CHOCOLATES, .$1.1:5 lb. in the purple box Qrmes ltd. Diic Pioneer Drupcisls THIRD AVE. SIXTH ST. - -TELEPHONES 82 6200 DENTIST Dr. J. R. Gosse Helgerson Block X-RAY SERVICE Phone 686 ,9 a.m. to 6 p;m. Evening Appointments UNION STEAMSHIPS LIMITED Halllngs from Prince Rupert. For VANCOUVER. VICTORIA. Swanson Bay, Alert Bay. etc, Tuesday, 5 p.m. For VANCOUVF.R, VICTORIA, Rated ale. Alert Hay, etc. Saturday 9 a.m. For POUT 8FMPSON, ALIC ARM. ANYOX, STEWART. Wales Island. Sunday. 8 p.m. For Naas River Points and Port 8lniw.on, Friday p.m. Hi 2nd Avenue. K. M. SMITH. Agent. Prince Rupert, U.C. Through tickets sold to Victoria and Seattle at a reduced rate and baggage checked through to destination. .... if ' 7