BVOL. 13° Philbert Hotel TERRACE, B. C. Fully Modern | ‘Bleetrie Light Running Water. Trayellers Sample Rooms | P.O. Box 5 Gordon Temple, Prop. of oer 4 ; age , Telephone Tease Mill Stock of Lumber Rough Lumber "Noa. 2 ‘Shiplap Sus common Mimension and No, 1 Ship- a tg ge S ie ; + wo. 1 Finish, | Siding, Flooring, V-joint Ete. ; Terrace, BC: ‘innee in the new Orange hall. On Friday night after the arrival of the train fron Prince Rupert, the local Orangemen, with the tadles of Thorn- hill L, ©. B. A, staged a splendid The floor had just been finished and the .|Blossy appearance of the newly waxed wood, together with the gyproe d walls uu the attractive general furnishings of the hall proved a centre of great attraction.. As a result the initial dunce in the new ball proved a record for locul dance attendance, oyer 200 by ‘a local orchestra assisted by Bill Mteigle of Remo. On Saturday eyen- ing another dance was held in the same hall, and a large number spent the last day of the week in social aCe tivity, . COULD FIND NO GOLD DEPOSITS Lawrence Greig and Bill Steigle ar- rived hack from their prospectiig trip in the Kalum district at midweek and Lawrence is almost wnique in -the pro- specting class, as he did not offer to show the reporter amples of rock with chunks of gold bulging out of the cracks, However, at that he bad ‘a gool alibi, His story was that he could net find the gold for the fog, the dense mist making them keep to well known trails, However, he is going to spend part of the vacation studying navigation and compass work, so that on his next trip into the hills he may he able to set a course—and keep it, Iisa new iden and if he can make it work he proposes to patent ft. - Mining ‘deals -continue fo be made through ‘the valley. the latest two to! be’ rendrted are the bohding of the Alger, Hell & Co.,,at Hardsernbble fo H. C. Batten and associates, and Steve McNeills Dardenelles group in the Copper Valley _to Arthur Stlhor nt and others, 3 Mrs. Hamilton of Vancouver 4 is 4 guest of Myra, 4 R. Gilhert for a few weeks. : iter spending some Cline at the 'tres- ton mink ranch in Katum Valey, are now nt Lakelse Take. for the rest of the holiday, et e* € On Tuesday afternoon Mrs. GL, M. Gigey was hostess to a number of the young people in honor of Misses Welch who are leaving for the south Fhurs- day. . : * . eee W. Steigle of Remo and Ralph Skim ner of Usk were week end guests of being present. Music was furnished! Mv. and Mrs, 8. N, Kirkaldy ee * Mra. D, Munro was th week. end guests of Mrs. Geo. Little nt her sum- mer home at Lakelse Lake. ak Mrs, Greig has received a letter from Canon 1, A. McKim in which he sys he has spent the last five months in bed but expects yery soon to be up nud areunl again. Myr, MeKim also siys that his health is much better. eke ' dunes Martin of Massett has been spending several days in the district. se Fishing at Rupert C—Vuastly Prince Hupert, B. im- proyed over last year, so much so in fact that there is no comparison the suckeye snlinon run in Prince Ru- pert district during the first ten days of the 1984 season has given promise of a produetion which will . compare favorably with the previous big eycle year of 1980 when a paek of 132,856 cases of this variety was recorded. All indications now point to an excel- lent run and a. good pack, The.gener- al average for the first. ten days on the Skeena and. Naas rivers. has been Waced nt from twenty to twenty-five fish per boat:with’ the highest boat re- ported as having had 174 fish. There nre slightly over 1,000 boats fishing on the Skeena river and sonte 225 on the Naas river. Early reports from the southern areas of Prince Rupert distriet also indicate a good run of -{ sockeye. More Money for 75, Be C. of Forest and The cost to British Columbia in direct expendi- tures and loss of timber and property from For- est Fires is approximately $2,000,000.(0 annually FEWER FIRES MEAN and like activities “ed by Human Agencies - " Preventable Roads Schools Fires are e start- are VO 00 8 CULO OCCA E LE LE B.C, Forest Service - Last COLL CeCe CL ELL CL LL A CYS THE TERRACE NEWS, WEDNESDDA, JULY 25. 1934 AO NO. 33 : “ | FIRST DANCE IN THE NEW HALL| pr. Tet Z = - Terrace Notes EW 4] Dr. Lelvoyd and family of Anyox| ¢ ~ SWAIN’S Transfer and Taxi Service : We meet all trains | Special Rate to Lakelse Lake. Sunday Special Terrace, B.C. iS 5 bE John’s Garage General Motors _ Cars and Trucks Gas S-rvice Oil Welding Air Honing Batteries Charged All work guaranteed John De Kergommeaux Terrace, B.C. Christy’s Bakery Terrace, B.C. Will ship to any point on line . Will you try our Bread and - Buns? Standing orders shipped regularly. All kinds of cake. Get our price, Terrace Drug Store Drugs . Vietrolas Stationery Jewellery Victor Records Tee Cream’ maie from Terrace Cream .R. W. Riley, Ph. B. Terrace, B,C. od In n general way-it may be = said that, since Canndas chief market for the sule of agricultural products is the United Kingdom, the amount of for- eign. competition is limited by Empire trade agreements, Here and There S. §. Empress of Japan arrived at Victoria recently with one of the largest passenger Hata in the ,. past three years. "‘There was a .. total; of: 577. from ‘the, Qient and Honolulu.” "The ‘ ‘liner ” was also heavily booked for the westbound MP from Vancouver and Victe- ria. i: Speaking at Toronto recently before: members of the Interna- tions! Building Owners and Managers Association, HW. “w. Beatty, K.C., chairman-and prest- dent of the Canadian Pacific . Railway, doubted the Wisdom of “tog elaborate planning” in na. - tional economics.’ Mr, Beatty did ‘not think. the - present. systera of society was-wrong except: in the “way in whith it is applied.” Le