oy soa THE OMINECA HERALD, WEDNESDAY. JULY i 1927 (ase FERSON BROS. Auto Jitney Service " Between Hazelton and New Hazelton and the Railway, or to any point.in the dis- } trict—and at any hour. Phone Hazelton 1 short, 1 long, 1 short 1 long Omineca Hotel, 2 long 2- short vinta) ity “We cnn not enjoy tea or coffee without Pacific Milk. We use it for every kind of cooking where ° milk is needed. We find it makes the best icing and is also a. grent — . saving on butter.” i This is an extract from the we), long letter by Mrs. C. A. Holman of Vancouver, recieved by Pactfie Hi Milk. Mrs. Holman says she has used Pacifie Milk for three years * s Pacific Milk 328 Drake St. Vancouver Factories at Abbotsford and Ladner iy | > .P. N.P, ; ) |g ’ i} Wm. Grant’s ; Agency — i LAND FOR SALE t: Mm: >» Mosquito Flats for Sale or to of Rent 4 ae ? District Agent for the leading ali S Insurance Companies— : iq Life: P af - Fire’ d a 4 ») . Health i eR Accident é i ( HAZELTON - B.C. ; Z " Lp oe on ae ear 4 RIL LR SPLIT PI Gn td | FIRE LIFE ACCIDENT Y ( AUTOMOBILE @ Only strong, reliable companies iy ’ represented by us, 7 | Flato Boats 7: Local agents for the -new sports boat Stocks and Bonds Bought and Sold = Daily wire from Vancouver . i . . ‘ 7 WM. 8S. HENRY 3 = «SMITHERS, B. C. | f ome peered eet reriemne mate ee a | _ , | i Omineca 2; |. Hotel _ . C. W. Dawaon, Prop. : HEADQUARTERS FOR TOURISTS... “ AnD COMMBROIAL . MEN ‘Dining room In ‘éonnection Hazelton’ - oB: ‘Cr { Say rah tg 7 Je — ee its greatest weulth producers, produe- The Omineca Herald ‘NEW | HAZELTON, ‘ON, B.C. Published Every Wednesday G. HL. SaWLe _ PUBLISHER Advertising raten—$1.60 per inch per month reading notices 1b¢ per line first insertion, 10e per line oaeh gubsequent insertion, WHERE GOES OUR HERITAGE Has not the time come for the people of. Canada to wake up and ask them: selves the question, “What: is becom- ing. of our herituge? Onr heritage is Canada. Canada in the practical sense’ means the, potential wealth of Canada which lies in her soil, her forests, her ines, her stream. The potential weulth was intended by its Creator a few Canndians only, and certainly not for nan-Cunadians. It gbes without saying that, ns the evolution of cilil- ization has resulted in the formation of nations, the land such people occupy. and live in is their land und for their use and benifit, for all of them and not for x few only, and not for strang- ers who share. no national ‘respon- sibilities or carry no’ part in national burdens. his all being’ so and nove will dis- pute its epmmion sense, we may well isk questions “as ty the whereabouts of our national heritage. A great dent of aur soil hes been given to the men who undertook to farm it and that was right and: proper so. to do. What. about the, millions of secres given. away ° to. railway compre nies? The tillers of “the soil have probably uroved Canada’s. grentest asset and ing our basic wealth. Our forests have heen given virtually for nothing to big lumber companies and mammoth cor- porations, many of them of foreign SOTILKE und ownership. The © minernl wenlth of the country in like mauiner is ‘becoming the monopoly of: rich cor- porations and individuals nud too frequently our Flin. Flons ‘ave handed surely, for all of us Canadalns, not for]. Health Service; Of the Canadian Med: cal Association SUMMER DIARRHOEA Every year there gecurs an appall-: ing number of deaths from Qarrhoeus. In Canada, in 102 2G, there occured 4,- B14 deaths of infants wnder one years The. best and -surest protection! against such (a condition. is breast- feeding. ‘Wheresrer such deaths ure investigated, it is found most of the cases occur amongst infants who are ‘artificially fed. There are Inany other good reayons why infants should be fed. on the natural food, but the one reason that it protects against: dia- i 'trhoeas is sufficient to make every mother renlize her duty. in this matter ‘The baby who is so unfortunate ns he deprived of his natural food must receive every care, He should be un- der the regular supervision of the fam- ily physician.. He ‘should be fed ac- cording to the physicians instructions and no change showld be made in his feedings: unless ordered by his physi- clan. The baby must be dressed ac- cording (¢o the temperature, not the times of year, in order to protect him from sudden changes of temperature against which he must be suveruarided. Diarrhoen in a young child is a’ very serious condition. When it occurs the fainily physician’ should -be called at once. Thinking that the diarrhoea WAS catived from teething oy some oth- er condition has been responsible for delays in securing prompt treatment. Such delays may cost the baby. his life. Questions concerninss. eatin ad- (lressed to the Cunadian Medical Asso elation, 184 College St.. ‘Povunte, will he answered. Questions 1s to ding. nosis and treatment will not be ans. swered, POINTERS. IN Bi BRCODER | Poultry Division of the Central Ex. perimeutal Barn at Ottawa shows tht not only for. nothing but’. with tax exeniptions that muke the gathering {Of buge profits a certainty. 7 As to our streams power generated by those streams .which might have been titilized Muder a better system to light every home and run every plece of farm and other machinery at a nom- inal charge is now in the hands of “St. James Street”, which “is but an- other name for Wall Street, and prices are charged for power generated by the neople's rivers that makes it a luxury almost out of the reach of the peopie. This is trne of every province except Ontaria, whose common. sense owner- ship of Its hydro- electric system is at ouce hated by bpower-profiteers sand envied by the thoughtful people of other provinces, sO Why should this new country go the way of older countries, “where wealth accumulites: and men-deeay" In this land of ours we do not need a few ex- tremeiy rich men, a. comfortable middle class, one degree above the poverty line, and th most of us living one week Wages away form poverty. There is lots kiugs and mine magnates. They should national ‘possessions, It should organize our potentialities iduals and. corporations. This _| thet overlords. - o, of everything for everybody. Our pos- contrasting two methods | sessions should not pass into the care| chteizs Which are commonly practiced, and ownership of power lords, lumber namely, that of lenving dry continually before: the clicks he fleveloped for“nll of us and every: {the start, and that of restricting the hody given the oportunity to henetit amount of mash consumed at any one from Lis or her partownership of our time by closing the: hoppers for dif- ‘he | ferent periods during the day. In one deemed the’ part of stutesmanship to | experiment vousidera bly grenter gain in stich {per chick and slightly gereater mnortal- Manner that the whole of the people ity was experienced when mash - “was would, share the national possessions {left ‘before the chicks - instend af acting, as our present states-|In another experiment of -dne! weeks qnanship flaes,. speading its time divid /duration, the chicks having the mush: Fine: our heritage ip amongst n few far-| aly. ays before them thade double: the :|seaing, grasping, and saullesa indiy- welght is the|to three Weeks of nge- than those birds | ‘atntesmanship. today and one ‘that the recley ‘ing mash? Bix’ ‘times * Q day fdr. ‘| people: ‘should, insist, on being” ‘faced | half:,hour. -periods.,. In. other vords.| Ufnot-tumbled: as now, The people ofthe | practice’ at’ Mmtting. ‘the: feeding oo ie t) Ceinndry are tlred. of: paying: tribute bb period ‘of. Srooder-.chicks; for, : : ey » |. pase ot controlling’ — Sas detrimental to ‘heal chicks when fed even as. enrly as from twenty-four to thirty-six hours after hatching, were subject to no Breatey mortality, and . made equal gains with birds of the same hateh that were allowed to go forty-elyht sixty, or seventy-two . hows after hatching without being fed. In-one experiment, mortality. was considerably lower in the enrly fed pens, In another, mortality was slight- ly less and weight gains were equal. it; would therefore seem pos- sible that the chick's ability to go for a longer period without food, which mnakes possible, shipments over greater distances,is morely a fortunate eireum- stnuece, rather than proper method. of chick nenagement, Certainly, the mat: fer of jength of starvation period for lends itself rendily to -nbuse with the; restlt that chicks . sometimes suffer from too lengthy a fast, and mortality is experienced from impaction caused | by straw, shavings, or other litter mat; |’ erlal picked up in an effort ‘to find food. ' ‘Work hag also been carried’ on in of feeding nash from -ebntinnously goin, with" less” mortality. se pothsa 7 rn tn a rrr 1 “whe Omineed Hernia AB $24 re “Year yee. than advrintageou When ‘the conde ‘a of age as a” result of this condition, ! MANAGEMENT Experimental work conducted by the welglit |. CANADIAN NATIONAL. RAILWAYS TENDERS FOR 7 TRACK TIES Sealed tenders addressed to the un- idersigned and endorsed “Tender for i Track Ties" will be recieved at the loffice uf the General Tle & Timber ‘Agent,’ Canadian National Express Building, Montreal, untill twelve o'- clock noon, July 25th, 1928, for rail. way ties to be manufactured from Douglas fir, Hemlock, -Jackpine, Tam _ September ‘Ist, 1928, and Mary ist, 1929, | ana delivered between January Ist. 11020, and September. 1st,192 FLO. B {Cars Canadinn National Railways, in accordance. with specification S3W-1.. revised July 15th, 1926. Tender forms ;may be obtnined ut the Oftice of th (Tie Agent nt Winnipeg, and from the | Purchasing Agent, ‘Vancourer, or Gen- -eral Tie & Timber Agent, Montreal i Tenders Will’ not be considered unless made out on form supplied by the Railway Company. The lowest or any tender not nec: essnrily accepted, ' G. P. MaciAREN, General Tie & Timber Ag ent . 3 ONTREAL, Que, duly 4th, 1928, mons umount of extra time and Iabom required ure taken into consideration. it is. without doubt poor econoniy tu use the intermittent method of feeding. Paddy Higgins returned tu the dis- trict last Week and is now preparin; to make a start on his property in thc Babine known as the Bubine Silve; King. This property is close ta th: Cronin property. A govd deal of worl has been done and Paddy expects t¢ Zeta good deal more done this yenr, « ;arack and Cedar timber cut between | Write The Borcien Co. Limited, Montreal, for Foeding Chart, Write The Borden Co. Limited, Vancouver, B. C. LAND SURVEYOR J. Allan Rutherford All descriptions of surveys promptly executed. SMITHERS, B. C. tee special. ‘processes, truck and taxicab fleets better. stone Dealer—he will save * BUILDS THE ONLY _GUM-DIPPED TIRES | IRESTONE Gam:Dipped Tires hold the longest mileage records. 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