THE MINEO BEAL? pees 1928 ee Ere atte more at Bites — a GARDEN LAND is Five- and Ten-acre blocks of the best land, adjoining the town, being the W.Half of L. 863 or Section 1 of ~ NEW _— —————— rd SESE HAZELTON _The land has heen given three classi- fications and the pricesset accordingly A small payment is required at the _time of purchase, and the balance is spread over ten payments, with-no interest charges on the first four payments. If cash is paid a discount is allowed. The owners aim to get settlers on _ the land, and in order to assist them as much as possible, to develop the land low prices arid easy payments were decided upon. ». A number of people have been wait- _ing for this land to be placed on the . .™arket. There are ‘only twenty-nine - pieces and they will soon be picked up by those who know the land and . _. who-want a home-site which will be more than self supporting. ‘ - These | blocks! are not for speculators, “but, first, for married men who will locate and make, their homes there. —_ = oe _ bead at the - Omineca, Herald Office “New Hazelton, B. C. | FRUIT ana now ready Maps Prices, "Terms and full information, mi may 1 Quick and ‘ : Deep Creek ‘We never saw potato leayes that would cover a man’s hand until today. Now about how large should the spuds be? Miss Irene Gilmour spent the week-end with Miss Wakefield, and incidentally rustled for the picnic. You can eat a chicken before heis born and after he is dead. You can do almost as well with a good cow—beef and milk, Isa Guernsey cow able to stand the test?’ It seems all wrong to us to get a Shorthorn bull, a Holstein bull and a Guernsey bull into a district 10 miles long, and for the same purpose. Can it not be deeided which is the’ best and ‘then everyone KO to it? We would ret some place in, that event, Fancy peeing a valley filled with cattle of all one kind, g\instead of a collection of every {kind and many cross-breds. Then one bull would be of service three times as long as now. We would become known as acenter for purebred cattle ‘and induce buy- ers to come here instead of going outside as now. Do you know what is the mat- ter with the butter and egg situ. ation—not to mention practically every other Bulkley Valley prod- uct? We think a standard prod- uct, uniform, graded and No. 1 in every way, put up with a placed on the market in the pro- per shape and condition, through a selling agency with business ability and a desire to make things hum, backed hy everyone in the money back’? guarantee, ‘and’ Buikdey Valley. would e even ni make optimists of the shareholders. Don’ t Start Fires At Smithers o on Jane 25, a Oulton, Louis DeVoin and Frank Gilbert were convicted before Magistrate Hosking of setting out fires without permits, and were each fined $25 and costs. — At Forestdale, by Magistrate Hoskins, on June 27, John David was‘ conyicted of setting out a fire without a permit and was fined $25 and costs. . At Sanctuary Lake, on Jane . 27, before Magistrate Mulvenna, James Vanzanton was fined $25 and costs for failing: to report a foreat fire, contrary to. Section 101A. of the Forest Act. More carloads cf poles were . Joaded here this week and ship- ped east for export. BANADA is endeavor- AG ing to regain her e after-the-war stride in the midst of many difficulties, —- debt, deflation and depression being some of them. | Quack remedies and academic theories beset her path on every side. Some suggest that our debt | worries can best be eased by go- ing further into debt. Others preach blue ruin, decry their own country and indulge in mis- chievous propaganda generally, while still‘others look for a new social order or some miraculous sign to indicate.a better coming day-—all this in apparent forget- fulness of the fact that just as there was no royal road to win the war, there is now no royal - road to pay for it or regain our former buoyancy, vigor and confidence. ' Some are leaving Canada hop- ing to escape taxation, only to find there is no escape anywhere. In seeking for easy remedies too many of us overlook the fact that the greatest remedy is hon- | est, hard work faithfully and intelligently performed, acccm- panied by old-fashioned thrift. It takes time, it takes patience, it takes grit, But every Canadian. knows in his heart that Canada is coming through all right. Our Experience Proves It . Look back over the path Canada has trod. ‘The French Colonists, cut off from civilization by 3,000 miles of sea, faced a continent— a wilderness—without the aid of Canada‘ onfident , of the Fore. even a blazed: trail, They had. to fight savages, frosts, scurvy, loneliness and starvation. The. United Empire Loyalists subdued an unbroken forest in one generation, growing their | first, wheat amid the stumps and. snags of the new clearing. The Selkirk settlers came to Manitoba when the prairie was a buffalo pasture, and grew wheat where none had grown before. - and where those who knew the country best at that time said wheat would never grow. ‘To- day the Canadian prairies grow . the finest wheat in the world. In proportion to population Canada stands to-day among the wealthiest. .._- nations in the world, with average savings on deposit per family of - $800. Canada’s foreign trade per head , of population stands amongst the highest of the commercial nations, being $192 per capita in 1922-23, .as compared with $135 in 1913-14, the — “peak” year before the war. New Opportunities for _ Canada. In Canada, although prices | in the. world: markets fell below war level, our farmers reaped last: autumn the. largest grain crop in Canadian his- tory, and Canada became the world’s largest exporter of wheat, thus’ in large measure making up for lower prices. Last year, Great Britain, after an. agitation extending over thirty yeara, removed the embargo on Canadian’. _ cattle, and a profitable and practically Unlimited trade is opening up for. . Canadian stockera and feeders. te “The 20th Century. belongs . to Canada”.—if Canadians. xeep faith. | The next article will suggest ore. : tical opportunities for profit making on our Canadian farms. * oy ay EE, Have Faith i in ( | | Awthunized fer publicaiion by the ” Dominio Department. of Agticulture we Wik, MOTHERWELL, Minister, “Ded: Hs GRIBDALE, Devity Mister,