THE OMINECA HERALD, NEW HAZELTON, B. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1937 Builders s Supplies Bough and Dressed Lumber Lime Cement Bricks A complete stock of Builders Supplies Quick delivery by rail or truck Smithers Lumber Yards Smithers, B.C. lu Smithers Garage & Hectric Smithers, B.C. , General Motors Partsand Service Accetylene Welding Experts ASIII KS 5 FEFRKAKRKH RES HVH SHV SES LEK Chilly days mean nothing in Van- vouver if you plan on staying at Hotel Grosvenor, for here you find u great cheery lounge and open tire place—rooms are modern in— every respect. You will be just round the corner from shops and theatres, bouts and trains—iind be alde to sleep quietly every night. The Grosvenor has no bar. The Hazelton Hospital ‘Tie Hazelton , Hospital issues tickets for any pericd at $1.50 {- y nonth in advance. This rate indudes - office consultations, medicines, as well as all costs . while at the Hospital. Tickets ure obtainable In Hazelton at the Drug Store, or by mafl from the Medical Superintend- ent at the: “Hospital. - COOPER H. WRINCH L censed Insurance Agent Handling: ‘all tweed of insurance, including. awe Fite, ‘Automobile, Sick- aI] “Tess and Accident _ ye csr. _-AAmBLTON BG - —E ————— Advertising - in the . Ounitiveca ‘Herald will bring real results, bo Of Interest to Most Folk Gathered from Here,:There and Beyond . a — = — Miss Fanny McLaren, R, N., return- ed to her duties on the nursing staff vf the Hazelton Hospital last Friday after nn absence of over two months. She is feeling very much better after the extended holiday. aes . Germany is a million tons of wheat short and offers to trade machinery for wheat. So long as Germany is so short of wheat she is not likely to start a war. ; wae The flu has been bothering the mey working in some of the rock cainps on the railway west of here. One of the {men was brought to the Hazelton hos- hitel on Sunday. He is doing very nicely now. _* & 8 Mrs. Andy Grant went to Vancou- ver last week. She is expected home this weels. “+e * A high wind blowing down the river eaused snow to drift on the railway at about mile 77 to a depth of 25 feet in places and for quite a distance. It was guite a nnmber of hours. before the east hound passenger could get through. in fact it arrived in New Hazelton between nine and ten o'clock Tuesday evening instead uf about 38 oe¢loek in the moruing. aes Those in ehurge of seating peers and Peeresses nt the coronation are getting in wrong They have allowed only 19 inches space for each person Some of the peercesses ate wondering if | they will have to stay home es 8 Yarold Gould left Tuesday night to spend some time at Walcott We has heen here a month, due to the injury to his eldest son a few weeks ago * * In future’ parliament must be sum- moned before Canada can go to war? Apmirently some want to have a say in all things. Of course if Canada is attacked Canada may fight back, be- fore parliament is summoned, What Is the EATON Catalogues have become used to see- ‘ing the circle shown above, here and there throughout the ‘ pnges of every Catalogue they receive. They have learned that wherever this sign ap- . pears they can safely expect extra value, ; F R ‘tte ea" customerg of Sometimes a Star Special is the result of particularly. for- tunate buying; sometimes it. ‘ @ is: specially purchased; some- times it is an item: which. we have given a ‘particularly fav- - orable pricing. ‘But always; it: _ stands for the very ‘utmost: in’ « . vale—a. shopping opportunity ° - “athich is exceptional ‘even:at. * CE ATON?S, where. we pride’, : ourselves that-ALL: oe ae “are. unustal. , : So. when “you ° 400. the’ ‘Star. - our Catalogue, “examine it very losely, Por this “f° the: very” hall-mark of. “value” Spectal- -algn On any: article in. Hon, R. BB. Bennett, leader of the Conservitive party in Canada; was given a welconie home by five hund- ved Ottawa Conservatives. Some of the Conservatives back there must be returning to the fold. “2 £m Poultrymen did Well last Year More profitable returns thin for re: cent years were received by poultry- monin 1986, the average price for eggs being 5e Ligher than in 1935 (when the price was 16¢) and in adyaiuce of tu: prices obtained fru:in LAK: onward, er, in his report to Hon. K.-. Mac- Donald, minister of agriculture, ou con ditions in the poultry industry. Last ‘winter and early spring weath- er conditions were inimical to good re- turns, both in egg production and hatching results, but the enforced rest Lecensioned to the hens resnited ii ap- preciable benefit. in later hateliug. . A warning is sounded by the poul- try commissioner against the. practice of breeders who gamble each year by hatching tea many pullets and forced tu dump their fowl on the market just ‘ata time when they woul] very short- Ir begin ta repuy the outlay for rais- ing. Later in the season there is gen- erally a demand and an. opportunity is presented to sell some and to realize. funds to. bny feed for th birds kept. For dressed poultry the demand is now for fowl weighing 3 to 414 Ibs, but heen a demand for henvier birds. The lrecders who cater to the trade ° in medium weight fowl are utalizing #ime males for crossing purposes, but Mr. Terry points out that care ‘must. be tiken to select. what may be termed as: “natural feeders.” for this purpose have to be fed entire- ly differently to those hatched for lay- ing purposes. A further difficulty is the competition from unrestricted im- portation of Hve.fowl from the prairies during the winter holiday season. ‘Phe demand for sexed chicks or day od pullets remained. strong. ond the work of selecting was practically all done by Orientals, specially permitted to enter Canada for this purpose, Many breeders, however, took advan- tage of the sexed link method of cross- ing two breeds, the progeny of which of which. shows the sex by color - of plomage or down at time of hatching. ers was carried on‘during 1986 in 30 Toys and Girls poultry clubs with a .. {total membership of- 243 young. people. .) Por, this work Ithode Island Reds, Burced Rocks, Wyondottes..and Leg- horns weve the popular. breeds in the order of preference indicated. In the work of organization farmers and womens institutes rendered valnable assistanee. In addition .to competi- tions within the clubs, poultry judg- ing classes were held at . Vancouver, Victoria and Armstrong falrs. FROM BONNETS TO CREATIONS The difference between a hat and a bonnet in. the earky | days, was that the bounct, lacked’.a brim and thus cover- od no‘ part of ‘the forehead, . Today ‘bonnet, . because there :is no brkin, eyen though one might be. at a. loss to. ‘describe, Wo-| ‘jdays.for the sake:.of modesty. “Her ‘| erowning glory” waa ‘apt™to, make her’ ‘}yain.- Although. they . have “followed : ‘this. custom,’ women: through . the ‘aged |. have. pursiied ; ‘thetr. ‘whims and fancies | die to: what: that hend-dress should ook ‘| MWke. fo e "The: earliest: hendgear worn hy: the wolnen : of. -Rurope,: avhen - they . ‘wore. : "headgear at: all, wos a felt. or: woollen _foap. jor yell. ; “Phis was’ ‘superseded, by. a: “hdod ‘Hats ® ‘then ‘came ‘Into: “vogue hat. were: discarded . for ‘colored ; hooda:: The ladies of pe “vars court’ ny: es states J. R. Terry, poultry. commission- | in November and December there hes}. Chicks hatched |: Edueational work with junior farm |- LS one would - not Aare -to call a lady's }- | Paris: “creation”: men- covered -their.-heads . in. ‘ancient |. a hats gradually won first place, al- though some bonnets are stili worn. | Today hat styles are os changeoble as the wind. The average woman | buys five or elght hats annually and | more if she can afford them.-. When ity lady presents to her husband the bill for a “Seotch and Soda” or “Cock: | i tail” as advertised, . it merely menns | that she has purchased uno excnisive | model of a new hat. Women’s. vanity : helps to keep 71 establishments busy making millinery. The yearly output , is nearly three and a half million hats | This does not include those made. by | /Special miliiners. The imorpted ma- ! terials for-making these hats amounts to. half a million dollars each year. Saw mills are humming again, and Little, Haugland & Kerr had to’ run ' overtime several nighis last week to fill rush orders, Lumber prices are advancing and for the time belng it appears that the constal strike is di- verting some business to the interior taills : _! ee there “at the time. - Charles wilson will start shortly with the work of filling his large ice houses at Lake Kathlyn. He will put on the regular | | of Vancouver, B. C., the conunisaioner of Lands for a Ncrnse Lo prospect natural gos over the following evibed lands:—Section 9, Tp 1 “a”, BR. i, Coast District. WAKE UP YOUR And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to go The liver should Pour out two Founde of liquid bile inte your bowels dally. If thie bile is not Mowing freely, your food doesn't digest. It just dacays in the bowels. Gus bloate up your stomach. You get constipated. Harmful Poisons ns BO into the body, and you feel sour, the world looks punk. oun mere bowel movement doesn't always get - at the eduse, You need something that works _ on the liver as well. It takes those good, of Carter’s Little Liver Pilla to get these "two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you 1“up and up”. Harmiess and gentle, the: make the bile flow freely. They do the wor of caloniel but have no calomel or moreary in them, Agk for Carter's Little Liver Pilla by name! Stubbornly refuge anything else. 26c. * NOTICE Take notiee that I, Sarah M, Frank. abstst des- for: coal. petroleum Sarab M. Frauk Dated, December 81st, 1926. crew of men and expects to wind it up inn couple of weeks. Mrs. E. 0. Evans arrived Saturday morning fram Port’ Alberni V. IL. to attend the funeral of her brother, the late Robt. Haysom. se @ Have you paid ‘your snnscription yet? © per MILE Good im day can only: che Z PER MILE rist sleepers 4 Good vent regular cx eoaFiat hesth fare- BpERMILE % cootiearniecear J standard bert th fares Stopovers allowed. at Winnipeg and East. - On Sale: Stopover. allowed at Winnipeg and East On Sale FFB. 20 to MARCH 6th 45 DAY LIMIT . Ask any Agent “Buy at Home’’: principal. you use these columns? | _ help sell. your produce, EMIIICINICR MA IHREN IH INIR ION DE When you use the célumns of your LOCAL TT WeeapER’” fan ates | You are supporting a local industry and encouraging the - Tell the buying public what you have’ and give ‘the price, ‘ OMINECA | HERALD AND TERRACE NEWS - Are here to carry that message’ to the public for you. Will Vancouver printers will not help build your town and community nor it BRIOCHE: eR x, RE DUCE ly w INTE me FARES {0:30 ‘pom outhbo n rays al intend to apply to ~ a ent