PAGE TWO THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon. Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News. Limited. Thlrr' Avenu H F. PULLEN - - - Managing-Editor SUllSCklPTlON KATES City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid In advance. For lesser periods, paid la advance, per week By mall to all parts Of Northern anu Central UiiUsh Columbia, Local rt iders, per Insertion, per line Legal notices, each Insertion, per agate line Contract tates on application. Editor and ttr porters' Telepnone ... Advertising and Circulation Telephone . Member ol Audit Ooreaa of Circulations DAILY EDITION 86 9H $5.00 10c paid In advance for yearly period .... 3.00 By mall to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid in advance, per year . $6.00 By mall to all other countries, oer year 9.00 ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per men. per Insertion 1.40 Classified advertising, per Insertion, per word Thursday. Dec. 31. vx NEW YEAR RESOLUTION .02 lb Glen Gulick, editor of "Rotary Fillets" suggests as a good New Year resolution subject: k "When talking about "getting even" with people, why do you always have reference to someone who has done you a real or fancied wrong? Haven't a whole lot of folks been kind to you and done you favors? Why not devote your spare time to "getting even" with them.-Here then might be a resolution: "When I get even with someone it will always be by paying a debt I owe and not by paying off a real or fancied ' wrong by 'committing another wrong." Another resolution which naturally goes with the other might read something like this Until the past few years Sir George Foster was one of the best known Canadians. He took a prominent part in any cause with which he was connected and his opinions were listened to with respect. He was very prominent in political life as a Conservative and was greatly opposed to the use of liauor. He esnoused the rause nf nrnhihitinn n Every day that passes .--eems to indicate more clearly that there will be very close co-operation in future between Canada's two great railroad systems. With the hotels under one management, it seems only a step to placing the Prince Rupert section under a joint management with connection through to the Peace River. Now that the people of the Peace seem to be a unit in asking for the best possible route to the coast, and with the C. P. R. having no real economic outlet so far, we may expect that the whole influence of Canada's oldest line will be brought to bear to secure a proper export route for prairie grain. v ft Gyro's TURKEY ! SHOOT AH Funds For Relief Purposes A Turkey Shoot Will Re Held On i New Year's Afternoon, 2 to 6 p.m. i i I i I At Canadian National Recreation Association Rifle Range in the VNiniij or naiiway station, between Malkin's and the C. N. Tennis court. Rifles and ammunitions furnished free, contestants are permitted to use wn rifle if preferred, only 2Z Calibre Rifles to be used. Each contestant will be limited to two birds, one shot for eatU bird. Price Per Shot, 50c Practice shots will be permitted between It:30 and 2 o'clock Competition open to all, no age limit, ladies and gentlemen, girls and boys, everybody welcome. Come every one, gel a good lurkey, have a good time and help provide relief to the needy and ills-tressed families In the city. ALL FUNDS TOR RELIEF PURPOSES iif.iT.BLi fflrmian t iati fiiti!ti xm m inmmtma PENALIZED Christian Science Monitor Discusses j Problem Arising Out ( Un employment Relief While President Hoover's Con ference on Home Ownership still Is tio in the Uwof certain. States wWehV probably without Intention, i sometimes places a penalty on home . ownership, says an editorial in the Christian Science 'Monitor. A woman In a Pacific Coast state whose husband, a carpenter, has had only a few days' wotk In many months, applied reluctantly at last to the county welfare board for aid. ' This couple owned a home which' they had built for themselves and' their children through five years of loving effort. To economise, they had moved to cheaper quarters,! renting the house fbr enough to keep up payments on the loan. Now, ' they and their children were nun-: gry. But the welfare board, under, the state laws, could not give the' family any money because they, were property owners. j True, the county offered the man ' some work on the roads, but two! weeks In these circumstances Is a! long time to wait for a pay envel-! ipe. Owners of a house were pre-i uaied to have resources, but they could not eat or wear the houe, and if they used the rent from It for their own neds they would lo. the home by foreclosure. Deserve Consideration J Surely; if those who undertake, the responsibilities of home ownership are valuable to a community; -and there is no doubt that they are Uulr stability should entitle them to consideration in time of adversity. The cose lust described j is almost duplicated by the exper-1 ience of a New England family.! Theirs Is a three-family house. One suite Is vacant. The second brings no Income btcause members of that family, like themselve. are out of work. Again, official regulations stand In the way of aid. And taxes must be paid on the house. Legislatures might well consider! whether relief laws ought to draw men rigid lines against the person who. for all his ownership of a certain kind of property, may be In actual want. But laws and ordinance can hardly be changed at once. The many unemployment relief committees which have just raised or are ratalne fund hv nrti. m h; pilIM Wit" I katlaa ill -IS .ft - . utuuuun an over me united Stale can meet this exigency more readily than official bureaus. To them Is commended as being especially meritorious the case of the family anywhere, that Is trying, at the cost of adequate food and clothing, toj noia its slender, mortgage-ridden ihread of Utle to u home THE DAILY NEWS Thursday. December 3! i93, A Happy New Year! Anne Roberts, aged 9. Is the official Happy New Year eif or nymoh, or whatever they call 1 for the tournament of roses out Pasadena. Cailf.. way That's an hour glass she's got a big one. "I will always try to remember the pleasant things OWN HflMFv people have said and done and will ignore and try ,; get the unpleasant things." SIR GEORGE FOSTER to to for- for vtxiajuil APPOINTMENT IN VANCOUVER P. J. Ryan will sail tonight on the Prince Rupert for Vancouver where he will aamme duties a saddlemaker for the Royal Canadian Mounted "?otce. having been neers of the north many oW friends will success In his new capacity. Mrs. heinp-the host mosns nf i-Arliimnrr th omm,f ,t i;.,..lireh in thoueht there have confe and leaving O ' . . w 1.111. umuilllb Ui 1111 UUl fnr V.-muu, .1 1 il t r n 1 1 in to notice lutb tu twe InttnnMa Instances nf of a a nrnril. condi 1Dr vanCOUVf latter. tuusuweu uy me peopie 01 tanaaa. During, the past few years Sir George retired to the Senate -where, amid the calm of the senatorial atmosphere-i uc iimujeu iroin ume 10 ume in less caustic aeoates anu espoused the cause of world peace. Sir George Foster was a splendid Canadian and he came very near to being numbered among the great. CLOSE CO-OPERATION Sir George Foster Played-Part of Note and Useful' ness in Life of Canada For Nearly 50 Years. j 'Continued I rum uaire one Charles Tupper, lasting from 1892 to 1390, Sir C6orge continued to hold the finance portfolio. Tasted Defeat Tn 1896 the Conservative government went forth Into the wilderness, where It remained for 15 yc.Kv Twice contesting seats In that period, once in Saint John, N.B., in 1900, and again In Northern Ontario in 1913. Sir U corse tasted political defeat. But in 1904 he returned to the House of Commons. -nt thither by the constituency of North Toronto, Until his elevation tn the S:nate in 1921 he sat for this riding not again courting the poll-tic. 1 1 ivors of his native New Brunswick. AVh-n the government of Sir Robert L Borden succeeded that of l " :.? Sir Wilfrid Laurier following thr Reciprocity Election of !9l l Sir George was given the port- : ii' of trade and commerce. During the Oreat War, Sit Ocjrxe. with other members of thr Cinadian parliament, visited Uv W-v'.ern Front. There Jhey wefc conducted to a number of Canadian battalions in reserve positions. Sli j George delivering brief speeches of encouragement to the troops am1 meeting the officers. During 1918 he attended the allied economic I conference at Paris, as one of the four representatives of the British j government, and In that year he I was appointed a member of the iltnpetial Privy Council a distinc tion which carried with K the title of Right Honorable" Following the war. Sir George accompanied Sir Robert Borden to the peace conference. Two years later. In Sir Robert's absence from Ottawa, he became acting prime minister. His elevation to the Senate in 1921 was Just prior to the defeat of the Meighen administration recently appointed to the position im which he had again held the of-Mr. Ryan is one of the real pio-'flee of minister of trade and eom. country anr. merce. From that time on Sir Wfeh hint GfiOne devoted the mainr nrt nf bis efforts to stimulating Canadian su"-ot f the Leavue of Nations. Insist on "GRANT'S BEST PROCURABLE"- The Original For Sale at Vendors or direct from "Mail Order 1 Dept." Liquor Control Hoard, Victoria, II. C. MsCOTCII WHISKY - M I ORICHEST IN FINEST SL. fl JKVVhighland malt AKga M bfjtfL fi BttM tad ftunntt-n! by William MiK Grant A 8uo Limited ClrnflUJWh and M.hc2i H Mm&Z litlverilrilrnljvtt Dirtilltrira. Dull. B Uwn Ctwtov, ScmImhI. SSHaVS' H This advi-.rt.i-" mi nt i not published or displayed lv tlic 1. Control iiu.ird or the Government of JJritish Colnmli.i outuy. N.B., Sept. 3. 1847. a son of and St. Qeorge. and in 1913 K: .ie late John Foster, of United Km- Commander. Grand Crosv re Loyalist desrent. He was edu- Sir George was president ..r -v. alied at the University of New end mining and developrntn1 -,,,. .Tunswick. Frederlcton. where he ponies, and first vice-pn s n-!. w several scholarships arid me- and general manager of the I'm n ila Graduating in 1863.Jie taught Trurt Company of Toronto He different high schools and sem- a Baptist, and a member of ,. .larlea. aiwl thtee years later was Rideau Club. Ottawa, and the T , elected as professor of classics and ronto and National Clubs. Toiun n ancient literature of his alma ma- "gjr George was always f.mi (f ter. In the followlnf yean Sir boating and fishing and he W l ,n Oeorge oontintieti his studies at entrrosiastlc gardener He ,. , Edinburgh Unlveratty and Hetdel- a urrtr of cricket, and an uni i ber bicyclurt until tete years. Sir George married twice, first,, Tne veteran Parliament -in 1889. MlM Adeline Da vies, oldest ' waj 84 years Q( age ne nacl daughter of the late Milton Davies f critically ill at his home for m ..-of Hamilton, Ont. She died In 1910 than two weeks. Strteken wtth and In 1920 at Genera he married ebral hemmorhage six months . -, Jewtie. daughter of the late Sir Wil- he sttflered a second and mor. llam Allan. M.P.. of London. There uhu apoplectic secure a fortr.: were no children. ;ago. On his death Sir Oeorge was the longest-standing member of the Dominion Privy Council, which he entered under Sir John A Maedan-ald in 1885. Honored By King in ivis air ueorge was created a V. I. Haan, superintendent of -White Pasa and Yukon Rou Skagway, and Mrs. Haan wen ;j sengers aboard the Prince M. last ertntng returning north a holiday vUit to Seattle and . Sir Oeorge was born In Carleton Knight Commander of SU Michael , where in the south. ureal cK nf,- iSc. , SO or 25c, . Hind htJJut tln$ of fifty ami one huitdreil 1 WHAT A RECORD! Canada's phenomenal and truly record So t h aince the beginning of he rent vry raited her I rum aim h ilacc among I he irade tut iontof the world tofourt b place -an unparalleled record of injuMrul growth. Her eiports have increased by almuat 700, her population by 90, and maiiulacturing production fxiie W0 during the three decade jute patt. The per capita niliray tnilejt of Canada utb inthewurld. Qke RECORD SPEAKS fox- ITSELF The growth In popularity of Turret Cigarettes has been as plienoinenul am! at oiitstnntliiif; (jmada's growth in Industry aiul population. Quality ulone Is retoitaU1e for this marked preference on the part of all lorem of kkkI Virginia clpn relics in Canadu. After all, nothing can replace rimmI. IioiicbI tohacco; grown and rlieiieil right out In the field under nature's own sunlight--nothing artificial about that und the high quality la "Inl.retl'V cr Quality and Mildness urret C I GAKETTES