Work Boots For Men Comfort in stout, long-wearing shoes because of the quality material used in their construction. These shoes have everything that men look for in work boots and the prices are exceedingly ' ' reasonable. BUY A PAIR AND BE CONVINCED Where Most People Trade F AMILY SHOE STORE IlD. PnONE 357 (Estab. 1908) TF1IKD AVENUE THE DAILY NEWS. jfRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avsnue H. P. PtlLLEN - - - Managing-Editor ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per Inch, per insertion Classified advertising, per word, per insertion ... Local readers, per line, per insertion Advertising and Circulation telephone .. News Department Telephone ......... Member ot Audit Bureau ot Circulations DAILY EDITION 98 8G 1.00 .02 .25 Monday, February 15, 1937 Economic Recovery 'While the economic recovery has passed the average orl , 1 -..K 'iL...L-1 1 i ! uvi umi mum on trie wnuie ami some lines oi Dusiness are better than they have ever been, there is one particular line in which the recovery is not Vet apparent. According to the Dominion Bureau of Statistics the building permits are only hdlf as high as they were in 1929, so that there is quite a long way to go yet. When the building trades get really busy, Canada will be a hive of industry. A kick in the pants serids a real man a step forward. Monkey Wrench in Machine Every community is composed of people who try to do things and of others who try to throw a monkey wrench into the machine. While the people who do things are possibly too enthusiastic and make mistakes, those who try to put obstacles into the way of action are almost always wrong. A few people only play the game. Thd spectators are numerous. Some root for and others against. A man can become so careful in business as just to sleep himself to death. How Many Friends? One writer sUefffests that two friends is sufficient to make a person happy. Most people seem to think they need ui? ..Clio ui xnciiua unu caiiiiuL ave witnout Demg in a con tinual round of excitement. It is not an easy matter to make friends or to keep them but even two friends who are good and true are Worth a great deal. They are worth cultivating arid sacri- ncing a great ileal tor. 1'ossibly just a few friends but not too many is the ideal, friends who are willing to sit around the fireside and talk or not talk, just as seems good to them. The itching sensation sometimes mistaken for is often merely inflammation of the wishbone. Fake Letters I or the second time, it seems, attempts have been made to pet this paper in wrong and to make capital for the C. C. F. at Terrace bv writintr letters to tVm nrlitnt- nf rMo BALKING DlVOItCE (ttontifiuert irorrt vh6 dne) Under this Interpretation the law refused to release an Innocent wife from an unfaithful husband unless he added aitfdult and battery to Infidelity or deserted her for two years. If he did not desert her and was not guilty ot cruelty he might Bin with impunity, whereas a single unfaithful act on the part of the wife entitled him to annulment of the marriage. In 1910 a Royal Commission, headed by Lord Gorell, was appointed to investigate the situation, and made its report In 1912 The chairman and five commissioners, including two women, made a majority report favoring more liberal divorce laws. A minority report written by the Arch bishop of York held the Christian conception of lifelong monogam ous uniort was not to be furthei imperilled. "We have shown," the majority rejport declared, "as we consider the- unsatisfactory state of the law in England and its need of reform. We have endeavored to recommend reforms which, In out opinion, ought to be the founda tion of a reasonable law suitable to real human needs, and, if oui recommendations be adopted foi England, It may be hoped that In time they may be accepted throughout the Empire and possib- ly In other countries." But bills introduced in parliament to implement the report were all rejected. The .present bill, Incorporating several of the 1912 recommendations, was the first to bo given second reading. Wrong l'eople Suffered Supporters of the bill In the House were nearly all family men with long years of married life behind them and blessed with happ families. It was of other people that they were thinking. The wrong people, under the present taw, It was' urged, wvVg getting what they wanted while the right people could not and were com pelled to suffer. "If a man goes off to America or Australia," one speaker said, "and carelessly omits to commit adultery and. to forward the facts, can It be s4ld that It is in the Interests of the state or of the children or marriage or anything else that the woman should b? permanently tied to nothing at all and unable to build up a new home with somebody willing to take over herself and her chil dren?" A Roman Catholic participating in; the debate said Catholics val ued very much and regarded as a no la vuc hiiiui ui ti j cv.uiii icttur I tttl Veil Ijy US, IjuSL SUm w,,tn tve Mid -Winer Recorder mer We received a. letter from a person Who claimed to te naJTnX writer nf this letter in the qnmo nersnn no fVio r" ttt,n ' B? A- torton., Division Engineer, ,wr kIUv. vHni: ...t-t-t. i I y J um;' uiu ubiiuir iiitiniii DvclvCiiivJJl LD WHICH WCrC aDSQ" lutely false and libellous. Agent. Th;dailr of tho first 'publlooUon of thl "nWtleern. lbniary 8th. 1037. THE DAILtt The Letter Box WilO WAS THE WRITER? Editor, Daily News: ih your paper published on fob-ruary 10 you made reference to a letter you had received from William Cole of Terrace. Although you did not publish the contents', according to your published re marks about same, the writer was evidently saying some nasty things about the churches and some boastful things about the C. C. F. As I am the only known Cole In this district and have been the only one here far the past twenty odd years I am being blamed for writing the letter. Please publish this letter and make it clear that I am in no way connected with the affair. If the write used my surname with the Intention of doing me harm 6r rather because he is too much of a jellyfish to sign his own name, neither the C. C. F. nor any other political organization should harbor such trash and you used good Judgment by not publishing his letter. Thanking you for your esteemed favor 1 am, E. S. COLE. Terrace, B.C. KE LATE W. D. MOXLEY Jdltor, Daliy News: body united In expressing their sympathy for the bereaved rela tives. We wish to assure them of our deepest sympathy. They have lost a great father,' and we a great friend. Written for the Indians at Klt-segukla by, BISHOP BLACK, Missionary Teacher. SEVENTH DAY AHVENTlSTS Editor, Daily News: In reply to many questions put personally to me here in Prince 3reat step forward the clause !RuPert, and to answer the queries which provided that for at least five years after marriage no dU vorce should be granted. If thai iMur-e ;V etc withdrawn, ht said of many of the readers of the "Daily News," I wish through the columns of your paper to take the opKrtunlty of telling briefly who1 there was no doubt whatever 0ftSCTenth Day Adventlsts are andj the uncompromising hostility 0fsomethlnS of thelr v- I the Roman Catholic Church. If' The X)rk of evangelizing peoples' that clause stood, he added, things whlh the Adventlsts are carrying1 mitht be quite different. on ls not a work done 1x1 a corner; , ,, ,. , , or o Individual initiative. The' Im A r C8;i "i0"3; U,enf ted: denomination -hich I represent lsj Wa'.ct on'y. Scotland has its own rI., , 1' , d law, which permits abso- yores gu than any other Protestant de-lute divorce for adultery and foi lnomlnallon. nomination. Seventh Seventh. Dav Day Advent- Advent. four years of desertion asainst the will of the party deserted. In 'the Isle of Man, an act of the Manx Parliament, the House of Keys: Is still necessary, but legislation has bean introduced there ta empower the courts to act in divorce cases. WATER NOTICi: Mttl-slon mill I'm TAKE NOTICE that ithe Orand Trunk raclflo Railway Company whoso ad-cirrus l c-o. Division Engineer, C. U. Rilyn.' Prince Rupert, BJC., will apply fcr a licence to take amd uso 26,000 gnllcns of water cut of No name cheek, which How Southeasterly and drain into Skeem River a.focut 230 feet sdrth of Am-tbury Station Building. The wa.tr will toe diverted from the stream at a point abaut 700 feet up-ctteun irom polnit where creek Inter-secW the main Unt of Oafi. Nut. Rlys. and will be used for InduvitrlalRaJlway purpose upon the land described a Timber Limit No. 7032 paper and signing fictitious nahies. A letter in this issue oFfZ?$'iST" says that so far as the writer knows there is no William I JSLSSt rrTndto11"?!; Loie at lerrace but, ot course, he may be wrong. We a?u wl should like to know if them ronllv is niiph n norsnn nwrl it tcru b..' Un id a 1u 'U.i u.. l' " I ObJiot to the ..ml.loa.14on ny be ists have more than doubled their numbers every ten years since! 1845, and have increased their missionary activities nearly 500 percent every succeeding decade. It Is essentially universal, for It is operating at this time in 353 countries, and Islands, toy means of over 25,000 missionaries, teachers, doctors and others, who i using in their work 578 languages' NEW YORK, tt'Pj Bar silver Jartd dialects. The denominational was unchanged at 44c per ounce on the New York metal market today. statstlclan reports that during a recent six-year period a new Ian guage was added on an average of every 22 days, and during the last' year oi tno six a new lansuaot! was drafted Into service by Seventh Day Adventlste every five and one-! V.I1 . . . .. . ' wiuu years, in two years lime, at the present rate of progress, Sev enth Day Adventlsts will be preaching and teaching in as many languages as Bible Societies have the Bible printed In, The Adventlsts maintain and operate in all the world, 2130 primary schools, 214 secondary and superior schools, sbcty-nlne pub llshlng houses, sixty-nine large hospitals, sanitariums, and medical dispensaries, and a model accredit ted college of medicine from which have been sent hundreds of devoted doctors and missionaries to all parts of the world. With regard to the medical in a Terrace resident and who criticized the work being .rlT of Thd1n . iSS!ututtoM' thcs nm an the way done at the time of the floods. We are wonderine if the neJKrH. iff0"1 eKai sanitariums with more k 11 in . . ,1 "umitmib u Ult-, TlfE O It AND TRUNK RAILWAY Od, than a mil I rAr n.cfm.nf1 Applicant. t;.-t: t" -r csuiuu wini uie mosT, moaern features tliat medical science Can furnish, down to the humble dU- pensary carried on by a medical missionary and his wife In-some mi- tff corner of tile African jungle, on the sweltering plains of India, or in the congested interior cities of China. One feature 6f the medical work is a leper colony In Africa. At tins leproharturn they have 120 lepers under treatment aVl the time. Every year scores are returned to their families com- . . 1 W-.JtUl t-l nil I It was a snock to our people 10 a statement from a recent article learn of the recent death of Con- wrlUen by a professor in the Unl-ductor W. D. Moxley. We feel our versity 0f Colorada in a study of people have suffered the loss of a the motives that actuate altruism: real friend and brother. , iThe Adventsts raise three times Many times when our aged, sick much ,money per of or otherwise weak members have m6mbership as any other Import- been travelling to or from the can neries or to the hospital, they have found a real friend and helper In Conductor Moxley. He was so human, so understandingly kind, that he won the hearts of all our people. We shall miss him when we travel. A tribute of praise was given to his memory by Alfred McDames on Sunday at the church service held in the Salvation Army Hall. Every int denomination the statistics of yhlch are available. They support a more extensive and far-flung missionary organization than any ther denomination within several lmss their size in membership dventLsts contribute for missions !,hree times as much per capita as heir wealthiest competitor, ard ;eh times as much as the Protest-mt average In America." The fore-going facts are not recounted with the Idea of boasting 3f what Seventh Day Adventlst ire doing. What they have accomplished Is a testimony to the powei of the Spirit of God Working through human kind. To God b: ill the glory. Seventh , Day Ad venttsts are resolved to let G0d' SrJlrit work through them and bj them, looking forward to thai happy day of consummation when Jestis shall come to end earthly sorrow, sin,, and death, and create new heavens and a new earth wherein righteousness and peace add joy shall prevail throughout eternity. AIN8LEY BLAIR. HE Bl Twenty -Five Years Ago February 15, 1912 J. U. Rogers, local agent of the Union Steamship Co.. announces pieieiy curea ' establish a bi-weekly service be over me worm uuve uuieu xiiwe ui with th lilt? methods mennLHJ.5 mi of treatment lacaiaucui iicic . -v, icians and nurses to the utter-most parts of the earth with the glorious evangel of health to body and soul. feeventh Day Adventlsts take for their textbook and ttlle of life :he Bible, believlrtt It to be the word of God and the final' authority in religious matters. Believing, from a study of the Bible, In the imminent return of Jesus Christ to this earth, Seventh Day Adventlsts are deeply missionary minded and have a whole- ithe intention of the company to Camosun and Chetosln, 1 used, and the British Colonial Reamers era at Dublin. The CamosUn rlllj arrive here Thursday nights from public school were given a Valentin P.trtv tout nlffht at the home allied longing to each have a part' . rttMnr twii '.il luiiiiiiiig uui uuiuo ifiiuiiiooiLril to .preach the gospel to all the Wdrld In this generation. As a result of this earnestness I will cite Peace Committee Holds Meeting Wrong; Impressions to be Cleared- Al Newman Named Secretary There was a meeting bf the Peace River committee of the Junior and Senior Chambers of Commerce at the City Hall Saturday afternoon for the purpose of devising ways and means to counteract wrong impressions that have developed In the Peace River Block SUN LI ad to the work of the Joint committee bringing before the federal government the heed of a railway connecting the Peace country with prince Rupert, a letter written for that purpose was approved by the committee and will be sent on the next malL , . Those present at the meeting were J. J. Littie, City Commissioner W. J. Alder. W. It. Tobey, H. F. Piil-leh, A. W. Newman and T. A. Mc-Wattets. Mr. Newman was appointed secretary of the committee. COLI) FOll PYJAMAS TORONTO, Feb. 15: (CP) Clad oriiy in light pyjamas, a woman was found walking! In her sleep In freezing weather here. A newsboy carried her, shivering and exhaus-:ed, into her apartment. v SINCE Fl SECURITY mm m iw mmw fB him VI i r-t T "V7 "V A jl. a m . w vt iv x r tin FEOFCAN POLICYL WAS'ISS WORLD WIDE Kitzegukla Ladies Cut Wood to Aid Neighbor in Weed KiTZEOUttLA, Feb. 15: TheLa dies1 Aid 61 the Kltzegukla Uhlted Church recently rose to the occasion of a great heed. One of its church members was sick and confined to his bed and to make mat. lers worse ius wne uok sick and had to be removed to the iiaze. ton Hospital. The men all being away in l0j. authorities authorities have have generously generously stlbsl- " ..Tlging camps., the women got b. dlzed the work. Seventh Day Adventlsts believe that the medical missionary phase of the gospel rhould be the opening wedge In reaching non-Christians both at' home and abroad, they are therefore sending their qualified, phys neina orousm oui irum mc uuu- . . i and spent an afternoon sawlni, and splitting wood and stacking it In the wood shed. lire auuwi, . f v- . , . . . art and sail for Vancouver sat-1 " - . i ThA nhnuwin win i efficient women handling cross-cut Ui UHJ ill- luioJ " I , .1.1 sws and wielding axes made arrive Tuesday mornings, make - lot the- Tost Slmpson-Naas River and nc- ou" ng n iroiti Goose Bay .trip and sail ,for Van-(hearts fired With love for a neigh. n nnmn VVAHnAvliiv.q ! our. Special p?rmlssion has been given by Chief of Police W. H. Vick-ers to the 250 Chinese residents of Prince Rupert to stage a ten-day celebration in connection with thi i declaration of the new Chinese1. Republic. Children of Division Two of the Synopsis of Land Ad rtt-BMtTIONt t VACANT, fenmetvtd. mtitjH cnu Undt mar x prt-rmptrd bjr Brum ubjtctt over It yean of tic and k, allrna n declarltif intention (o bxoiM British aubjecta. conditional upon rin drnee. occupation and improttment. Pun intorriatrofl codctrhlnf Pre-rmp. tloni la liven In Bulletin No. 1, um Senta, "How to Pre-empt Land," topiei tt which can be obtained free of charit bt addresalnf the Department of Landi, V toria. SC.; Bureau ef Provincial tnlrrni-tlorl. Victoria, or ant' oovernment Arl Record! will M granted esvennf uui, land aultabla fof iirirultulal purpun Ithln reasonable dlatancc of road, ict.wi arid Marketing facilities and hlrb u m lUnberUnd, I., carrving over S000 tuiri feet per acre east of the Coait Kanie u4 1 000 feet per acrl wrat of that Rami Apphcatlona for pr-emptHiiu are U m kddretaed to the Land CommlMwner ef the Land Recording DHUion In ObliH IM land applied for la situated, on prim forma ootalned from the Commllonir. Pre-emptlona moat bt occupied tor tin yean and improvement! made to Value ef III per acra, including clearing and ruKI-tatlng at leait f It acres, before a Crevt Orant can be received. Pre-emptions carf jlng part time condt. tiona of occupation ara also granted. rl-RC'IIAE OB LCA9I Applications art received for puretm Of vacant and unreserved Croio Uaa, hot being tlmberland. for agrkultvil Minimum prleo of tlru-elui furposes. arable I land la $5 per acre, and kk4-tlasa igrailngl land. I1M per arn Further Information Is given In BuurM No. 10. tand Series, Purchase and la Of Crown Lands. Aa partial relief measure, rettrud lands mar be acquired v purchaie la ui tqual instalments, with the flrtt patneol luipended tor two veart. provided um kra paid when due and Improve mtnta are made during the first to fears ef set less than 10 of the appraised value. MUI, factory or industrial slid limber land, not ticeeding 4 acre eij be purchased of leased, the aond!tM including payment of Itumpne. Unsurveyed u'u. not HctedlM acres, may be leased as bomesltcs. ew tlonal tipon i dwelling being erected i th first year. UU being obUlned stw residence and Improvement condition! an fulfilled nd land ha town surveyed. Por graslng and Industrial par" areaa not esceeding MO acres ms leased by on person or a company. Under the Orailog Art the prvl dlvldfd fnto grarlng dutrleu and rang! administered under grasmg reft tldna amended from ttrat to time varying conditions. Annual greslm w' mils are laaued based on certain awmw ratea per head ot stocl. Priority In ruing privileges la given U resident r owners. Block-owners may form su tlona tor rang management, rree partially fre permit available for tettim, campers and Uavtilua, DOLLAR JfS Y ADA UED IN 1371 SERVICE Another Milestone ol Achievement in public service has beer, passed by the Company during 1936. Of the many s.sn.hcanf features of the Annual Report, perhaps the most striking is that during six y-s.x years of operation the Sun Life of Canada has paid in benefits to its policyholders and beneficiaries more than One Billion Dollars. Features of 1936 ASSURANCES IN FORCE Th increase In durance, in fore, r.fl.ct. r.ii.cu the in. improvement In general bu.Inew condition. ?AJE "rnd n th 0oTO"ny' Jnv.tm.nu ayaln lncr....d. ASSETS of th. Company lncr.a..d by a.v.nty million dollar. ln 1&36 and art Dividends to Policyholders participating pollcThoId.r, will ,h. ln th. Company'.! aprogr.. by incr.a.ad dividend payment, during 1937 ASSUXANCC3 IN TORCE. D.c.mb.r il, 193ft . NEW ASSURANCES PAID TOR . - 4 , INCOME . . . DISBURSEMENTS .....I""" EXCESS Or INCOME OVER DISBURSEMENTS ..11. PAYMD, 5,. 2W?& Sine f nUalUn " '.' ASSETS 7 LIABILITIES - . . . . PAID-UP CAPITAL (I2.0O0.0O0) SURPLUS. " 13,450.303 - S.78a,085 - 10.000.000 U,I18,808 SI.773,919.087 21t.96.t 164.Oa3.SM I03.384.aea M.699,728 77.489.301 1,048,104.001 777.803.S3 740,448.993 eurlM tmnlti )n th, j,,Un ,,- ti h fc , : S37.3Sd.fl7S SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA ni. r rn.i , . . MONTREAL