hata Nt NUCT. Wuity bree “ and Nor ther n ind Central British Columbia. anadian Dally Newspaper Associalton by. ‘Phe-Prince. Rupert Dally News Limited J F, MAGOR, President vet _ Subiscrlptlon Rates: By. mall—Per ‘month, "Be: per year, $8, 00 L TINEA tof Canadian Pross-Atidig Beret of Cirentations econd, eines mall by,. the Post Office Department, Ottawa ame as it Is at present, ees ime that the canneries themselves began the: Feqiirement 0 of the law are car ried t serateh, ‘Those that did vemained open, One cafe Was closed. The year 1958 is still some time away but ; _ time passes quickly and it would horrify the public. | two year's. henee, if the. situation was found. to be the . bs : ye V.0,. v k Seq we “This advertisement Is.not published or displayed by 198 thee Pewee ee a ta 3 3° oh 2 1 R EE] ge Seagtams. i ae vad be SUN : B\ 3 \% “ 5 eu 0 . — ! ; | “ * OF agraw’s “3s * Y “the Liquor Contra). Bourd or by the Government of British Columbia, » Advartising in The Daily Nows Brings Results e food is being svodhie. Mi serious, It also makes — |-tiful ' Elinore ito {Calling All Sherlocks » |wRI ITING in a special all-Canadian edi- tion of. Current: ‘History jmagazine Professor W. L. jof Manitoba quotes what Inadian doggerel: screams, The lion roars for blood; The beaver, musing by his streams, Says nothing, but saws wood. Can any literary, Sherlock Holmes tell me where this an- cient Canadian rhyme origin- ated, or where it was first seen in print? an “he he “ef {LIBERTY magazine received 2400) entries in the contest.to select ithe best. designs for a new Ca-: nadian flag. These were screened down. to; . 50 “possibles” before: Christmas. The ‘21 judges are now in the final stages. of selecting the win- ners. 2 + ~ The designs’ submitted by the schoo! children seemed to me to | those submitted by the grown- ‘ups; buf there were many beau- and striking’ designs both, , ers . a A MEDICAL poll. conducted by the U.S. News and World Re- port follows political rather than scientific lines. The heart spec- iallsts of the U.S.A: decide by a small margin that President Hi- | Senhower's heart. condition does not ‘Tule ‘him’ out from running again.’ But those: doctors who say let him. run again come mostly from the states which vote rock-ribbed. Republican. Those who say no, his bad heart is too: big: a risk, are from the ~ bDemocratic: ‘south, or other sec- ‘tions which ‘tend to vote Demo- crat. a a * about a recent column on sex criminals. One writer, a gradu- vate-of.a famous European. school : the supreme thrill out of killing their victims—and do: not kill ‘Merely to cover up. their crimes, as I suggested in my column. As the Minister of Justice painted out in his speech in par- liament, sex deviation is a very big and complicated question, Some of the greatest beneficiar- ies of the human race were no- torlous sex deviates, particularly among the composers and pocts. Granted that more harm than good may be done by laymen ‘rushing in like fools where the experts tread most warily, The fact remains that waves of sex ‘degeneracy ‘have swept over elvilization, time after time, The Bible tells us plainly about the fall of Sodom, It also tells us ‘thet at one stage in history the entire tribe of Benjamin was! homo-sexual, The statistics show. that, since 1981 homo-s?xual offences In Britain have inereased by the staggering ratio of 800 per cent, fe oo te GRAN thats the: question .of ‘SOX! deviation is’ avery. intri- cate one. There are some things ‘which the layman can know and indeed does know, as well as any experts, One surely Is thal all small ehildren should be taught never, never, never ta vee pl{ts from strangers, or Lo go for walks with i slrange nen, Anather is that the law, as it ‘now stands, provides for the Ine, Ho aes 1 te Must Be Conquered , that thoro wore | : POLIO CASES IN. PRINCE RUPERT ‘ i oe i 7 LAST YEAR, x eS The Kinsmon Club of Princo Runort As again ‘pamtoning the Annual ~ Mall Your Donations To 7 P.O, Box 15) Did You Know 4 definite detention of any person | “convicted of a sex crime of the! I nature which suggests that he i may do the same thing again sf “timed loose | Sir Frederick ‘Abel, “authority | Hon explosives, was the frst bite | rector of Britain's Imperlal Tnstd- i tule In a7, omnes cad ive FEBRUARY LADIES’ PUMPS *& All Colors % Many Sizes Prices Slashecl aa laclies’ Mocassin’ SLIPPERS Men's Dress SHOES recent : {Morton of the University} ‘rhe ealls “an old bit of Ca-4 The cagle flaps his wings and] ‘be, on the whole, . superior to’ in MANY readers have writtenme; Fashion Footwear By GARY SMYTH * Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO .—Dr; J, “As Ja- cobs put his finger on an: RCAF ‘photograph and traced” the ‘twisting six-mile expanse of British Columbia's Salmon glac- ler, “y expect. that’s where we'll set up camp,” he said. His finger paused over the. centre of the 10,000- year-old ice bed - where nine geophysicists from the Uni- versity of Toronto will carry out a three-month survey this sum- mer, With some $50,000 worth of equipment, the party, under Dr, Jacobs, will plumb the mile- wide glacier and try to answer come of the questions still a mystery to Canadian’ Scientists. The expedition is, in Dr. Ja- cobs own words, run” for an Arctic challenge ex- pectéd in the summer. of - 1957 as part of Canada’s contribution to the Third Geophysical Year, fan international study. of the _jearth’s physical char acteristics, The same party, ‘again, under the 40-year-old university. lec- turer, expects then. to ‘fly to Alert at the northermn- tip of ai ior sexicolog gy,. points out. that,’ Ellesmere Island cand, . Meagyre rg” t'sonte* sex! deviates’ actually” “get glacier, Canada's Defence.- Research Board is backing the’ two. ex- peditions, the sceond as part of the international study and the first the relatively inexperienced Un- iversity of Toronto scelentists. For the last two months Dr. Jacohs-and oa small staff have been planning the flyst- expedl-! tien. He, two other staff mem- bers: and alx senlor students | OX- | 1 WELFRUD DUPRESNE, Pro : gressive Conservative meniber of the House of Commons for Quechee West. has deserlher Jean-Paul St, Laurent aaa spoiled elite of Prime Minis. } fey Sl Laurent. Eperkine tn | the Commons, Mr Dufrasne ; salcl Tean-Paul, 43, won the r federal by-cleetion in Tents. conta Sept, 26 with “child. | I Ish sayings” about his influ. ‘enee with hls father, i G P eetisninainin anes SPECIALS! AND SANDALS $95. $4.95 | 99 $ 5.99 Glacier Near ‘Premier Tatget Of June Survey | “a sort of. dry ‘aint ‘investibate the” Maléspeni | ‘as a training program for |: THIS, AERIAL VIEW WAS TAKEN after fire destroyed two hotels, three homes and a store at Ste. Angele de Laval, Que., about 90 miles east of Montreal. There were no injuries but 60 persons were forced fo leave their homes. Damage is estimated at $200, 000. ipect to leave sometime in June. | sald. test ourselves. our and our supplies.” - Prof. J. T, Wilson, department head who is overseeing prepara- tions but will not make ‘the trip, commented: “Our chaps could fly up to Ellesmere in 1957 and after a week discover they’vej° brought the wrong kind of screwdriver. Then there’d be a wrench in the works for sure.” - Incidents of that kind, Jacobs feels, probably will hap- pen anyway. But to guard: against such things, research | assistant George. Falconer, 26, : has compiled an li-page list of eqiipment, food and: clothing! that the party will pack into: northern British Columbia. The British-born geophysicist : bases his list on his own exper- ience, He. has spent previous summers -tramping glaciers in Norway and the Alps. Pians call for.the party to fly to Prince Rupert and then take a beat 100 miles up the Portland canal to Stewart From there the scientists will “motor overlaid {o Premier, a small silver-mining commun: ily.’ The Salmon glacier is another 10 niles farther, Falconer's supply-lst includes the item: “Two only light: sleds with ropes,” indication that: the motive power Ne Ih. mile hike will have ow from (he men themselves, The Us. iso Includes tents. steeping bags, cir mattresses, ;porlable stoves, cating utensils and three-months supply of food as well as the pot-pourri of sclentitic equipment the ex- ‘pedition caiis for. The scientists’ job will be to | record ‘he glaciers’ area, posi- tion, ths speed with whieh It ds | advanels or receding and the; imaterlal of which it fs com-- “posed, Prof, Wilson sald the team will ‘ ? n bry to gather evidence to sup- iport a prediction as to what the “= placier is likely to da in Suture “The trip this summer really is a necessity if we're to’do any} sort of a job at all,” Dr. Jacobs : “It'll give us a chance to, equipment ; Dr come ,. and | ! | i | (CP Photoi i i 5 7 What You | | Should Know This coymma is being run in con Junetion wilh) Che Prince Rupert piign: for $2,000 Co help the BC. Pollo Fund, and will aecquatne the Rupert had nine eases here last yer, AN ANCIENT ENEMY Polio is net a modern disease. Reliable medica] authorities are: convinced polio is a very an-- cient disease; at least as old as, ‘civilization itself and it is world ; wide. Strangely enough the widespread the infection: fewer the cases severe cnough ito be recognized as polio. Isola- ‘tion and sanitation may actual- ‘ly be the friends not the foes of polio. ‘in extreme isolation show littic ‘or no natural immunity. But ‘veople living in densely popu- lated areas where sanitation is at oa very primitive level, are ‘rarely subject to a recognizable attack. Rather, it is the high standard of living in countries “such as Canada, the U.S.A., the United Kingdom, Australia, New ‘Zealand, and Scandinavia. ot he reasons appear to be _these. Most people in the ,countries where low standards ‘ 1 ‘of living prevail have been ex- ' ;posed carly In life, to a low ‘prade «venak! polio Infection. 3°They develop a mild case of the disease which passes patient, To contraet potie in even a mild form renders the patient immune, sis. Thus, countries where low standards of Hvine prevail are relatively « ay paralysing type of palio which - Isolated people on: the other hand, such as the Es-- Immune to the epidemic plagues us, kimo, having never been expos- ed have no natural Immunity. ‘Hence the terrible outbreaks al: the disease in such commiunit- les, Our high standard resuling .ood of living OTTAWA DIAR -ig how the new system works : About Polio |. 'Conmmons met at three o'clock in : : for a Quebec or Ontario MP to: Kinsmen Chib’s. Pollo fund gam. reisler } piblie with mast of the known vt fhets about the dread disease: whieh strikes every year, Prinee | | VANCOUVER More | the Groups of people living | away: probably unnoticed even by the | Successive OXpusares ure unlikely to result In paraly- heavily populated , hygenie : practices which do sa much to” _-~prediclions based on the na- contro) other disease may work : mars (ture af its shape and olhnates . jayaingt Ws when ib comes toy pole | IThy¢ man who will supervise to, * The day when pollo can:he nich of the ameesuring is Dr.i prevented may be near ut band, | R,R, Doel, 83 a Californian who The 3.¢, POLIO. FUND needs has heen in Canada anly a year afler gathering experience it the Pershan gulf, : Most of the data, he sald, will Jbe gathered with the ald of ‘seismic equipment, "By ex. jpluding small charges an the surface of the glacier ond re- rcurding the echo that bounces ‘buek from the reek bottom: Ewell be able to enleulate how | ‘and the Moor of the vlaeder,' That way we can estinate the sept, " Want Real CHROME SUITE ') Check Our Stock )... Ts Lovely-From GORDON & | Dial ind Calgary. your he Ip Lo speed the awh, MONTREAL Three “Mon: veal delegntes will represent | Quebeo at the Canadian Cans! ference on Soelay Work in Wide: monton die 1-22, Delegates ue hue and Tewlsh Child Welfare Bureaus Edna Osborne af al sorkil work, and rancalse | Marehand of the national elll- ceenship and dimmigration dept: ' Value in a $6800 hoPCh SET ANDERSON 3014 PRA NPP SN PRAIA | David Welss, executive dis | eetor of the Baron Trsvh haste the! much ee there is between us! Untyer ‘SIlY of Montreal's se shoot | | MacLEQD ! Persons who believed that; which would get him Parliament had hit upon a min-: ‘home by nightfall, to nis ago when, niost of ils members ‘til around 1 p.m, vent, for all practical purposes, ‘well pub in a wile day's work fon about a four-¢sy week, ser- iin the Chamber, iously under-estimewes. the re- But now the trouse substitules sourcefulness of our Me's ‘a morning sitting on Fridays for For by the unexpected grace ils former night sitting. ‘That of a special assist from the new ; means thal your Quechee an Honse rules adopted at the start ‘Ontario MP's can register theit ' of the present session, the states- jaltendance and cateh afternoon rien have been able 1 case once jians without any trouble, They again the fatigue strain they're can spend the whole of Satur- under, ‘day and Sunday at home. Morn. Ing or aflerne They're wol Lamgs organized | no moon trains Monday fow—or at least the 60 pereent | a Oh yma af them who represent Quebec ; Their a a whee “me Lo and Ontario’ ridings have gol! ‘he things organized—so that they'- re able to operate on. a wor i week of just three clear days, | ‘with sometimes the fragment of. another day thrown In, MP's from. the Western or the: Eastern provinces cannot, of course, take advantage of the! new schedule, at least until such: time as. the government relents - und gives them free pass privi-. leges on TCA, But for the Que- ‘hee-and Ontario MP’s who don't: i have the problem of long dis- , tances back to thelr homes, here | register ced Monday” night fore the House ee A noticeable unuer or MP's even fmprove on this sehedute ‘by taking the Thursday night ‘rains home, It costs them a ‘day's alleondance, but if they don’t do it too often, the number ,of days they're away doesn’t ex- ‘ceed othe | ominimum — number ‘they're allowed to miss without lake their extra day Monday at ihome and don't return until ‘Tuesday. In either case it works ‘out to three clear days in Parlia- and Thursdays —- with’ possibly A fragment of Mondays or Pri days thrown in, It's not too strenuous a sched- ule. ,eyed MP's are even looking for: ‘ward to the day when it will Be ‘possible to do the whole thing by correspondence, ~- including ‘the collection of the $10,000- “pers jyear stipend, of course, “ 2 te eet amen enteintete eae | inese Disle - oul, Under the old rules, when the! the afternoon, it was difficult : his atlendance ‘and ealch the mid- afternoon train. FREQUENT SERVICE 4h = Pacifle Western: Airlines has opened ate- three-flights-dally air passenger , ‘service between Vancouver, Vie- toria and Nanaimo. No reser'y: Le ‘tions are necessary for the | ‘fiwhts to the Vancouver Island: CHOP SUEY... jcilies. . CHOW MEIN Open 6 p.m.-3:30 a.m. Hollywood Cafe For Oulside Orders Ph. 6296 THE OLD AND SHE NEW tn limpposts along Parts’ famed Champs-Elysees stand side by side after modernistic neon lampposts were installed) fer test purposes along dde the ow gaselight posts, The latter, put up during the Second Eimvire in dhe 19th Centure, will re- RUPERT RADIO AND ELECTRIC’ S19 dred Ave, Phone 4206, By NORMAN, And since ‘imum work schedule some time. the night trains, ant leave ine , : intent ‘ay ‘Will bring them back In most reduction in their pay. Or some’ ment — Tuesdays, Wednesdays, : Some of the more dreamy-- FOREVER main standing as a tribe to France's past, PPP LPP” ~ ee , - TRY THE Grand Cafe For the Best Selection of Chinese Foods v ‘OUR SPECIALTY — TAKE OUT ORDEPS: * 1 DIAL. | | 3215 Open Gao tod aan, i 2nd Ave, West YOUR JEWELLERY HEADQUARTERS FOR 1956! f ET: cat, ea re a Te ete See eet. sta et Ee ——— ee ——, am SSS. =a ~seer tl 0S al bw. AS ere one cr. v r ie Wie