/ N S IDE ........................ Pago 2 WOMEN'S SOCIAL ............ Page 3 SPORTS .............................. Page 4 CLASSIFIED ........................ Page 6 COMICS.......................... Page 7 W E A T H EW Mostly cloudy today and Tuciday vr�a few snow flurrfea. & change in temper***' Low tonight, and ^ Tuesday, 18 an�T 3l Dedicated io the Progress of the North Phone LO 4-2441 Vol. 3; No. 46 PRINCE GEORGE, BRITISH COLUMBIA, MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1959 Legion Set Arrangements are nearing completion for construction of a new Canadian Legion building at Giscome, it was reported by the organization Friday. Officers and members of the Giscome-Willow �River Branch 252 attended ceremonies commemorating the opening of a nuw recreation building in the community. Thomas Linidow, immediate past president of the branch, officiated at the ceremonies. Mr. Lin-dow is justice of the peace at Willow River. CARS MEETING TOLD A desperate need for a School of Rehabilitation to train physiotherapists was one of the discussion highlights at the annual meeting of the B.C. Division, Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society, held in Vancouver last week, Mrs. Jessis Cunliffe, president of the local CARS branch, was the Prince George delegate to the convention. SVJys. Cunliffe said that obtaining staff for CAUS physiotherapy units was considered one of the organization's major problems. Approaches tovr;utl cstaif- A death trap awaits pedestrians using the road which .skirt? the west side of Con-Mciught Hill, police warned today. Officers said as much as four-feet of water lie under a thin crust of ice which mocks a solid road surface. "A child or adult, taken by surprise and panic when they fall � through the ice, could drown in the water," police said. Committee On Safety The first steps toward organizing a Prince George and District Safety Council were taken during the weekend. A temporary chairman and a committee were chosen from 16 persons who attended the initial meeting of the group held in council chambers at city hall Friday night. Harry Hamper, executive-director of the B.C. Safety Council, who was in Prince George in connection with a lecture on human relations and management, addressed the meeting. � He pointed out the significance of a Safety Council's work in communities similar to Prince George and showed the effect of accident - prevention programs on accident statistics. Herbert Maxwell was elected chairman of the council. li.shing a school were made eight years ago but the first physiotherapy gradim tions from t[!ip University of B.C. ar