7-55!“*"31*‘”*“=’§“'”1+l%=~uvIw-Iguanas:-sauce;-unm«a¢»sp-g9... .- .. -' ‘ A ~ -. ~ - -*."t5:I~:-z-..-a:-u-.su:a-.—;-i»..-..-.-....-...«.-..—- is...-v.at-i-vs-a-.~c.-r-re-a-1 " ?1X~§§3-Ul@{<Ufitr.-Js:-.s:;c:£I»cur~qsss‘JIr1I—:_§:=s:-asaqaziwy-r We -V.-...,. ,~ . ~ ~ - - . - -. .. .;q7-.- .....-. MAXIMS or A. MERE MAN my-—— _ ‘!'oundersts.ndistofoI‘I'lV|- 3, carrier: Charlottetown. lunnstdds $13.10 par snnan. llaawnsn in P.E.l. $0.00; om: Prsvilcu and ll.l.A. 1100 per annum. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew" FRIl)AY, APRIL 2, 1954 ILA OFFER TO END N. Y. DOCK STRIKE TURNED CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, Royal Couple. Bids Regretful Australians for If!) days was the estimate of Farew_e_ll To By GOMER JONES ABOARD G01’!-l'.IC, (Reuters)- With cheers. tears and shouts of "come back soon," Australians waved farewell to Queen Elin- beth and the Duke of Edinburgh Thursday when the liner Gothic sailed on a 1.900-mile voyage from Frunsntle to the Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean. The royal couple's two-month tour of Australia had ended. and the long homeward voyage had begun. one official on the dock said the Queen's eyes were brimming with tears as she said. “This is a sad occasion for us all." As the liner pulled away. guns boomed a royal salute. Australian Jet fighters screamed overhead, ahlp sirens sounded and hundreds of gully-decked boats hurried be- hind the Gothic to follow her to the open sea. Queen On Bridge Four warships steamed into es- cort position.s—and the royal con- voy sailed into the sun. with the Queen on the saluting bridge. Crowds pressed to the water's echo and sang. "'I'here'll Always Be an England". ‘Waltzing Mat- ilth", "Wish Me Duck", and final- ly “Auld Lang Syne". The Queen and her husband did not shake hands with anyone dur- ing the farewell. because of the Western Australian polio epidemic. When the Gothic was at sea the Queen made her farewell broad- cast, telling the Australians. "God be with you until I can visit Aus- trails again." In a goodbye massage. Prime Ml.n4ister Robe-rt Menzies wished the monarch “a wonderful reun- im with your children and a long of service to your PC0919 and the wild." , - . llllim also sent. a message to the Duke of Edinburgh. express- 1nI’_l?ll-lllidfi for his "dig!-lnetiolh warm friendliness and bin: oom- panlomhlp." Lost Weight The Quseri appeared frssh and buoyant duplte the heavy M-day schedule in Australia. not she has she wore an ensemble of mush- onc souroe—about aix pounds. when she boarded the Gothic. room and lilac silk and a. small hat trimmed with black osprey feathers. she also wore the sprayed-dim rnond brooch which the Austral- ian People had given her. Good weather was predicted for the first days of the Gothic's voyage to the Cocos Islands. since leaving London in Novem- ber. thc royal couple have visited the West Indies. Panama, Fiji, Tonga, New Zeaiand. Australia and Tasmania. On the way home they will IWD It 00608. Ceylon. Aden, Uganda. Libya, Malta and Gibraltar. lady Churchill 69 Yesterday LONDON. lR;ll—ldl_'s) Lady Churchill, wife of the prime min- later. celebrated her 69th birthday on Thursday. She stayed in her bedroom. when she is recuperating from neuritis in the arm. Though there was no elaborate birthday party. the Churchill fam- ily gathered at her bedside to help hsr sat a I5-pound cake. It was decorated with a flower garden and s croquet pitch—-two of Lady Churchill‘: favorite. relaxations. Inscribed on the oaks was this verls composed by tho baker‘: son: "You stand mayhap in shadow of the man "Who with your undoubted help. history has mods. "You stand dsmursly and be- the or nuns -'_' . TOKYO. (AP)-Communist China accused the ‘United States Thurs- dsy‘of timing its Pacific hydrogen bomb» tests “to have a better har- gaining position at the Geneva conference." ‘lhe conference on Koran and Indo-China opens April lost some weight-an ounce a day as controversial on Wood is. The controversial resolution op- posing the transfer of the Wood Islands ferry service to the Cana- dian National Railway: along with an amendment moved yer- terday were killed in the Legisla- laturs last evening when Premier A W. Matheson asked the speak- or to take the chair during con- sirlernilon of the resolution in committee. The original resolutldn. moved last week by Mr. George Savills and seconded by Mr. T. B. Cul- len. asked that the -House go on record as opposing the transfer of the Northumberlond I-‘errler Company service to the C. N. R. or to any other Federal agency. The resolution caused a two- dsy controversy in the House be- fore the debate was adjourned un- Coming Events "Reserve Easter Monday night for danes in St. Peter's. “Pantry Sale I Pennell and Chandlers. April :rd., Springvsle W. 1. "Card party ovary Friday. st. Peter’: Legion Hall. Danes sar- urday. "Dance Psrkdals Hall. Friday. April Ind. Don MsIsor's Orchestra. Dancing 10.00-1.00. _.L_ "Don't forget the card and erokixols party at Hunter River Orange Hall tonight. “Psrkdsls w. ‘x. can Ssls Moors & llsuod. Third floor. Saturday. April I. Izlo pun. s-5 —. I "cleaning grain and timothy by appointment till May fifteenth. Wilfred Pickering. Ksnsington. "Showing at Mt. Stewart. Pri- dly and Saturday. "Just For You", stsrrl Bing Crosby. Jane Wymsn and ti Isrrymors. "Do not forget the family meet- lnl. conducted by Sr. Ospt._ Les. Titccsnbe. in the Capitol Thsstrs. Sunday night. April Ird.. ms p.m. A service for all the flmlly. "Just arrlvsd Snlpmsnti of ‘GNU! Kerosene lufrigsr-stars. lost and torn lloolrll ‘Resolution Ferry Killed til yesterday by Premier Math- eaon. In re-opening the debate yester- day Premler Mathescn stated than were many in the House who did not agree with the orig- iusl resolution. However. he thought that the House could reach some point where there would be general agreement. "I hops that there can be a gen- eral agreemen‘ and it is such, so that when the resolution is pass- ed and forwarded to Ottawa there will not be those in the House who disagree with it. If we could be united on the suoject of water transportation we will be listened to with a great deal of consider- ation when ws go before them at Ottawa." The amendment. which In effect was practically a now resolution stated that "This House request the Government of Canada. if any change of operation is considered. to assure the present fcvorsbls rate structure to our primary producers in agriculture and fisheries so that the producia of the land and res may be car- ried at Borden-Tormentlne and Wood Islands-Caribou at no in- crease over tho present. rates." It was moved by Mr. T. R. Cullen. ooillusly . “And ‘dignity that vary lhlde-" - bgts on the perils of tho hydro- 30 cents per pound. (Other pi ..;~ -» .K Bedverse Stewart of Mulldale Farm, New Wiltshire proudly displays his grand champ- ion Aberdeen Angus steer for which the T. Eaton Co. yesterday paid at the rate of 99 cents per pound at the Fat Stock Show and Sale to net him $979.11. Looking over the ears of his ten-month old Angus calf. is his son Temple Stewart. who won a first in the calf club entry. The calf weighed 688 lbs. and was purchased by Canada Packers for I‘! E‘ O ‘fl __m Fl- 5-‘ -0 —:< E W (D 59 ctures on page 7). -—Barter’s Film Lab. Great Debate - (By Philip Clarke) LONDON. (AP)-—Thc great de- 'sen'bomb raged onuirr 'the=_Qai- llsh ‘press i'oday"in what‘ out newspaper called an atmosphere of "H-bomb hysteria." While both Conservative and opposition members glrded for A full discussion in the House of Commons next Monday, news- paper: vied with one another In headlines, editorials and features to hammer home their views on the awesome weapon. The pro-Labor Tabloid. the Daily Mirror, devoted its entire front page lo H-bomb develop- ments and opened a public-opin- lcn poll asking readers to vote yes or no on: "1. Should Churchill at once openly invite Eisenhower and Mal:-nkov to a conference on the llbomb? 2. Should Churchill ask Eisenhower and Malcnkov to stop further H-bomb tests in the mean- time?" The News Chronicle. Liberal. carried an interview with Earl Russell in which the famed Philo- scphr-r and mathematician spud the American H-homh tests "must be helping to persuade" Russia to enter an international atomic agreement. "Giant ln Decay" The Mirror in an cdliorinl at- lE‘.(‘kf‘ll Cll\.lI‘(‘llIll as "the giant in decay" and said he Is too old and tired to speak any longer for Bri- loin. "Scare" headlines blazcned forih In other newspapers ow-r Wednesday's statement by Lewis Strauss, United States Atomic Energy Commission chairman. that a hydrogen bomb could he built big enough to put any city out of commission. Tile Daily Herald. Labor, under a headline "H-Bomb Can ,\VrcCk Any City." printed ‘I picture of New York's skyline captioned: "This skyline could he shattered." It called editorially for Britain to Mr. George Ssvllle. the mover Kind on Page in col. 1) In “Critical” TOKYO. (AP)-'l'hru of the 2! Jo snsss fisherman burnld by rs ioactlvs ashes from the torch reported in “fairly critical" condi- tion todsy with their blood count "ruling. sharply further since yu- terday. This report came from in Japan- ese doctor as a government offi- cial took issue with s statemsnt w the United States atomic snsrgy commlsuon chairman, Lewis Strauss that the fishermen! boat unwittingly was Inside the official danger sons when showered with rldiosctivl Japan‘: msritiins safety board. told Parliament that tho fishing boat Dragon was at least ll miles outside the danger srsa. onw msnssrs luvs said they were at least I miles from the bhst am ‘ 1 hydrogen blast at Bikini were , Tsuisu rauuiuucm. director of to domain! a half in further tests. "Ono I-I-homb can wreck all Three Burned Fishermen Condition Foreign Minlstsr Kntsuo Okauki said the U. 8. "should take re- sponsibility for dsmngs sustained . . whether or not the ship was within the danger none." Hoiru pf Representatives s ’the United Nhtions to outlawing of atomic Ilhl ‘ calling on "expedite weapons.‘ The newspaper Toyko Shimbun quoted Dz Ehinlchi Iflws as say- lng: "Three of the seven atomic pa- tients now suffer from 102.2-dcgrse temperature. and their vnhlu cor- puscle count which has been 3.100 Lam-or about one-half nor- msl—hss started falling imply further since yesterday." Dr. Mlwa added that some ps- tients had recovered when their white cell count dropped even lower "but they requlrs special attention now.’ ‘_ llages In British Press On H-Bomb London," was the front.-page head- line in the Conservative tabloid. the Dl_lll¥ Sketch. In an editorial, tho, pspgr called for ogsie West to ljfpauss now’ in‘ its nuclear test: to see if Russia might be willing to enter an atomic control agree- mcnt. Effect On Minds Lord Beaverhrook‘s Evening Standard said editorially that the H-homh "does appear to have had a quite remarkable effect on the minds _of. many people~—iurning ordinarily sane men and women into hysterical and irrational be- lngs." The editorial warned that until I general world settlement is reached, "it is dangerous nonsense to demand that the countries of the West should scrap precisely those weapons which have guar- anteed the safely of the free world in the past. eight yI-al's-- and can continue to do so in the future.“ To ArgTT—lI~ Cases loday OTTAWA. (CF) - Three groups seeking to establish new television stations will argue their cases at I Dublic hearinl of the CBC board of governors today. ‘ .’I\vo mutually-opposed applica- tions come from groups seeking use of television channel 12 at Peter- bomuah. om. The third appli- cant is Radio Station CJON. st. John's. Nfld., which plans is 1,4319. vision outlet in the Newfound- land capital. Signal Station At , Halifax closed 0I'I'AWA, (CF)-The department of transport's signal station ax Halifax has been closed as part of n modernization of department facilities on the east coast, H. V. Anderson. director of marine serv. ice. said Thursday. He said the functions of the sstabllshmsnt will be distributed among other agencies such as the Halifax pilotage service and the l0VeI'nment's Camperdown radio station near Halifax. The signal station roportsd on vessel movements in the Halifax Item Mr, Anderson said it had ‘ outmoded by other facil- ltles. He said other such stations along the east coast, ranging up to Quebec City. In being closed. Their work— some of which had been done by visual slgnsl——hsd been superseded by developments such as radio and radar. IAOI IIOM ANTAICTIC MEIJOURNI. (AP)—Ths Polar ship Klsts Dan came home Wed- nuds Ira establishing Austral- ia's permanent bass on the Antarctic continent. s wssthsr station. It is 0.1!!) miles southwat Tributes From Lieul. Governor 8: Chief Justice His Honour, Lleuicns ‘ '1‘. W31» ‘Pyowss: “The people of Prince Edward Island to-day mourn the loss of a distinguished son and the voice of a great champion of Island rights is forever stilled. However. his memory will ever be cherished in his nailve Province where for many years he unstintlngly gave of his many talents lnihesclentiflc field and where he laboured in the ser- vice of his beloved Island in the field of statesmanshlp and politics for the past twenty years. "As Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island it has been my privilege to have been closely associated \vith the late Senator Jonas during the latter years of his office as Her Majesty's First Min- ister in Prince Edward Island and the qualities of kindness, unfailing courtesy, i'rlendliness.ancl humanity are those which I found exemplified in the highest degree in his nature. "His passing is a deep personal loss to myself and I extend my sincerest sympathy to-Mrs. Jones and family in their great sorrow," Governor Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell. “The very sudden passing of Son- ator J. Waller Jones is a seven-, shock to his colleagues in Parlia- ment and to all who knew him in public or private llfe_ Though sixty- ‘ibEtiEiTd on i>éETs‘eo_i.‘4T' News In Brief OTTAWA, ICPr—Drfence Min. lster Olaxion today denied a Tar. onto newspaper report that Cana- dian-built Sabre jet fighter planes are drstined for a reborn German air force. OTTAWA. (CP)—Exlernsl Af- fa‘rs_Minl.stsr Pesiton warns that Russia's new proposal for Euro. pcan ucurity may be a "pfopg- gands trap" aimed at delaying Western Europe's defence moss- urea. LONDON, (CP) — High-ranking British and Commonwealth air officials Joined Canadian sir force officers Thursday in celebrating the sour anniversary of the R.C. A. P. EDMONTON. (CF)-—A helicopter has been sent from Edmontorn to start the search for a new town- sm for Aklsvik, Oansdrs blgguf Arctic settlement which is in dan- ger of sinking through melting permafrost and being sruulfed by the Mackenzie River. IJNITED NATIOHS. N. Y.. (AP? —The Arabs have demanded Israeli raid on the Jordan . killed isst many. huvy Oousliunist-led Commisshh I Comproniise sociation and.) Thursday night dc- dock strike in New York's history The Union was promptly turned down. long strike if a bl-state New York- an urgent meeting of the United Nai- lons Security Council to take up the village of Nstsln when nlns Arsba were HANOX. lndo-Chins. (AIl— Th: WONG“ Nlll colllllnd announced Thursday night thst Ranch union troofl dsfsndinl Dim llsn Phu Md NOW! off ssoihsr series of s ttseks MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN Salt!-lnsuniulyluu. 14 PAGES The Guardian. Pin Oasis Mo ' Dally Founded llli. DOW Refuses To By ARTHUR EVERETT NEW YORK. (AP)—-The old In- ternational Longshoremenb As- manded a waterfront amnesty as its price for ending The ILA promised to recommend an end to the crippling m-day New Jersey waterfront commislon restores working privileges to about 05 black-bailed ILA men. The commission's executive di- rector, Lawrence E‘. Walsh, losl. no time in rejecting such a deal. Said Walsh ln a statement: "The waterfront commission will give no consideration to the con- ditions so brazenly advanced . The action of the commission will not be affected in the slightest by any threat to strike or to continue a strike. .'I‘he commission will make no compromise with law- lessncss." The work passes of the ILA men were taken away since the strike began. presumably for violence or other misbehavior. However. the ILA charged some work permits were lifted for no reason at all. ‘ If the passes are returned ILA executive vice-president Patrick J. Connolly said. the union would be "willing to recommend" to work. Connolly talked to reporters af- ter an emergency meeting to dis- cuss .1 government order that the‘ ILA end its strike st once. or risk slow death as a labor union. He called the government man- date “legal blackmall"_ New Election Ordered The tough ultimatum camp from the National Labor Relations Board as it ordered a new election to select it bargaining agent for New York's 24,000 longshoremcn. The NLRB said the ILA will ruled off the new ballot unless it ends its multl-million-dollar strike “forthwith." 'I"he ILA must win the new election to bargain with shin- pers. If it loses to a rival AFL union. its days probably will be numbered. It was this demand for bargain- ing rights which sparked the cur- rent ILA strike —longest in the port's history. The walkout began March 5. In Washington. Attorney-General Herbert Brownell ordered a fed- eral grand jury waterfront invest- -_(0on-ilnued nrTP:ge I3 col. 4) Firem.ah*llnd Boy Fall In ~ Rescue Allempl SYDNEY. lCP)—A 10-year-old boy and a 35-year-old fireman be- came heroes Thursday. but their efforts failed to save nine-year-old Freddy Monk from drowning. I Freddy ‘fell into deep water In Wentwm-th Park crack when he ran out on sun-rotted ice in re- trleve a ball_ _ Billy Reid ran to his companions rescue. but he wasn't much of a swimmer. I-‘reddy clung to him and kept pulling him down. Fireman Ralph MacLean on his way home to supper, heard Billys cries and plunged into the icy’ water. He had Billy ashore before he discovered the second boy was under the ice. He plunged in again, broke away ice with his fists. and made three underwater dives before he found I-‘rsddy's body. But that time more firemen were on the scene with an extension ladder and brought Mac- Lean and the victim ashore. wiltshire was the winner of the Grand Championship at the third Prince Edward Island fat me l°"3°“ show and sale which yesterday with a huge crowd in attendance. Mr. Stewart's year and nine month's old Aberdeen Angus steer weighed 939 purchased by T. Eaton Co. Mom‘:- ton, for a record breaking price of 99 cents a lb.. nettir.-z the owner $979.11. An av:-rage of 26.44 rents per lb.. was realized on the $15,- 667 sale. who is agricultural or the Canadian Pacific Railurnv. ' stated that the type and quality Mr. Wolff was high in his praise for the culling committee whom he said left a splendid group of ani- mals for him to judge thus making marked that he did not favor the lnm:-legged type of Education Committee Report my-.Sparks Controversy In House New Wiltshire Breeder Is Grand Championship Win.ner At Stock Show Mr. Redversc Stewart of New stock was held lbs, and was one oi in Canada I-‘rank Wolff representative Yesterday ‘s show was the finest ever held and the judge, Mr. of the animals was outstanding his task easier. ’I'he official re- anlmal for The report. of the select oom- mittce on Education. moved in the Legislature yesterday by the chair- man, I-Ion. Keir Clark. provoked strong criticism from Mr. R. R Bell, leader of the Opposiliomnncl - adverse comment from 1-Ion. Dou- gaicl Macxxnnon. before an ad- journment was called to the dis- cussion. which will be resumed ‘af- ter the week-end recess. Mr. R*.'R. Bell. leader of the Opposition, charged that the in- vestigating committee aimed to discredit Prince of Wales College in the eyes of the public. He stated he did not know why there had been an investigation of the College and that he was much concerned about this matter. Dr. W. J. P. MaoMillan. a. mem- ber of the Education Committee, asked that Mr. Bell be made with- draw his statement about the aims of the committee. “I take exceptions to those ro- marks that it was the aim of the committee to discredit Prince of Waits College," stated Dr. Mac- Millan. statements are in- correct. They are not true. The aim of this committee is to deal with Prince of Wales College. schools and general educational conditions. “I think the speaker should make him (Mr. Bell) withdraw those statements." Mr Bell had also charged that the Minister of Education should not have been chairman of a minmittee investigating his own department and he qucstloned the proceedings used at a number of the privnlc hearings in the Min- lsi.er's oilirc. Hon. Dnugald MacKmnon. Min- ister of Public Works and High. ways stated he was inclined to agree with the Member from Fifth Prince who called the investiga- tion "a damn waste of time". He stated that was the attitude of nmny of the people he had dis- cussed the matter with. Text Of Report Follmrmg is the text of the re- port as presented by Mr. Clark: “Your Unnintillne on Education has mot and wish to report as follows: "i. Your Committee has liven rnrcful study in the continuing shoring» nf fully qualified era. Nolmc has been taken of the Thirty minutes of resuscitation failed to revive the boy. Msclmsan is in hospital in a state of severe shock. possibility that cancer can and thus be prevented from spend- by a University of medical researcher. So far tests have becn proiedure would work is not known. heth G. Scott. director of lng rssssrch laboratories society. 01 Mclbourns . dustbowl foru-cu. against the eastern aids of the lspsrimsnlsra rsosntiy mRdF».rats' food. The expperimenla were rlr-acrib-; I found nanny. and in many _A_ ‘ that tho presence of iodine in theudread growth did not start It all sets at 6.42 pm. .-'n~nll numbcr cnrnll.ng in lnacher Irninlng classes at Prlncr of Wales (follr-go encli year and also of the fart that a large pm- See Possibility Cancer Can Be “Quaraniined” —"— l “"”“. SAN FRANCISCO. MP‘ *- Th’ anlrnal system promoted the growth be of cancers after they "quarantined" at its site of nriginlpignced in the animals. i Dr! Scott found that the pres- Chaleur "II fllvally VII Innolmcet Wily enre of cancer caused the animal ‘ California system to store more iodine with had which are lalong with waste rnat:-rials. when the resin diet was »the resnrvn champion leach- llll“ band of :a resin compound put into the In the intestinal sys- Only On His. Whether the Ilmeliem this resin hooks onto iodine in humans. compoonds removed; _._.%.__.__ beef purposes and pointed out that these were not popular with the buyers either. The reserve grand chompionshlp went to a 1.114 lb.. Hereford own- cd bv Fulton Sanderson and Sons of North RlVPl'. Champion Short- hnrn was a 813 steer owned by Athol Roberls. Southport. Red- verse Stewart had the reserve champion Angus: Fulton Sander- son and Sons. the reserve champ- ion Hereford and Athol Roberts Bhorthorn. Temple S[PWnrl_ young son of Rcdverse Stewart held a first prize in the calf club with his 10 month old, 688 lb.. Angus calf. Dlrcc tors Cnngraiulated The sale opened promptly at 1:00 p. m. with a message of wel- come from the President of the Provincial Exhibition Association, Dr. J. P. Lantz, who said that he was most pleased with the im- movement in this show from (Continued on.I’agc 5 col. 3) porllnn of those who prepare for teaching remain in the profession for only a few years. "The Committee recommends that the Department of Education give close study to all available means of increasing and retain- ing II supply of fully qualified teachers to meet the needs of all srliools having sufficient pupils to ‘(Continued on Page 8 col. 2;‘ DON'T GIVE ALL. YOUR ADVICE AWAYZSAVE SOME I pron YQURSELF TORONTO. (CF) -— Minimum and maximum temperatures: Dawson 14 32 Vancouver dz 52 Victoria 41 (3 E4.’-monton 4b 1:) Calgary . 5 Rrglna 5 \\‘lnnipc-g 5 Toronto .. 40 Ottawa 15 Montrcal 37 Que-hen 34 Saint. John 35 l\lcnt:tnn . . 35 Hrlifax . 35 (‘lwarloliclnwn 30 Sydney 31 Yarnmuili . .. 39; St John's. Nfld. 23 HALIFAX. (CP) -- The Domin- inn public weather office here says .the first of April was mainly {ins and cold over the Maritlmes and ‘,Quebec. The high pressure area ‘Icausing this weather is moving slowly anutheastward and a dis- liurbance over western Quebec is ;moving eastward. An gggoclgggd ‘ anowflurrles that marks the advance of extremely cold air from central Canada. will reach .t.he northwestern regionslsts Iri- day. There will be little change over the southern Maritimcs. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island, Eaugm N. 3. counties. Lower st. John River Valley: Clear with lltttls ‘ - in Ismpsrsiure; solihwat winds id; low-high at Charlotte- town ill and as. Moneton and Fredericton la and M. Islnt John 599"‘ 20 and to. Upper St. John River, lay of Clear becoming cloudy with snowflurries in the evening: little change in temperature; light winds shfiting by evening to north- west 15; low-high at lidmundslnn 18 and 35. Campbeliton lb and 35. Bay of Fundy: Light winds be- coming southwest 15 by afternoon; nntl _ ed to science writers by Dr. Krn- used. Dr. Scott ma. he could in-3:n;°}“fL°":;;n::";:“‘zemguflflgr the ject 300 tumor cells into the rat school’: radioactivity research cen- Mood mum ma produce . mg. In. The salsncs wriurs are tour- lignancy in the animal‘: lung. at the High tide today at Charlottetown When the iodine diet was used. it at 0.41 a.m. and 10.03 pm. invitation of the American Cancerliook an injection of 7.000 cancer Summer-side tide ll minutes cells to produce one lung msllg- later. cases the sun nus today at Isl an and at: 9...... L...-. -. .-,e.~=.. -3..--3.’-sang.-‘ — '