MAXIMS 01-'A MERE MAN -:1: After ,after Lent Easier. Christmss cams lent, gs, carrier: Clnu-lottatowri. Bunmeraida 010.00 per annun, Ehowhgrg Inkl- OBSERVERS SEE KOREAN TRU I. 30.00. other srovinces and U. S. A. 813.00 per snnuin. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. Saskatchewan Bridge Destroyed By Million-Dollar Structure Losi In 15 Seconds SWIFT CURRENT. Sask.. April 0--(CP)-A flood crest in the ice- jammed south Saskatchewan Riv- er early today knocked out in 15 seconds a new 81,000,000 bridge that took two years to build. Three steel spans in the centre and one concrete sp at the north end of the S skatchewan Landing bridge, completed only last year, went out at 1:55 AM. EST. . Water which had been up to the floor of the bridge rose an- other three feet as the flood crest came downstream from Med- icine I-lat, Alta. Within three hours after the bridge collapsed the river level had dropped by 14 feet. All that remains of the bridge. a. 1,215-foot structure linking the southwestern corner of Saskatch- ewan with the province's west-cen- tral region. are three concrete spans at the south end and two concrete spans at the north end. The steel superstructure of the centre spans which went into the river disappeared without truce. Nothing can be seen of it beyond an eddy in the current which marks its place in the stream bed. Army engineers Saturday had blasted a big ice Jam eight miles below the bridge. But the blast had no apparent effect on the level of the water at the bridge. The bridge. 35 miles north of Swift Current. was completed last year but most of the wori: was done in 1950. There was no trou- ble when the ice went out last spring. The bridge replaced a ferry which had been in service 68 years. Ice had ben piled up for '10 miles upstream from the bridge. Pioneer residents said it was the worst jam they had seen in years. Damage lo the 51,000,000 siruct- ure was estimated at between 8200.000 and 3300.000. Mr. Douglas said the span will be repaired "within three months." Centre spans of the bridge were swept away with a roar at 1:55 A. M. EST, hours after it had been thought the danger had les- geried with receding water levels. Seattle Mon Holds Clem Eating Title SEATTLE, April 6-(AP)-Dick Taylor of Seattle successfully de- fended his "world: clam-eating championship" Saturday but he was forced to n belt-straining pace of 337 cinms in. 10 minutes. The effort broke his own record of 272 set last year. Coming Events A-.-M. ll "Seeds! Send for Free Catalog. Arthur Vcsey. York. "Benefit Dance. Vernon Hall. April 18th. Orchestra. "Dance in Trncadie Hall, Eas- ter Monday night. "Card party, Summerfleld hall Monday. April 7. "Now in stock, Happy Hog Grower and barley meal. W. I. Bowman. '”lintries for Drama Festival elose April 15th. Entry forms and information booklet obtain- able at Charlottetown Library. "Sandy's Ramblers vs. Mi. Pleasant Bombers. Final game for Intermediate 0 title, Monday night, 8:30, the Forum. "For Snapshots that will not fade. mail your Films and Nega- tives to Garnhum Photo Studios, Charlottetown. "Collecting Hogs for Canada Packers Ltd. each Tuesday at Crspsud and Carleton. . When roads are impassable farmers are asked to deliver hogs to our trucks at Crapaud. and Carleton, up until ii A. M. each Tuesday. under the same arrangement as last year. R. N. Dawson. Phone No. 12-11 or 17. "Buying pigs. poultry and feeder cattle-any kinds and size. Mon- day at Fredericton. Buying youns pigs at Brookfield, Tuesday 9.00 A. M. Milton 10.00. Charlottetown Market Square 1100. York 1.00 PM. Bedford 2.00. Mt. Stewart 300. Paying 320.00 per pair for good pigs over 40 lbs. each. Will also buy smaller ones. Knud Jorgemen. "Attention Farmers in Mon- isgue. Cardigan and Pesires. Load- ing hogs for Canada Packers Ltd. on Wednesday. April still, rather than on Thursday. This is caused by tbe' Good Friday holiday and will apply for this week only. Sid. ,'ifcf.oan. Norman -McKenzie. Mer- lin Davina, V ' - so with what little time he had and .Ice Jam Island Artistis Portrait Of Alexander Accepted By Canadals National Gallery (By A. R. Sykes) OTTAWA - An oil painting of Earl Alexander, British Minister of Defence and immediate past Gov- ernor-General of Canada from the brush of Hubert Rogers, noterl por- trait painter and former Prince Ed- ward Isiander. ha been accepted for hanging in the National Gallery of Canada. It is the second important mor- trait of the former Field-Marshal to achieve prominence in Ottawa art circles in the past few weeks. The first, painted by Mrs. Lilla: Newton of Montreal. was unveiled by His Excellency Vincent Massey in the Parliament Buildings re- cently, and will be added to the long line of Governor-Generals' portraits at Rideau Hall. Mr. Rogers' painting differs widely in conception and treatment, to that by Mrs. Newton. Art critics here say Mr. Rogers was in finest. form in his delineation of His Ex- cellencyts strong and mobile face The expression is serious but not severe, and a glint of humor is de- tectable beneath ihe soidierly hear- ing and expression. c At the sittings. His Excellency was wearing full uniform of a Brit- ish Field Marshal, with the wings? of the Royal Canadian Air Force which he won during his term in this country, standing out sharply above the long rows of medals for gallantry, orders, and campaign iii- slgnla. The former Governor-Gem erai's left hand rests lightly near the buckle of his sam Browne beli Wonderful Experience "It was 9: wonderful experii-nce'. Mr. Rogers told The Guardian, "to talk with Earl Alexander and to paint him. He was most generous his knowledge.of Canadian and world affairs is amazing. He was kind enough to say he liked ;my portrait of him and as a fellow- painter. told me tliatt the main thing about a portrait was that it should loci: like the person it is sunposed to represent. "Lady Alexander sat for me too and I am Just completing that por- trait ncw. She is very charming and most helpful in aiding the painter to do the best work the can." Grandson of A former Lieuten- ant-Governor of Prince Edward Is- land. Mr. Rogers was born at Al- berton which he revisited in 1947 after a long absence. He plans to spend at least two months there and at other points in the Province this Summer. Attached To Alberton "You know," he said, "as a rule when a man revisits his home town after being away many years. it looks older and smaller to him. C(ccuitlEied'5rT Png'e'5'c6'if' :iT' Serioibroughr In Northern Australia DARWIN. Australia, April 6 -- (Reuters)-Ranchers in a vast area of Northern Australia are helplessly watching thousands of cattle die as unbroken drought continues to turn the area into a dust bowl. More than 300,000 head of cattle in the Kiniberlcys. the Gulf Country and Northwest and Southwest Qucenslii . are est- miles an hour hit the Washington scattered some 5.000 persons gath- ered to witness the first Der-'.orm- sunshine followed the storm and EARL ALE-XANDER THROUGH ISLAND ARTIST'S El-(ES. The National Gallery of Canada has just accepted this Oll painting of the immediate past Governor-General of Canada, work of Hubert Rogers, grandson of the late Hon. Benjamin Rogers, is former Lieutenant-Governor of Prince Edward Island. At present the portrait is in the office of H. O. McCurry, Director of the National Gallery .who is considering the most suitable place for it in the Gallery quarters. South African Colored Groups Plan Defiance; Police, Troops Stand By By Arthur Gavshon JOHANNESBURG. South Africa. April 6 -(AP)-- Leaders of South Africa's main non-white groups called today for tens of thousands of volunteers to join in a campaign of defiance against Prime Minister F.D.li.'s Famous Scoiiy islead W HYDE PARK, N.Y., April 8 - (AP)- Fala, the little black scotty Daniel F. Malan's "unjust race in s i th alsi f hls- law -' W 0 W n on e m M 0 Armed police and troops sicod tory, is dead. He was buried today in the fam- ous rose garden of Hyde Park, not far -from the resting place of the late 1-resident ilranklin D. Roose- velt, his master and constant com- pnnion for five years. John Roosevelt. the late Presl- dcnt's youngest son, said simply: "Fala slept sway today." The scotty. born April '7, 1940, died two days short of his 12th birthday. ' by in the country's major cities, where meetings were held to launch a unique national struggle. There had been widespread forc- casts earlier that clashes might take place between police and the demonstrators but these did not materialize. Reports from Capetown, Durban, Port Elizabeth and Johannesburg said the meetings were peaceful, with the thousands of non-whites attending acting with good discip- line and order. ' This day was chosen by leaders of Negro, Asiatic and colored (mixed blood) organizations" for the "Peo- plcls Protest Day" because it is the 300th anniversary of while settle- ment ln South Africa. These lead- erslhope the meetings will blossom into a full-scale passive resistance movement aimed at crushing the government's policy of apartheid WASHINGTON, April 8 --(AP) A freak squall with winds up to 62 area about noon Saturday. Rain ance of the water pageant of the Cherry-Blossom Festival. Bright imated to have per shed. OTTAWA. April 8 -(CP)- The government is trying to find out whether Canada could seize the. seven controversial Ming Sung, ships by force even if the chance presented itself. There is some doubt that she could legally grab them even if one or more of Canada's three destroy- ers in the Far East waylaid them on a dash from Canton along the Chinese coast to Shanghai. Reports out of Hon: Kong that that the seven ships, built. regis- tered and mortgaged in Canada. have been seized by the Chinese Reds and may make the 9&0-mile run to shanghai have prompted both parliamentary questions and government inqury in Ottawa. Al I time when Canada is an- xiously agslnst any step that might participate general war with Red China, she is not likely to send her destroyers into Chinese terri- torial waters to seize the ships. But some are of the opinion the ships would have to come outside the three-mile limit occasionally in such a voyage because of shoals allowed the pageant to be staged. Consider Seizing lMing Sung Ships By Force or race segregation. The government. under powers assumed two years ago, can jail any persons who organize passive resistance movements or siidown strikes, or urge social changes. There is some fear in south Africa that the campaign contains the seeds of real racial explosion. wrrrr-m---mm--m-w Non-whites outnumber whiies. if the destroyers could wsylay by 9500000 to 3500000 in scum them outside the three-mile limit ,,mc.'. A ' they would not be violating Chin- The A N,c. 3.14 10 win mnoun. ese waters. But there still is the C0 um. um date 10,. me 30,.” 05 q""”0" Whether 530550 WWW the projected civil-disobedience have the right to seize them even mo.-mem, there. The ships are the ones built in Quebec after the war and given permission to fly the cgnndiim flag in Oriental trade. Use of the Canadian flag was originally ex- plained as a step to prevent seiz- ure by the Reds. They fled to Red Chins late last year and stayed there after the first of 10 annual capital instal- ments on s 012,000.00) mortgage fell due and went unpaid by the Ming Bung firm which bought them. The money is owed to three can- adisn hanks but the Federal Gov- ernment stands to get stuck for the bill because it guarsntedd the mortgages. so far the one tangible slap tak- en to try to regain the ships "is action by the banks to arrange for the courts in non: Kong to "se- rest" them if they return to Hang N. sfiioy Killed In Rifle Practice EDMUNDSON. N. 3.. April 6 - lCPi-Rifle target practice brought death Saturday afternoon to Gilles Patron. 14, when he was shot in the head. The youth moved in front of a companion. Leopold Dugu. 16. as the latter fired at a ca . Perron and Dugas were on a hike with three other boys. The fsialliy occurred in a snow-ooven ed field near Ddmundston. ....A.....i.... MOSCOW, April 8 -(AP)- Moscow papers announced today nulls is going to build' for Poland a II to so-story "Palace of Culture and science." The soviet Govern- ment will pay the cost of construc- tion as is tribute -to mission-Polish i Allies Smash lied Attack TOKYO, April 'I-(Monday) -- (Reuters) - A pulverizlng United Nations artillery and mortar barrage Sunday smash- ed a fanatic. "death or glory" niiack of 1,000 Chinese troops on the Western Korean front. The enemy managed to breach U. N. barbed wire at one point, but then retreated with heavy lossse in dead and wounded. U. N. radio monitors heard Chinese commanders urging their men to move up through MONDAY, APRIL 7, 1952 CE POSSIBLE WITHIN MAXI MS OFA. MERE MAN I You may break Lent by looking at a pretty Miss. Morning lihily Founded 1881. The Guardian. Five Cents. MONTH Cargo Plane With Easter Concilialory Move Flowers Crashes Into 0" P"50lj(5 N.Y. Residential Area - By WILLIAM C. BARNARD TC" MUNSAN, Korea, April 1 3? 59”" 9”"l”" W l U I (Monday) -' (AP) - The Com- Gewge Mm” munlst radios today promi ed lm- v-Ew O ' 41 ,g g. muniiy to all prisoners rctuErned Dy;Ah1l0w n:in:l:,..:0pn piianelmlgzdwlln with Easter flowers. smashed into the Allies in an apparent concilia-i the heart of the residential tory gesture in connection with the long-siaiemated truce talks. borough of Queens Saturday! km. ing five persons and turning a A Pyongyang broadcast nearcl here was attributed to the "Korean b1ock.1ong suetch of homes mm peoples armed forces and the Chin- naming terror. 259 peoples volunteers. It was car- The twin-engine C-46 dived out 1"-ed m the Kmelm language sum of a heavy rain irlih a thunderous day night andgagaln to ay in Chin- expiospm, 59- by U18 P9113108 rad 0- It was the filth airplane ac- 16 PAGES Commun-is-is In April 6 -iAPl -- Government mediators met with lcompany and union officials in the steel and telephone industries .today in continuing moves to stave loff widespread strikes. A note of cautious optimism was sounded in the steel dispute with a government official guard- CHICAGO. the deadly Allied barrage of 10,000 mortar bombs and 8,000 heavy artillery shells. "Ignore the sh ell i n g,” screamed one Chinese officer into his radio set. "Advance and win medals." lledisiribuiion May Touch Oil ' Biiler Debate OTTAWA. April 6-(CF) -Re- distribution of representation in the Commons, always ll controver- sial lssue, may provide the basis for one of the most contentious debates of the current session. Western farmers, in particular. are aroused over the threatened loss of seals in their areas. A government move Friday to ease the blow to Saskatchewan was welcomed. but it did not remove all opposition. i Under the constitution. rep- resentation in the Commons must be revised every 10 years on the basis of the latest census. On the basis of the 1951 cen- sus and the redistribution form- uia in the British North America Act, Saskatchewan would lose five of its 20 seats and Manitoba would lose two of its 16 seats. Nova Scotia would lose one of 12 seats. British Columbia would gain four seats and Ontario and Quebec two each. Other provin- ces would remain unchanged. A bill providing for the changes was introduced in ihe Commons and given first reading March 10. Prime Minister St. Laurent sponsored the measure, but said that redistribtuion was a task imposed by the constitu- tion on Parliament and not on the government. Plans were made for establish- ment of an all-party committee to study redistribution. Report Queen Mary Recovering From chill IDNDON, April 6 --(Reuters)- Queen Mary today was reported to be improving from a slight chill she has suffered all week. Yesterday Queen Mary. 84. was mitzig tgfligcirfmrghorhitzhbeen work-,cici.s:ni of its kind in the metro- ne -8 arise SSU6 poiitaii area in less the fc r goiletlniled in rfgesf today. The sub- months and brought the totrzl-ii icilllmmin mm” C ga ES COHS Er ng TUCE Super--of dead to f 2 0 ' A vision scheduled a session at Pan- rrge ciosing p-mas Ill 5- Ullrd lndl-15il'l'. Wesltm mlmiom 35 11 A-M- (9 P--M- lb S-Tl Jusi as Edemaiids were made al'- Ema" reported R lmusdlmommg Slmdkyh ier three crash:s at Elizabeth. N lb:w.l!:.'ll3'll"”l: m?)VeLme"l;u ”lm”(;g The Pyonsyans broadcast aiupear- 1.. for the closing of Newark Air- 5 ” ""5 W” ”5- " ” ” ml 9” 7, ed to be an effort to sound out the port, civic groups Saturday called erBCa1-led .meF5";,te.m1em 9' ulm.'gh'c Allies on an indirect compromise oi for the rlosing of nearbx Inter- '3” am." ' Mr 955' 9"” 9” one of three key issues biockin nnlnaiionai (Idiewild) n l. r- M the Umled smtes steel C”l”" lz , a d la Gua . . armistice - voluntary rt-patriaiionlrlia Fields. Planes from both must aLm'l' mmghi.appea1ed W "m0" of prisoners. fly over Queens. huge residential presldcm Phil") Mum” '” W” off the threatened country-wide borough of New York City. Newark . Airport has been closed since the ffieggt smke' 5” lot Tuesday mm' liast Elizabeth crash Feb. 11. TOKYO, April 6 - (AP) -- The Saturday's accident occurred at off-record negotiations on prisoner 8:25.21. hi. EST as the cargo plane exchange at Panmunjom produced was attempting to land at lnter- a formula which may lead to ag- national Airport. reement on a Korean truce within The plane tore through a two- edly rcporting "gradual progress" in understanding between the op- Agreemcnt Possible Largest Tanker Hos Completed Trials the month, storey home and split apart. ' United Nations observers who.B1azlIllZ fragments hurtled into GLA5G0w- AW” 5”(Re"':".” have viewed the talks with cauiion'three other housss. ET” lag-ie5i.ll”"k9' Y” -1”" from the start now say an end One wing slapped R cruising l E W” 5 m canymg ee 5" the 31,7-i5-ton, World Unity-went lnio service in the Clyde today on completltion of her trials. The tanker was handed over by the builders, Vickers-Armstrongs Lim- ited, lo hcr owners. World Tank: ers Corporation of Liberia. ' could come with startling sudden- ness. 0 - Gen. Matthew Ridgway and most: The Plane. trying in recover of his higher lieutenants are tax- from a landing attempt at Inter- ing the agmudg, --we-n believe 1;, national Airport, thundered low when we see my over a half-mile stretch of build- But others whose opinion must 11185. then Crashed in Jamaica. be reckoned wiin are showing real "A great ball of whlrlins flame optimism for the first time. l-surrounded the plane as it came us down." said William Boyle. an ipolice car, killing a police inspeci- 01' zflie SiMei.e UN is An. Piltd-if il'-' You Dowf i-imli: rfo l-NE if! lC9mlm"5d 9” P339 5 CPL 2) ieyewitness. "Its wing fell off be- -m- fore it struck." c i Leap From Window; Many leaped from windows, as - gasoline-fr.-cl flames and clouds of S T e d smoke rose over the block. Hos- p u S pitnls counted six seriously injur- 00 ed. Dozens of others were treated. . 0 At least 10 cars were wrecked Ca(l)1:'ClIl2fll,:A, iviliprlile stold lfguiisdavion me me" 9” i" 3" ”d5””"l how much the Federal Government parkmg lot A truck blew uni plans to take from them in taxes Fm” homes were de5lmyed' during the 1952-53 fiscal year, n The p1a"e.ml55ed "".”p”t'mmt year when expenditures will set a ho”-Se oc-cupled by 2"” p"3Om' peacetime record. Police said if it had hit 100 feet As is customary, the speech and 3:9? 1:,hfhede;,::drt:;g would have its contents will r ma n or t - ' e ' til read to the COfTlll'ld)nS.seH:Well1:X'. S35” plan-6' owned. by Uniled both Mr. Abott and Prime Minisw 8 es A r1mes' had med. ” ”"”l St. Laurent has given advance In the airport on Queens south warnings that Canadians should edge.bm' Overs-hot mm mm expect no "substantial" tax 'reduc- ,,,Q,”,E2”,,f"gf,lf,f s,:,l,.d gt magwbigi lt'ie?:l:l: iargnigt the world situation D11-::;,r:,r:'et::e,; nvswung low and Tomorrow. in a departure from D OML HALIFAX, April 8-(CP)-Offld clal forecasts issued tonight the Dominion Public Weaiher Of- 5?. aiiiatoglgfyinrpgedgre. Mr. hAbboit N I B . f I e n e ommons is an- ice here and valid until mid- nual white paper containing an n night Mgndgy, economic review of the last fiscal -.... Synopsis: "There are patches of fog over year. Ordinarily the white paper is the Southern Marltimes innighl. tabled during his budget speech. LONDON. April 6-(Reutei-si- Mr. Abbott told newspaper men Admlml 5”" ,A”huY DH”. 77. In Northern New Brunswick and that by making the review avail- fmim” Cllmal" Oi, 3- M- 0- 5- Eastern Quebec drizzle and snow able a day in advance of the bud- B”mm5h3m- We m'5t END Y-0 are being reported. sink a German submarine in the First World War, died Saturday. Moist air from ih Atlantic is expected to keep 0 flowing into the northern regions. but as ii: gels a. little milder the snow is npi: in change to rain and drizzle get. he would be able to condense 'the economic portion of his nudge: speech. The early tabling also would facilitate the work of newspapers BURY S1 EDMUNDS' s5”' folk, England, April 6-(API- (By Thomas 1'. Whitney) MOSCOW. April 6-(AP)'In- dials ambassador in Moscow sold today he is convinced after a half-hour talk Saturday night with Prime Minisicr Stalin that "every effort should he made in get the top people together" to iry to settle the problems divid- ing the world. His conviction that now is the time for such a mceii1ig--pre- sumably among Stalin, Prime Minister Churchill, President Tru- man and Prime Minister Nehru of Indln-is thought here to be extremely indicative of the ex- tent of his interview with the Soviet leader, and is believed to be a significant development. It was said at ihe lndian Em- bassy that the Ambassador hnd in "very frank discussion" with Stalin "on many of the issues new agitating the world." The envoy, Sir Sarvapalll Rad- hakrishnan, was pnylng a fare- well call on Stalin before leaving for home April 8 to become In- dia's vice-president. Also present during the conversation at the Kremlin were Foreign Minister Andrei Vlshinsky, who had ar- ranged the interview: Y. D. Gun- devla, minister counsellor of the Indian Embassy, and Vladimir Pavlov, Soviet Foreign Office of- ficial who acted as interpreter. On the basis of his interview. minlsirr in England nnci Wales, diorl today. lie gave up an engin- ccriiig posting to enter the minis- try in 1878. Two years later he be- came one of the first Methodist niiiiisicrs to serve in South China. visited by three doctors including in handling the budget and the . - , , V . g an ear, nose and throat specialst. economic review. ' g',),l,11r,;m'3'll8,-:,',1083'se;:f'e'f,l335 lirrlrs: M0:ld;'ill'-i lVt;ShtErl3fO minds arr: bassudm m Bram Md Jalmm wilh odlcasldjnalenslunshiliie. N 1 T 1 1 dgccll Satilrday: He reiircrl in 1.-m.,,m5,5. ew Op” allot 35 5”” in the Fmclg” Prince Edward Island: Variable . we" cloudiness. Mild. Light south- mi. winds. Low early Moncinv Ilalks Mad B I (1 wow. ---n s .. e y n George Morris, 98, oldest txictliodistpCha,1oHe,m,.n 35 and 44. which could not he discussion and ncgoiiaiion. . "it would be unwise in hung the door against every npproacli and give up the task as impos- High tide today at Charlotien town at 9.10 A. M. and 9.02 P. M. High tide on the North shore at 4.17 A. M. and 4.16 P. M. Sun rises today at 5.43 A. M. and '"sTiiie&i7(-iii. , siblc. No effort is wnsicd and .... mm at 5.43 P. M, every effort should he made in NEW YORK. April 6-(AP.i- gel. the top people together." Police seized sl00,000 worth of M0,; Aug smrvrcg Radhakrishnan had suggested pure heroin in a dresser drawer pgmy Excgpvr SUNDAI - in a Harlem apartment Saturday and arrested a man and a pretty woman on narcotics charges. Poi- ice identified them as Joseph Sierra. 23. and Irma Malos. 19. Saturday's visit when he went to talk to Vishinsky. l-le snld ihc Soviet. Prime Minister looked "as usual" and was in "a good hum- or." Senator Declares US Now Building Hydrogen Bomb Leave Charlottetown for Mancini) 5:30 A.M.; 11:20 A.M.; 4:50 l'.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Mom-toil 1:25 A.M.: 1:35 l'.M.; 6:35 l'.M. , Leave Charlottetown for t New Glasgow-Halifax 7:40 AM. New Glasgow 1:50 P.M. New Glasgow 6; Ilallfai Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 AM. from New Glasgow 4:35 PM. from New Glasgow and g g, g.” g Halifax. WASHINGTON. April 6-(Ar) interview with the Gannett News MONDAY. WEl3l:FtS;JAY. FRIDAY - Chairman Brien McMahon Service what can be done to avert . (Dem.-Conn.) of the Senate- a war with Russia. He replied 9:10 AM Arrive Sydney from ' House of Representatives atomic ”We must continue to build up New Glasgow 1 10:25 AM. Arrive New GlllIOW- from Sydney. I SUNDAY ONLY V Leave Charlottetown for Monctoi said tonight our influence and our strength." hydrogen bomb and added: "I do not retreat from what I said in February. 1950, when we energy committee thst "building a . . . is under way at the prescrt time" by the United States. The Senator made the staie- talked about building is hydrogen 11,20 AIM; ment in is radio interview. He bomb, which is under way at the Amnchnouemwn "om Momm- did not make it clear whether present time. 5:55 . "I pointed out that armaments 1. That scientists still are woik- were no substitute for disarma- lng toward finding out whether merit because eventually arm- such a super weapon an be built. maments and armament races 2. Or. on the other hand. that lead to conflict. so what we have he meant: jug IOBDEN - CAPE TORMINTINI FERRY SERVICE Daily (Including Sunday) mrdhakrilhnsn said: Kong. The prospects of such a step friendship. The building will lower and it would be fairly easy to plot just where those appearances would occur. are not bright. over others in Warsaw. g .--.--....-...... ” "'rhe're is no outstanding prob- lem new dividing the ' world lect the study stage has been complct-- got to do is bring about disarin- U3" 30"!” MI". 0- '5 ed and actual construction of an ament." 9210 AM. 10:58 AM- H-bomb has started. McMahon said "We have made 1:00 PM. 2:10 P-M. . McMahon brought up the sub- great progress and strides in 4:30 PM. 0:00 PM; f , developmeir " 7:30 PM. 0:00 P.M., when he was asked in an (atomic) .