14 PAGE Concluded Before Commission Set'eIlhllVlll1ellQoI; lt.l.s;ree Muglm unto 8 DP?" 9'” El potato shlppnrs- appeared be- W, the Board of Transport. Com- lnissinners hero Yilllrdlvnll "13 two day hearing of the Inlport Board was concluded. Among those who appeared yea- terd.-iy were lion. Eugene Cullen. Minister of AK1'l9l1ll3"1'9- (-,,.,.i.am Rogers. Director of -1-.-mspnrtatlon for P. -E. 1.: Earl Kennedy of the Department of lliunways: Charles L. McCoy. As- slslzlnt General Freight Traffic n1.-inager of the C.N.R., Ind tato dealers E. D. Reid, W. L. T OM9- E- '"- ”"'".:'?”li. -.':n: ifll')',-ir9Bll.Il'EF of the CU Ltd. The Board concluded its hear- in: about three o'clock in the If- im-nnnn. The subject under con- slflflrflllnn was an application from tho (1N.R. to abolish most of its pa.-'s('nEel' train service in thg PI'tlVlnCE during an eight months pi-rnirl and maintain a trl-weekly (rt-unlit service with additional llN'llll5 when required. with the exception of Mr. Mc- Coy all witnesses yesterday were called in by Government counsel. Mr. J. 0. C. Campbell. QC. Mr- Mccny was a railway witness. A judgment on the merits of tho C.N,R. application and the arguments against it will not be handed down until some future date. HON. MB. GUI-LEN p linn. Eugene Cullen. Minister of Agriculture, stated that he did not C oming Events "Your Saturday night Jamboree ..I'omm. ' "Remember Ise Orange Tea. Orapaud. Jul? 1391- "Dance. Travellers Rest Country oiub Thursday. Jackie Doyle. "Regular Dance at Emerald ball every Friday night. ”l.obat supper. loly Name liall, St. eter's Day. Wednesday June N. "Dance at Rustlco C r o I I Icluiol June 23rd. Doiron'I or- clients. "Special meeting. A-begwelt R.B.P. Kingston. Friday night. I o'clock with 4th deuce. "Dance in Gowan Iran School. l'r-riay. June 34th. Lunches. Chais- son'i Music. "Dance Mount Itcwart MI- mnrinl Kill. Friday. .1111! 01'- chvstra. "Dance in Inrdross Ichool. M1 Monday. June Ius-nu-'s Orrliestrg. "Regular dance Friday ainst. Braver Club hall. Montana. All BlanclsIrd's orchestra. "Lobster supper. lob Name Hall, st. Peter's Day, Wednesdw June H. ” "See Cardigan Players it did: 3-ncl comedy It Cardigan hall. gt-iday. L-lune Id. Oin-tala mo. nnco. "Stock-Car Dnnol. Cavehead Raceway. Tuesday,' June 1th. Everybody welcome. I cents pea- pilrsoll. trRcgular Dance Monday night. Charlottetown Forum. Rollie Mc- ltenzlc'l Orchestra. Dancing 0.!) to 12.30. Admission Itnenll. ltvonlng dance Mathew ni:icLeIn's warehouse, lourls, iii-ilnesday. June will. Canteen. Sponsored by Jlmilw HOIMMI AH. "Cornwall present "The Ilsb Millionaire", Pownsl lall, Tua- dal. June 1. Sponsored by Me. llerhedt Ladies Md. ”ComI to big Issuing dance at iioreli Rear be , Wednenihy. June 301. Good Eli. Ihutees of Mtvrell Eali. ,"Weekbv dance. Wiaaloe Ita- llnn hall. Friday, June Iitfl. Rol- lie .vlncKenzie's Orchestra. Can- teen. Dancing 0:!) N 11:!) Day- llaht Time. s”lI stock. all Hnds Potato gl""l'l- Fly Iprayi Cobalt Lick - Ill. lierbate 8-4-D. lain- gggl ftirawbern Iona. Dillon & 0 . It as V p ...i"lnnni.fl:t:'.' um Pl" in Boiuhaw Iall. ICC :-,f'l,v- nu. Ii-ouius is "Ruins: rfllng Jug. . Mum. -Maxims of a More Man Thetengusenntlensorsknoh iIn&eIee&InnIntle , Messrs. B. d Ina'”' Railway Application Hearing r'egard the proposed schedule as an mltted yesterday by the rail- way as an adequate pan to care for the needs of the prim Provin were something on which prim- I&l-producera .could depend. - . Cullen also stated that the counsel for the C.N.R., Mr. Gra- ham Macbougnli. had brougit it out very clear in his quea nlng that anything less than I daily service in the Province would be inadequate. He suggested that if the present service were reduced the purpose for which the C.N.R. sought the reduction in service would be de- feated. ''I don't think there is any doubt but that other trans- portation servicea will take over the transportation of these pro- ducts." he stated. In his opening remarks Mr. Cul- len pointed out that under the terms of Confederation the C.N.R. had a moral obligation to maintain I daily train service between Tig- nlsh and Charlottetown. In connection with the potato business Mr. Cullen stated that Island dealers had plenty of com- petition from dealers in New Brunswick and Maine at the pre- sent time due to the tter's pre- ferred position re frelgh '-services. He thought that I trl-weekly freight service on the Island would strengthen the hand of outside it-u I great deal more. Under cross-examination from Mr. MacDougall- Mr. Cullen stat- ed he took Mr. Hayes' statement very lightly about the Island get- ting I better freight service if the application were granted. EXTRA TRAINS . Mr. Charles L. McCoy stated he had worked with the railway for the past 40 years in various capacities but chiefly in the en- gineering and freight departments. He stated that he looked on ex- tra trains very favorably from I 2-ieitghlltttraflflic J-talndpoint and ldd; a ex I III deal of the total freci-glillll I n" Under exnmlnatl by Mr. Mae- Dougall he stated that the C.N.R. vice under the pro d schedule changes and he d not think the railway would suffer any large loss in business to competitors. Mr. McCoy added that the rail- way likes to consider it can clian e its operations as than can tions change and maintain its dpositlon in the transportation fiel . Mr. J. O. C. Campbell stated that the rIilway'a application was built up around the Issum tics of ration between a rail- WIY In shippers and that such cooperation was not always forth- coming. He asked Mr. McCoy if he would venture an opinion about what might happen Mr. E. D. Reid's potato on It Baltic as I result of disclosures during the hearing. (Earlier in the day Mr. Reid had stated he was loading I car of Continued on page 18 col. 1 N"'1'l0I:ul;'r0lIklnI iai-ouui I aim- Woekuwwlsu Jdal seamen I strike at They were the Cunard linar Caro- .-.eiii.'.'”i'i'i.1'il'i. 'il'.'3. '."' ”:i"i.”.'l' lug. siiak tons. ' "' ' e Itr on Wednesday I: lit continued efforts to tie up the b g. Oil Prize of all-CunIrd'I giant een Elizabeth. The world's lar- Ill Dluenger liner is due to lonvn llllllmpion tod for New York. Meanwhile. Er taxis. pg;-.11.; GLASGOW (Reuters)-The can Wednesday IWI-llll I DCl'lD::Id champagne bottle again: in gleaming white bow of tbg,914,. 000.000 Canadian Pacifnc luxury liner Empress of smoothly into the River Clyde. The M0-fool. Em-in stream- could give good and adequnte ser- Th Two Liners'Sail From U.K. IOUTKAMPTON (Reuters)-'!Vo dock strike, now I transatlantic liners weighed nacho: flared into a quarrel wgdnuagy .54 mm gm. Norm strikers themselves. with Dick Bar. Queen Launches L640-Foot Liner Empress Of Britain Britain. and of seconds later the ship slithered can liner lnts position. and u..-, mm s. 3... .3. Iowa use sasssivcans If than l0.M0 tators If W III. A echoed ovn the gal:-"deciied ICNH..h'1.I.'.'.n mm” mm . sun slnnnn-I s-as-In A 4? WNi CANADA. THURSDAY. JUNE 23, 1955 FFIRSTTRANS-ATLANTIC TEL so -A mid-afternoon fire yesterday destroyed the two-storey frame home of Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Walsh. 65 St. Lawrence Street in Summerside and all its t but fortunately two of their six small children who were asleep in the house at the time of the outbreak were rescued by their mother. Mr. Walsh was It work and Mrs. Walsh was visiting next door.. with her mother. Leonard Clow. when the fire was first noticed. Mrs. Walsh rushed home and realizing the blaze had gained conslderaulu headway, ran child who was asleep on I cot downstairs and carried them to safety. Two neighborhood children, who had been playing in the kitchen. were also led to safety y Mrs. Walsh. ' 39 this oriillnated in I clothes closet be- hind the kitchen stove about 2:30 lI.m. It isn't known, however. If It was lsnlted by a spark from the stove or whether the children were playing with matches and Iccldenllv touched off the blaze. Although the flames spread quickly. firemen had the blaze under control shortly after ar- rlving on the scene. thus prevent- ing it from spreading to any of month old, among the nth general secretary of the strik- ing stevedores' union resigning. He bends the faction which wants to did the strike-I move opposed in moat of the six ports affected. The seamen's strike. I blow to Britain's tourist industry at the height of the season. was called by the sailors to enforce demands for more pay and improved work- conditions. f the crew of the 83.76! - fan can Elizabeth decides to ignore strike. its prospects of ending soon will be helgbtend. mu lullh - the Empress Ill d dlllllollally into the watar.ppAel- I100! ll DIM. line-carrying rnck- whole left arm ,and shoulder were etc were fired over its white bull to secure it within half I minute entering the river. and In as- I tugs found to bring the . than Prince After the lhnlchlrlg the Queen Id the duke left by train Icmss III! E Ieetland R 'siMoll1erRsues iclcli Mrs.- the numerous houses and nut- buiidings located nearby. The dwelling was partially covered by insurance. Salaries, Pari OTTAWA (CP)-A Liberal back- bencher Wednesday added his voice to CCF and Social Credit criticls o fa government proposal to give Except for raises to county court Judges. said J. L. Macdougall, (1.- Vancouver Burrard). an increase is not needed to attract suitable can- didates to the bench. lawyers Mr. Macdougall re- ferred to. . NARROW THE GAP Judges have to deal with compe- tent. adrolt lawyers, Mr. Garson said. if Canada had a weak judi- ciary and I strong. able force of lawyers- it could result in bad ad- ministration of justice. The government could not justify paying judges' salaries equal to the substantial incomes available to many lawyers. But it had to nar- row the gap to obtain good jurists for the bench. ., Crlllcs of the proposed salary scales should realize that judges have the responsibility of protect- ing freedom and standing against government power if necessary." Mr. Macdougall, defending his stand following Mr. G a r s o n's speech. said good judges are not Girl A Killed By Lightning HUNTSVILLE Ont. (CF) - A high school student sitting in the boss' chair on the second day of her summer job was struck dead by I lighting bolt Tuesday. The bolt travelled down I chimney and along I telephone to shatter the phone she was holding. lFellow employees snatched Bev- erley Reeds. 17. from the burn- in: chair and carried her out of the wrecked. smoke-filled wood pro- ducts nffice in her home village of Kearney. Cecil Smith. 07. film manager. badly burned. said he got up to sandpaper I new deck being made for Eeverley while she sat in his place when the bolt split I tree outside and crashed into the room. "Beverley was wearing blue jeans and they just burst into names. We beat out the flames and tried to revive her. but there s From,Burning Home Mr. Walsh is an employee of the Summerslde Light and Power Department. -(Photo by Wotton) House Debates Judges' -Mutuel Betting At Quiet Session found only among top-flight. lgw. yers. He said he knows of no case I Jlldlclll lppflllllmeni. SECOND RMDING bill was given second readlng.-ap- Dmilll in princlvlo.--and . .'ved clause-by-clause approval. If op- ents did not force I vote and t now needs only the formal final reading to be paued. The Commons passed another bill under which federal supervi- sion of horse races where pIrl-mu- tuel bettlnga is carried on will be financed by I levy of one-half of one per cent of total wagers. At present, race tracks are charged an average of :27 I day for sub su ervlslng RCMP constable. he House 'Ilsn approved In principle of I bill to give rail- ways greater freedom in setting agreed charge freight rates. It was referred to a committee where rep- resentations of outside groups will be heard. Agreed charges are special low their traffic. MONTREAL (CPI - A United States scientist said Tuesday the atomic-powered railroad . locomot-' lve is "still many years away." W. H. Keller of Washington. ex- ecutivn vice-chairman and director of research for the American As- sociation of Railroads. said eco- nomics is one of the many rob- lems facing construction In Ito ' -powered locomotive. He told the ARR'I annual meet- ing of mechanical and electrical divisions the coat of atomic fuel is not known and I low-cost fuel would be needed to balance the higher cost of present-day meth- ods. I-lighor cost per horsepower would result becaus of complica- tlons involved in construction. Ali'- other drlwback was the possible hazard in case of accident. Mr. Keller said only the moat elementary research has been done on an atomic-powered locomotive. K. H. Gordon of Philadelphia. vice-chairman of the associations electrical section. said "old king coal" wiu continue his. rain as I fuel in iadusky for many years. He said advances have been was no hope. She warvery badly burned." Id In of ll 1! info ”.i'f.ni.2i '......" ".'i.'." & Coalition Gov't Resigns in the last 30 years when the just- ice minister had to break any law- yer's arm to get him to accept The government's pay lnci-nu contract rates given shippers in Killed In MONTREAL (CP)-Two men were fatally injured Wednesday when I CF-100 jet fighter from the RCA! base at nearby st. Hubert made I crash landing on an emergency field at La Tuque. Que., 120 air miles northeast of Montreal. F0. J. M. Arsenautl. 27. of Rich- mond, P.E.l., navigator of the plane, was killed in the crash. Sqdn. Ldr. G. J. Zaleschuk. who lived in the married quarters at St. Hubert, died in hospital a few hours after the accident. He slit- fercd multiple fractures and shock. The plane, on a routine flight. reported one engine on fire before attempting to land at the emer- Robert Watson, chairman of the Canadian Freight Association, now in annual session at the Charlottetown Hotel was present.- ed with the Key to the City by His Worship, Mayor J. D. Stewart at a reception last evening. Ap- proximately 40 members of the organization, accompanied by their wives were in attendance along with local invited guests. among whom were His Honour Lleut. Governor T. W. L. Prnwse and Mrs. Prowse and Mayor J. D. Stewart and Mrs. Stewart. At the afternoon session of the Association. Mr. Watson occupied the chair and gave leadership in discussions dealing with various freight rate matters. The organ- isation meets monthly in various parts of Canada and frequently in the U. S. A. Once I year during the summer I series of meetings is held such as are now being held here to which the members lring their wives. In addition to chairman Watson many lnanobea of the freight ser- vices were represented by offl- cials in attendance including: G"eorge'I)ouglIs, General Freight Infant Brothers Die In Blaze BRUCY. Que. (C?)-Two infant brothers died Wednesday when fire swept through three homes in this community 3) miles west of Mont- real. The children. 15-month-old Pierre Smythe and his 10-day-old brother. Robert. were trapped in their beds when their mother went to I neigh- bor's house to borrow I fuse after the lights failed. Police said the mother. Mrs. Daniel Smythe. found thick smoke pouring from her two-storey home when she returned and was unable to enter. Two adjoining homes return for I guaranteed portion of were also destroyed. Believes Atom-Powered Locomotive Years Away coal will continue I basic fuel. Use of oil and gas in generating elec- tricity "will start to decline long before the use of coal reaches its ilk... The electrical utility industry doubles its growth every decade. Inid Mr. Gordon, and thus the prospect for growth and develop- ment of the coal industry seems "very good." D. S. Neuhart of the Union Pac- ific Railroad. Omaha. Neb.. said he doesn't think other forms of transportation can do I better job at less cost than railroads. He said standardization of equip- mant Ind procedure are necessary. Railroads must continue toward providing "better transportation at In cost." Owen Clarke of the U.8. inter- Ilala commerce commission said railroads must try to parallel high- way transportation in speed. prompt delivery and dependability. I-II said railroad transporta- lion "now is living in I feroc- busly - competitive euvlionment." II which other industries grow and prosper through conforming to realities. Railroads must do the same. P. E. I. Airman Crash gency field. The plane exploded on touching the ground. PM J. A. Arsenault was born at Richmond. R. R. (St. 1-lubertsl P.E.I. and was I son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Arsenault of that place. He is survived by one sis- lter, Louise. at home and five lbrothers. Alyre. Chelsea. Mass, Ernest at home: Raymond, Ed- mund and Alcide in the armed services. He was to have been married this month to Miss Terry Gallant, daughter of Mrs. Alvina Gallant, of Montreal, formerly of Duvar. P.E.l. Canadian Freight Ass'n Meeting. In Charlottetown Agent, C.N.R., Montreal; R. J. MacDougall, Assistant General Freight Agent. Toronto; R. Pirrie, General Freight Agent, Montreal: C. L. McCovy. Assistant General Freight, Traffic Manager, Mont- real: W. Jamleson, Freight, Traf- fic Manager, C.P.R., Montreal; E. W. Drewe, General Freight Continued in page 2 col. 5 TEST RUNWAY BARRIERS OTTAWA (CPI-The RCAF next month will deliberately crash I CF-100 jet, fighter into I barrier at Uplands airfield here. The ob- ject, the air force said Wednesday, is to test runway barriers. an ac- cident prevention device. The bar- riers are similar to those used on aircraft carriers to halt I plane if it misses the arresting cables on the flight deck when landing. Sign Dec MOSCOW (Reuters)-Russia and India have signed I joint declara- tion of principles concluding Prime Minister Nehru's l5 - day visit to the Soviet Union. Nehru and Soviet Premier Niko- lal Bulganin signed the declaration in I three-minute ceremony Wed- nesday in one of the Czar's old- time reception rooms at the Krem- lln. Among those looking on were party chief Nikita Khrushchev and Defence Minister Georgi Zhukov. Terms of the joint declaration were not disclosed. A Soviet spokes- man announced the text of the declaration will be withheld until it is published It 6 am. today (12 pm. ADT) by Russian and Indian newspapers. It was generally believed, even before publication of the declara- tlon. that it would reflect the strong stand of Nehru and Bulganin for peaceful coexistence and disarma- ment. HOLD RECEPTION At I reception Wednesday night the Soviet leaders were smiling and in high spirits. Out of deference to teetotaling Nehru. grape juice and tomato juice were served in place of the usual vodka and cognac. Western reporters joshed with GLASGOW (AP) - The Duke of Edinburgh gave his wife I fright Wednesday as his helicopter "van- ished" for 20 minutes over the Scot- tish hills. The helicopter, taking the duke to I rendezvous with the Queen aboard the ro Il train, was forced out of the I lea by heavy mist and rain. It landed safely on I muddy football field It the mining town of Bathgate. - Thirty miles away. In the out- skirts Glasgow. the Queen waited anxiously. Twice she came to the train doorway and peered worrledly into the dark grey skies. Grave Political Crisis Faces Italy It PATRICK cnosan ROME (Reuttsl-Italy's long- shaky coalition government re- Illlvd WIGICMIIV. plunging the nation into its graveit political crisis since the wIr. . The-government. led by tough orrawa (3)-tn sgaicim -Ihflrlo Sccibl. howl: nafsn Iv cosnmnsrl cIIIdI'I new pig "LIcambe." party was split over lcolbrs There was llbllation Wehssday other the Alberta anparlmeateilesdarabip. Imltlntke Iflecsn. statiaawbanttwasdsnsupea. sssllisasl-suits-easryeawitaniuabisaaqnaeo-I'aIIbtI.nq Prsnaslti-IfIanIwcInId:IlIeebtnI't'.:IeIretIh5gwv-Issgsgmg ggggqghgs been I waits Ir-seat. President lovII- navspuuu-ragga. d& u.I'g:.iaa.I.'IIt0ronehltIcIiastIojis'bI(nad-i'l'o'i.it:es Ry " sasbntlisthsn. Mummy-Hr; with it cabinet seals. the Social lat II eldctlon might break up Democrats and the Liberals, with he balance created by the voting four seats each -- spoils the doom is III. when the Christian DImo- of the pro-Weston coalition set lflfl. plus coalition partners. was up seven years age h the late less than half the nation's vote. In any case. the Italian consti- Alclde de Gasperl. Fall of the Scelbn government Cation obliges aroachi to exhaust follows I despea-III three-month all peaalbilitlu before agreeing to fight by the premier to keep the new elections before the next I6-month coalition alive. adfll ' ' PIG-WISTIRN COALITION scheduled for Tuesday be fried to heal the Hit tbechrtstianbevnocr in at rIIkI'by I cabinet makeup. list this move failed when the party's Observer! feel he collapse If executive turned down his pm- the pvsrnniut - which com-posedliatofminlsters. Covers Prince Edward lslancl Like The Dow EPHONE OABL AKESINTOOOEAN AFTER CEREMONAIE Iy ITIWART MIILIOD (Canadian Press Staff Writer) . CLARENVILLE, Nfld. (CP) -- The first trons-Atlantis cabin snnltnel not on ocean floor Wednesday, launched with the blessings of three countries amid colorful ceremonies. As the eubleshlp Monarch sliced into the stream on the first lap of the 340,000,000 project, a series of speeches do- serlbad the event as I historic milestone and another example of so-operative accomplishments of free nations. Before the and of 1956, if all goes as planned, two cables with 36 voice circuits will span Under I scorching sun officials of Canadian Overseas Telecommu- nications. American Telephone and Telegraph Company, and the Brit- ish post office. saw their joint pro- jeci duly launched from the island that made similar history twice before. OBSERVES FORMALITY As I formality, I). F. Bowie- piesident of COTC. smashed over I bottle containing water from Heart's Content, the spot where the first successful telegraph cable was landed in 1866. Beside Mr Bowie was C. P. Eddards, retired deputy minister of transport who charged Mar- coni's batteries for the receiving of the first trans-Atlantic wireless message in St. John” 5 in 1901. For the town of Clarenville this was the biggest day in its history. By civic proclamation it was declared I holiday so, that 1,200 citizens could gather around the new white terminus building to see modern history made. Flags of Canada, the United States and Great Britain fluttered in I light breeze as speakers lauded the enterprise and coopera- tion of the three companies and reviewed the historical significance of Newfoundland. PIONEER ENTERPRISE W. A. Wolverson. external tele- communications We of the British post office. descri the project as I challenging and pioneering enterprise. Lieutenant-Governor Outcrbridge .said that because of Newfound- Russia, India to ltoyan, I keen advocate of his as- tlve Armenian brandy. for drink- ing non-alcoholic beverages. He re- plied wltii a grin: "But there is nothing else." Lazar Kaganovich deputy pre- mier responsible for industry, quip- ped tn the reporters: "For the sake of peace. he is prepared to drink tomato juice." Bulganin joined United States charge d'affalres Walter WIlms- ley. British ambassador Sir Wil- liam Hayter and French ambas- sador Louis Joxa in drinking I toast to "the 10th anniversary of the United Nations and the next 10 years of it." Nehru is now uheduled to visit Belgrade. Vienna and Rome after- Warsaw. FEARED RIDICULI TORONTO (CPl4uburban East York police said a young motor- cyclist who decided not to wear his new crash helmet for fear his friends would laugh died Wednes- day when his machlne collided with I car. They said Paul George Mc- Gregor. I9. was thrown 12 feet through the air by the impact and landed on his head. If he'd worn Soviet deputy premier Anastaa Ml- Duke's Helicopter Makes Forced Landing Safely the helmet he might have lived, officers aald. shielding her eyes with her hand. Then she looked across the plat- fnrm to where the local station master"; wife was stIndlng- and smiled, all if to ssw know what these husbands " QUEEN ANXIOUO Anxlnus officials scurried around the train as the minutes ticked by and the duke still did not show u . Then I police call reported: " e is safe. The duke is continuing his journey by car." The Queen then ordered the train to proceed to Glasgow to meet the duke there. The dukels helicopter. with I veteran RAF pilot at the controls. took from the Earl of Rose- bIry' late. where he had been spend I few da . to meet the royal train at U lngston. on the nut skirts of Glasgow, 40 muss IWIY. Half way then. he weather aud- denly changed and the duke gave the order to return to Edinburgh But before an belleopfar bed mi veiled men than I few miles. the pilot decided to land. DIOVI N GLASGOW The sun waved It local house- wives who came out to see the air"- craft land and later clambnred into I hired ear. with I local councillor at the wheel, to drive to Glasgow. The Open had nearly finished bsrm.ton.r”IfhIhlracIlc:Ir-pstfactlsry W IfHVId.bQmh& cheyihishedtbstanr Indwentontotle dach- where the Queen launched the 24.- 000-ton liner Empress If Canada. the Atlantic. land's history this was I "singu- larly appropriate” scene for the launching of the cable. Immigration Minister Plckersgill described Newfoundland Is the focal point of this continent. And W. G. 'I'hompson. president of the Eastern Telephone and Tel- egraph oompany. subsidiary of the American company. further des- cribed thls island as "the bridge of understanding between the new and old worlds." , NOTCH CABLE The two-'inch cable. which de- creases to We inches away from share, was notched in the speakers stand, I few yards away from the 18-inch reinforced concrete walls of the new bomb-proof terminus building. On grassy slopes around the area- hundreds of people cheered and clapped as Mr. Bowie cracked the bottle over the cable to offi- cially send the Monarch down the blue waters of the'Northwest arrn. where it will ply across Trinity bay and out into the open Atlantic. The ship will lay 200 miles of cable before going to Scotland for another load. The first cable is expected to be laid by this fall with the second going down next summer. A few months later the connection will be completed with cables across the Cabot strait to Cape Breton island. Ontario Forest Fire Situation Sold Improved TORONTO (CPI - The Ontario department of lands and forests said late-Wednesday the forest fire hazard throughout the province has "minimized somewhat' Inez: in the Sault Ste. Marie- 0It.. ap- leau and Sudbury areas. Scattered showers across the province helped although 70 fires. ranging in size from 40 acres to one tree. were started by lightn- ing Tuesday and early Wednes- day. About Ill fires In burning. the department Iald. or two f.vii.s film: ill: Oi! use l..tKEl.Y 1'0 TORONTO (CPI -Minimum and maximum temperatures: Mia Max. Dawson .. Vancouver Victoria Edmonton Calgary Regina Winnipeg Toronto Ottawa ontreai EESSBSSCESSSGZREES SUSBEZSGISIIESEBESC Yarmouth St. John's HALIFAX (CF)-The Dominion weather office here says somewhlt drier air is led to flow ill” the district I1. sunshine to all re s. New Brunswick wl