MERE MAN laawieot. Paticnce is bitter. but lb fruit 3; Carrier: Charlottetown. lnnnaraida 010.00 par annual. llaevblo in l'.l.l. 89.00. Othar Provilleea and U.l.A. 12.00 per annuals. Covers Prince Edvvird Island Ukethe Dev? CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, MARCH 30. 1954 NEW HYDROGEN EXPLOSION T OUCHED OFF IN PACIFIC Gov'li To Boost Grants To Municipalities Dulles Would Stop Beds Before All Asia conquered Heavy Snow in Onlario; Cold In West llr THE CANADIAN PRESS Monday was the 10th day of spring. It brought snow to east- crn Canada. sub-zero tempera- tures to the West and sleet and hail from the mldwestern United States to the Texas Panhandle. In southern Ontario from Wind- ior to Trenton and extending 60 ililiPS inland from Lake Ontario, a freak snowstorm mixed with iroozing rain moved eastward. It mile driving hazardous and called niii. highway snow plow and sand- iig crews in full force. Weathermen expected the snow- storm to leave eight inches of snow ll its wake before moving off into Quebec and the Maritimes today. Temperatures were higher in the Maritimes and Quebec where. oc- insional light rain was reported in some areas. Montreal reported It degrees above zero. Even the west coast felt the icy lilast. The mercury dipped to 24 nliove zero in Vancouver over- i:.i:ht Sunday. Midwest Lashed The Arctic mass pushed into the lvnlted States and dumped heavy snow. sleet and rain on the mid- ursf. and some plains states. The weather bureau warned of possible tornadoes in extreme soiithern Illinois and southwest lidiana. Temperatures dropped to seven degrees below zero at Helena, Moiit.. and five below at Inter- intioiial Falls. In the Texas Pan- handle Dalliart had 25 and Amar- illo 27. A storm which reached its peak -luring the morning rush hour sur- prised Chicago dumping 0.8 in- ohoa by nit-crnoon. Midway alr- iiiirt, the busiest in the U. S. was closed to air traffic for more than "ifhi. hours. Freifiliie-r”Passes Quebec City litoN'llBiEAL. (GP)-The British ':i-lghter Manchester Spinner, first r-roan-going vessel to enter the 9!. Lawrence River this season, today paned Quebec City and headed for Trois-Rivieres. The ship will dock tonight in ri-ois-Rivierea and may attempt to r-rmtinue upstream to Montreal today. Heavy ioa. however, was re- nortsd in the channel between 9-oral. Que.. and Montreal. 0. x. earer.orMsN'r nisiis LONDON. (Reuters) -- Register- -ed unemployment in Britain has climbed to its highest peak for 12 months, government statistics mowed Wednesday. The latest -irwmployment total. calculated lv'ch, 15. is 429,526. This is 106.- W0 more than the number re- "Irded in a count last Septem- MP. Coming Events "Wheatlsy River 1-fall. oroklnols tonight. "Card party Dunstaffnageschool tonight. "Variety Choi-1.c:'t in Kingston 1311. March 31. if not line April For school iiiiyrovsmenta. V "In stock Ollcake, reed Mol- asses, Bran Shorts. at your one 5'09 rvirm supply centre. Kons- iiiaton Feed service Limited. "Movies tonight. Hunter River, lobn Wayne in "Operation Pael- ic. Baauro tosoait. It's top tvel entertainment. A "Hockey at North River Rink -Onllht: Cornwall Meteors vs. :harlot.totown Abbiaa. Game time 3-45. Qate after. "Come to the card and crokln- "lt party in Hunter liver Orange Hail April tad at 8 pm. Adfl'lI0- 'l0n: adulta 40c; children 000. Lunch included. "Hockey at North River rink lmllkht. Glasgow Road achoolboys Pf North River schoolboya 1:30. Pill-Iznw Road Maple Leafs vs. Jtlerialhano Monarchs, 8.45. Skate NEW YORK. (AP)--state secre- tary Dulles says the free world should take "united action” 'to pre- vent Communist conquest of Indo- china and all Southeast Asia. "This might involve serious risks". he said Monday night. ”But these risks are far less than those that will face us it few years from now, if we dare not be res- olute today." Dulles spoke out. with the ad- vance approval of President Eisen- hower, in a major U. 8. foreign policy address on the communist threat in the Far East. He declared in a national radio and television address prepared for delivery before the Overseas Press Club that if the Reds should WII1 control over any substantial part of Indn-China ”they would surely resume the same pattern of aggression against other free peoples in the area." "Grave Threat" "Communist control of Southeast Asia could carry a grave threat. to The Philippines, Australia and New Zcaland. with whom we have treaties of mutual assistance." he said. ”The entire western Pacific area. including the so-called 'ofi- shorei island chain. would be strat- egically endangered." Dulles said the U. 5. government has no intention of granting dip- lomatic recognition to Communist China or voting for its entry into the United Nations Giving Ii preview of the Ameri- can position at the April 26 Geneva peace conference on Korea and Iitdo-China, Dulles said: "We hope that any lndo - China discussion will serve to bring the Chinese Communistahto see the danger of their apparent design for the conquest of Southeast Asia, so that they will cease and de- Continu-ed on page Sfcol. 2 Water Thrga-lens Glace Bay Mine GLACE BAY, N.s., (CPI-Pumps at No. 25 mine at nearby Gard- iner were ”bctter than holding their own" Monday against tons of water cascading into the shaft from an unknown source for un- derground. A flow of water that began with a trickle from a break in the roof several weeks ago had by last week grown to a roaring deluge. Company officials say an eight- inch pump put into action over the weekend turned the trick. and that the worst is passed. Previ- ously pumpa at the end of two- inch pipes and a converted six- inch air compressor pipe were un- able to check the rising flood. some mechanical equipment was under water in more than half of the mine's working places, but most electrical equipment had been removed by men working around the clock. u. K. Gov? Silent On Hydrogen Bomb LONDON, tCPi-The govrriiincnt refused Monday to any whether Britain is building hydrogen bombs. Labor member Emrys Hughes supply Minister Duncan sandys. whose office watches over atomic research. what "orders" he had placed for H-bombs. "I am lure you would not ex- pact me to give you any enlighten- ment on this subject," sandy: re- plied. Ambassador OTTAWA. (CF)-Oxford - and Harvard-educated Charles B. A. Ritchie. 07-year-old Haligonian. is to be Canada's new ambassador to West Germany. The external affairs department also announced Monday the ap- pointment of E. W. T. Gill, 51, of Ottawa as Canada's new bill! commissioner to south Africa. ililr. Ritohle,'who will assume his new post. in May. succeeds Hon. Thomas -C. Davis. M. of Prince Albert. Isak, who will return to Canada for home leave.. Mr. Gill. head of the personnel division in the external affairs department. succeeds T. W. L. Macberrnot, 57, a native of Jamaica. who was ap- pointed ambassador to Greece March 1. Mr. Gill will assume his new post in July. , Hon. Robert W. Mayhew, 73. of Victoria, is expected to retire soon Haligonian. Named New i national conferences Abboll lldpes To Introduce legislalion Soon 0'I'1'AWA, rcei -- -mg, govprn. ment plans to increase grants paid to municipalities in place of local taxes on federal property. Finance Minister Abbott told the Commons Monday he hopes to in- troduce legislation next week to amend the Municipal Grants Act. He gave no details, but said the amendments to the act will make it somewhat more favorable. He made the statement in reply to a request by G. E. Mccullough (CCF-Moose Mountain) for an increase in the present grants. Municipalities now receive grants if federal property comprises four per cent or more of a community's total assessment. The federal gov- ernment assesses the. value of the property. Mr. Abbott told Stanley Knoifes tCCF-Winnipeg North Centrei the government will continue to make its own valuations. Authorize Expendlturea The question arose as the Com- mons dcalt with supplementary estimates of spending totalling s9B.2l4..'i50 for the fiscal year end- ing Wednesday, March 31. The House authorized the ex- penditures. in addition to estimates of 34.433.466.000 already approved. In addition, the government has spent about 000,000,000 in old age security payments during the 1953- 54 year. which are covered by a special tax. The Commons also provided it cash advance of 530,945,824 for the government to pay bills dur- in: the next two months. The interim supply bill was cleared through the Commons in a matter of minutes. It will he considered by the senate '-today. The cash advance is needed bo- ciiiise Parliament has not yet. voted the total of 34.491.751.000 in main estimates for the coming fiscal years starting April 1. QUEEN T0 BROADCAST ADELAIDE. Australia. fAl"l -- Quccn Elizabeth will broadcast a farewell to Australia from the royal tour liner Gothic when she leaves Froomantle April 1. Radio Australia will pick up the address from the national network and re- lay it throughout the world. The broadcast will take place between 5:45 p. m. and 6 p. in. (4:46 a. m. and 5 II. in. EsTi. M C A Planes Move to that Charlottetown yesterday tlcipate in the airlift the Queen Mary to Boston New York. ed to Halifax as a result of Three Maritime Central Airways huge Douglas DC-J's took off from will stay at Maritime Central Air- par- move hundreds of passengers from and The giant steamship was rllvert- Captains H. C. Trnlnor. Murnaghan and C. 10. Blair will longshoremen's strike in New York. pilot the aircraft. the iiQueen. Mary” Passengers Maritime Central Airways ft is expected that that aircraft vi-ays' Halifax base until movement will of pasengers is completed. is preparing more aircraft for the airlift if they are required. Senior 1-7.. F. Announcement In Washington By JERRY T. IIAULCII WASI-IINGTON, (AP)-The gov-5 ernmant announced Monday night that another hydrogen explosion was touched off last. Friday in the mid-Pacific testing area. A brief announcement by tho) atomic energy cominilssion said "the second test of the presaiit thermonuclear (hydrogen) series- was successfully carried out on Friday. March 26." It added: "Information highly important to national defence is being derived from this test series." The announcement came even as. demands were being voiced in Con-, grass that President Eisenhower, tell the public more about the de-; strurtive power of the new H- bomb. Asks End Hysteria In a House of Represeiitativrsi speech. Representative Chet l-loll-, field (Dem, Calif), is member of. the Senate-House atomic energy. committee, said he wrote the pres-I ident asking him to end world-. wide "confusion, fear and I1.V”1 steria" resulting from the hydro- gen explosion of March 1, first in the present. series. I The shattering p0WPl' of the March 1 blast was reported fol have surprised even the experts who set it off. It shot radio-active debris and moisture out. beyond the safety some boundary, shower- In: some US. naval vessels and Continued on p-aAgeE5. colfi” News In Brief BELGRA DE, t;.('llliel"5t - Marshal By GERALD FREEMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer HALIFAX. tori giant. Slight upturn orrawa. K;-'1-The cuaizi revenum are below expectations! this year to date, but the com- pany thinka it has spotted a allghti upward turn in the last week or) 50. President Donald Gordon gave? this information to the Oommonsl railway committee Monday as it launched into its annual survey oil the publicly-owned company's 1953! report and its 1954 outlook. l Despite a cut in the company's? 1954 budget forecast of i'evenilcsf from 1953, Mr. Gordon said. rev-i enue up to March 21 was dorm by about 50,900,000 from the estim- ate. t I-f an upturn does not develap.i "a very bad year." "We believe we can detect just I t.urn in the last week or so," he told the committee. "We are not sure. but we think that is what it To Germany ya'.a-Canadian ambassador in Japan ,and this post may be taken by llvfr. Davis. who has served prev- liously in the Far East. Mr. Ritchie until recently was the No. 3 man in the external af- faira department - deputy under- secretary. He was special ambas- sador and chief adviser to Prime Minister at. Lament on his world tour which ended March 17. Charles Stewart. Almon Ritchie was born at Halifax Sept. 23, llmfi, and studied at. Kings college, Dal- houslo University, oxford. Har- vard and L'Ecols Iilbredea Scl- encea Polltiques in Paris. He joined the external department in 1084. and served three years in Washington, the war years in London, two years in Ottawa and three in Paris. He re- turned to Ottawa early in 1050. He has attended many top-level inter- affairs lleoently In 0.ll.R.,Business Reported he said. the CNR. may be in forlsloners order for the eqiializiitioni tCPi--Special trains; Rgfurnjng Canadian, aiirl planes sped 1.087 ocean travel-! far 220 of the pas,”-,g,.r5 aboard lers off the diverted liner Queen. Mary to their riestiiiations Mon- day while hundreds of stevedori-5 unloaded cargo from the 81,275- The Queen was re-routed here, for the second time in seven mon- shore as she slid along the full 'inearby Eastern Passage. Halifax Busy As . . Queen Mary Arrives length of two ocean terminal berthsitlnd-l W01”- iat 7:40 a.m. the world's Secnllri largest ship. One special Montreal for New York York via Boston. Lines flights from the nccnuntpd-OFII government for its strike of train look them to French Union forces unleashed a IMMWEM and om puud thrtllxggsmashlng week-end assault on the American and Canadian passen -lRed'1”d b”1e5"'' 0' mm ers. Two other trains went to NewIPhu' kmmg squeezed i-Andrei Y, Viishirisky Monday cast the because of xi longshoremen's strike in New York. Her towering PIIMI Tlke Other! masts rose over the eight-storeyi M0,, paqengef, wen Nova Scotis hotel immediately in- mm regular -I-mm , Canada Mrl Tlto's Commiinisr. regime is facinz an internal wevival at lib-We ect- mry by unfriendily '4-.lernent.I." Yugoslav communia leaders were told Monday.” - i .Nig:w YORK. (Al;-F.-'l'he Interna- tional l.ongshoremen's Association on trial Monday. charged with contempt of the fed- lthe New York waterfront. ! HANOI. Indo-China, tAPl - Blen an estimated 1.000 vletmlnh in an armored thrust across the dusty lndo-China plain. UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (AP) ,Aooommodati Much Is required of then: to whom much Is given, MAXI MS OIA. MERE MAN .4 14 PAGES The Guardian. Fin Cents Morning Daily Founded 1001. AEC Mali-e? Brief Need Motels says Premier As controversial Tourist "I believe the future of the four- lst industry lien in the motel line not in the construction of cabins as has been the custom during the past five years." slated Premier A. W. Matheson yesterday after- noon during the discussion on tourist accommodations in the Legislature. The Premier outlined his views .on the controversial tourist, indus- try as the LPglSIalllTB was civin: a second rr-arllnsz to a h:II Pl'llllIP-Ti ”An Act. to Provide Loans for the Estabiisliment. and Improvenient. of 'Tnurlst Accommodation within the Province. The Premier commenced his considerations by saying that lie i believed the Leader of the Opposi- tion was wrong when he thought more cabins should be built on the North Shore. "The Norih Shore. area serves the lniirist. trade from the first ten davs in Jilly tn the last of August and no one living can make a go of any such business which lasts less than two months." he stated. ”There are changes in the west- her that will not keep the people in cabins aftr-r the first of Sci)- lrff'lI)f'l'. We need accommodations that will prnvirie ii cortain amount of heat and the aliswi-r lies in motels not cabins." said the Prem- ier. According to the bill which was given if second reading yesterday the Govt-rnnient will be a.ut.horizt-d to grant loans during the coming year from a fund of 3100.000. The maximum loan which may be ob- talned by one person is 340000 and the loan may not exceed 50”? of this cost of the proposed ac- commodation. Thu money lniay be loaned for a Jr-rm or terms not to exceed fifteen years and at A rate of In- terest, of at least four. and one half per cent. Among the members on this 'llouri.-t Loan Committee to look offer this fund will he one member of the Executive Council and others to he appointed. This is the first time that an Ari has been set up to administer the loan it was revealed yesterday. Prcvlously the Legislative author- ity to grant. money for tourist loans was granted only when it came to passing the mallet!" in the estimates. The object of the new Art is to provide closer Leg- lslaiivn control over the matter, it was stated by the Premier. Rnhiies Statement "That's what I referred to when the Soviet Union's 58th veto in the airport Ii--United Nations Security Council to mid a Western demand that Egypt Om?” lV"ll'l1Ed N0 Sbeciiil follr-.stop interfering with Israel-bound engined North, Star airliners andlcargot-.s in the Suez canal. three DC-as for Boston to ronneet with Amt-rican Airlines. flclals expected to handle more than 200 extra travellers. Halifax longahorenien had a busy week-end. profiting by the divers- TCA of- V British carrier Becomes rse I said those tourist loans were in a mess," stated Dr. W. J. P. Mac- Millan. "Senator Jones then ,lSaurel In Harbor l0ul of Storm l HALIFAX, (CPI-The transport department icebreaker Saurel was reported Monday anchored in St Georges harbor on the West coast inf Neivfoiiiidland ashore she sought ish-ltor from livery seas and a blinri;ng snow slorm The Saiirei broke one of her two propellor shafts Friday while !trying to free the Halifax sealer Arctic Prowler from 3 Belle Lalo ,SlrnLt icelield. The icelireaker was ilimpiiiz home to Halifax ivhen sho ,ran into the gale and anchored. The Saurei will resume the trip ias soon as the storm abates. of- ncials here said. The Quebec iccbreaker dilber- ville was reported to be Wllhlll a quarter mile of the Prowler Mon- day night. She was butting through heavy ice. but making headway. Rescue operations to the sealer, whose 75-man crew are in no im- mediate danger, are QXDPFC-Pd io begin Tucsda,v, ' No Confirmation On Radio-Active Dust OTTAWA, (CPl - Associate D9- fence Minister Campney says he is not able to confirm a report that radio-active dust has fallen on the Melfort. sask. area. H. A. Bryson tCCF-Humboldt- Melfort) asked Mr. campney on ,Monday in the Commons whether lhe rnuld ionfirm the report. "No I can't confirm it," Campney said. The report said the radio-active dust fell on Melfort. Sask.. follow- ing the March 1 bikini hydrogen- bomb explosion. Mr. You DON'T HAVETO BE A cPuPPi.E To TAKE SHORT HAND NOTES9 tCr-htlnllvdvon-EP;geERAco.EEilA ry, Liner I mMr Gordon under est 1 mn or the Queen Mary Ind TORONTQ ICP”-oN””lm'1m "id declined to agree withqua amgx ifreiigmd?,:;Wf,:,”'v3f:;;.,b!gRN:: m....aD... .... .- maximum u'Impcram"5: gun w". tion that higher freight rates may dmh, Hameiand, Nu Hem; Andy 3' B0'E:QDKlnEL drawers and turned them In”? nurmn O 12' O W be pncmg the mmm" om M F1”3"991113- ALGIERB tReutersi -A British makesmn com I” the bahm5'IV?l.l'lCK1ll1'FY 28 49 some mm” and sending It my C1i9W1111'mbPl5 0? ill" bli-I Qllfltn aircraft C7;l"TiFY was convert:-rl to-ismpls mrwmns knncked ME”hEriVicio:'ia 34 50 mmpet'”””' W91”? 1955 111311 N1lI11lS185llC about-Idav min a combined nursery aiidl d”””m talks for the vmmm my Edmonton ii 19 "9 ””lb'J'”d 5"-11'” 1" ””.reniaininiz in Halifax instead ollpassengnr liner to transport. 1231” ("W ””””' . lCalgarv is :7 Volume m H" gcneml b”5m”5lN0lV York 1111'” Fl'1f1lY 1100l1- 0nf'.lshipwrecked men women and rliil-l Cmll” Sklpp" C31” R" Regina 4 is ””l"3"”"- however. recalled an evening ofidren rescued Sunday from tiielwmm ""”""d "ch ..”"””m"'IW1nn1iMir lb 15 H9 5150 5"”I "M CNR M5 110'' billiards with "very hospitable. gutted tronpship Empire Windrush.I Md upwsskd "HHS mmmmns. Tnroiito '38 .10 in mllld 8111' illlmediate HPPI1Cil'ichaps” when the liner iias here: They are dug Ry,(;1bmm.,. 1,-,dg..;"h'””d .,""e "”C””I'”-V snniewhatkmtlflila :20 33' mm for 7i "ew fmizlli WW 1"o.scv(-n months ago. Alirilhcr liadlgn join 200 male survivors. From a"5””” . , M031 T31 5” 34 "9359 B”'- H1315 C511” 01131180 H-Blsnriicivliat bitter i'ciinilccllnn- of rt'thr-rd they'll be flown to I.K)lldt'lll.i Th" S"”'wT( I”"k”' 7” if HI” Qll”h'F .11! till U19 5lll"”l011 W53 ('X""1l11N1- ldance hall fight he emcrgcd froml The l.”i.'i0-ton carrier Trilimpiii mm "W hm" rfsmm (mm 3.? F'”'"' 'I”h” M A: M” Gmdml 515” mm H” mm” second best. scl'lipped'ils rigid naval regulations Amm.n EM"! HI" WM" (.m'I -NI”"'"'"1 W ” mm": 1 The special passenger list in-! to make the men. women and rhll-I WNW” Nomi" Mum" ””””'"”:l Ham” ' 7” is 1- Th” CNR BC”-Pi-A 5l”1"17lII.l' l1 rliirlcd paper magnate Sir Ericidren feel at home in two liiiaci mm: ”"d'” fwd "h”'"'"' "m" Fhnrloltotovn 20 46 1'9"''” Ward Of m"15i101'li 90"1"1l5"Bnii'atei'. Vancmivrr-b-ii-n British hangars and Pvcrv ""1" "”””b"'l ::ii(iNdf-iNi:imilorcmN:r?giii”iI::f -jmnmv l . . . . g I t . ' l JIiI'lilI'iI' "I . of freliilib ram effective lIvNl'I::i1:t nSCii'm:Al?):xN:1aIiTdaIlxlI wrist-i-I1:-):ie i(:arlTI3l?'.Ellpfr))1EalincfiEeCI?Flrf:I "W" ”””''l” '”””- ””l.””” h""'" 5" -I”-lll'-i 19 ” Milmh 1- but iii may IDDOFI '0 H19-imobile manufacturer Sir Wllliaminiake room for camp rot.-i Andi "mm and "Sramd 1" nmh"'lmhF,sl 1" 1 "O" ""” board on one point lnvolvimz Yl"Nl,iRootes. hammocks in the hangars. 3'” ,."” ."x'L'”L”TI ””.'''L ''.''Li ”A””-V lcr" TI" ””"”””''l ”" tmmc mm'””' by 7"” md Sailors even emptied their lockedl .ont.imicd on Page 3 col. 53 p”h1”" w""h"7 Om” he” 533'” ' Great. Lakes water transport. 2. The company has no pro- gram of special works to absorb personnel who might be displaced by its economies resulting from falling traffic volume and increas- ed mechaniantion. Expenditures Not Cut 8. Freight rate increases "haw- not by any means" covered in- creasod labor costs in recentyesrs. The only way the line had surviv- ed was by economies such as the increased use of diesel power. Discussing the question of per- sonnel laid off as the result of CNR. economies based on dwindl- ing gross revenues Mr. Gordon said there is no program of spec- ial works to take care of them. "But we have not cut our plan- ned capital expenditures despite. lower l.rai'llc." he added. "The cap- ital budget. is based on the as- sumption that the Canadian econ- omy is going ahead. We are carry- ing on normally in this respect." As to curreirit. expenses. the CNN. was definitely trying to reduce them in the light of truffle de- clines. Layoffs were due to a com- bination of tivaifle decline and mechanization. i (ll )- 1 flN Delegate Delayed Sir Eric. Bnwater planned to fly in a new Bowater mill in Ten- lnP5JC9 and expected little incon- tooiitinimi on Page 5 i-3.37 Farm loan Board Figures OTTAWA. (GP)-Ontario led In applications but. Saskatchewan wait ahead in loans granted by the Ca- nadian fann loan board in the (is- cal year ended March al, 1053. , A return tabled in the Commons Monday for Hazen Argue (CC!- Assinibolni showed 1.169 applica- tions from Ontario, of which I'll! were granted. Saskatchewan farmers applied for 1.009 and were granted on. Applications from other prov- inces. with the number granted in brackets: British Columbia 3'10 (227); Al- berta, 346 I220): Manitoba, :1! tub): Quebec. 701 (M9); New Brunswick. 191 (07; Nova Scotin, 0.1 (40); Prince Edward Island, 130 I Nasser Seen By IIAIG NICHOLSON CAIRO, iRl'lli.ef'Ai --Egypt's mili- tary rulers Monday night aban- doned plane to hand over the lov- ernment to politicians. They called of! national elections and declared their "revolution" will run its or- iginal three-year course to 1057. At the same time. they pro- claimed a state of siege and reim- posed int-rnal press censorship. lifted earlier this month by Presi- dent Mohamed Nagiilb. Troops poured into Cairo and qulcklv converted the city into an armed camp. Nagulb. who suffered in collapse in public earlier Monday. appears to have lost his battle against other Junta members for a return to parliamentary life Jilly 10, fol- lowing elections June 10. An In uncement said he will remain president. and premier but one unofficial report said he would be kept in office as only a Triumphant In Quarrel In Egypt "rubber stamp" ruler, Naguib's rhioi adversary. f.t.-l Col. Gamal Abdel Namer, has, emerged triumphant. ivy the QIIIT-I rel splitting the 12-min revolution- ary council The handsome .78- ynnr-old officer ousted 53-year-old Nagiiih from .iha premiership Feb. 25 but stepped down to the deputy premiership two days later. Nasseris hand was strengthened by demonstrations for him through- out the day by mobs roaming the streets chanting slogans for con- tinuation of the "rrvoiiitinn.” Pro- Nasscr crmvris. shouting "down with imperialism" and ”long live the revolution". also swept through Nile delta towns. One Cairo mob broke meeting of the Egyptian stale Coiincil tsiipreme court) and knlfed its president. Abdel Razzak cl Sarihniirl. The mob fled alter into .1 t new disturbance is inrr-r.-isl m mm: i-aslwarri from the lfiiitcd States is give the southern Mai'itinws a last oi the snowstorm that. has I"lPPl7 ti-ins: up traffic near the Great Lakes M-onday. Snowfall amounts in rxcrss of four inches are likely in much of the south:-m Maritimra Tiiesday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island. lower St. John river valley. southern half of eastern 3'. R. counties: Intermit- tent snow: r-older: northeast winds IS: low-high at f'harlntrI-town. Predrrlrivvn. Saint John and Mone- Ion 20 and 25. Northern half of eastern N Fl. counties. upper S" John river val- ley: Variable cloudiness with a few annwflurrins; colder: light winds flow-high at Chslham is and 25, I-Jclmiiiidston 10 and 23 Bay ofclialeiir Clear with a few cloudy intcrvals roirlert mum winds Low-high at Campbcllton I) and 23 Bay of i"unriv: Northeast winds i.'i; intermittent snow; visibility about one mile in snow other-arise 10 miles: colder; High iidt! xi. Chnl'I0l.te'fown at 7:lii um. and 024 p.m ht l1'i1lDr1r!l out a gun and shot dead two of his attackers. Sun rises today At 5.53 3 .m. and sets at 6.38 pm . .