TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets dicin Want seller with Guar. Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. 14 PAGES NAVAL OFFICIALS CALL ON LT.-GOV. PROWSE ary Cadets attached to the Univ- ersity Naval Training Division of A group of local and naval officials made a courtesy call on Lt.-Gov. T. W. L. Prowae Saturday afternoon. In the picture members from left to right are: ' ' ' . Commander H. Little, C. D.; Lt. Gov. Prowse; Lt. Cmdr. D. M. Hewitt, C. D.; and Cmdr. ..l N. Kenny. H. M. C., S Queen Char- lotte The visiting group from Hal- amining the The Guardian "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" lfax who arrived over the week- end are in Charlottetown as a Boy- al Canadian Navy officer select- ion board for the purpose of ex- eleven Probation- CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA Saint Dunstan's University and Prince of Wales College for prom- otion to cadets. Egypt Begins Manoevures To Avoid Being Isolated CAIRO (AP)-Egypt has begun maiioeuvrss to avoid being isola- ted from its neighbors by Pres- ident Eisenhower's Middle East doctrine. Fears are expressed here pri- vately that the United States now is pursuing the former British policy of driving a wedge be tween President Nssser's govern- ment and its Arah allies. There are signs Saudi Arabia. Jordan and Lebanon, to the east. may desert the ncutralist Nasser camp and move toward real co- operation with the United States with Libya. on the west. rcndy permitting both Britain the United States to maintain mil- ilary bases on its territory is a possibility ' as an island of neutnliam sur- rounded by pro-Western states. NEWSPAPER! CIITICAL Emma take the view the Arabs veg cm fill the vacuum left bythe decline of British and French influence and are critical of llsenhowsfl bid for special military and econ- nmic powers to block Osmnuaild expInslon'lll the Middle last. Dd gl. . JORDAN FAVORABLE this is by no means a unanimous Fail To Locate Two Crewmen From pWrecI(ed Fishing Vessel GLACE BAY. N.S. (CP) A search of stormy Atlantic waters oil lcatarle Island at Cape Bre- tnn's eastern tip Sunday failed to locate two missing members from the wrecked vessel t.rsnd Etsng. Meanwhile attempts is ere made to roflost the New- foundland motor VGIIII Marilyn Clair which ran aground in near- by Mira Bay Friday during a gale. 'Wrecltage of the 40-foot Gr Hans was spotted from the air saturday b an lt.C.A.!'. Air- craft from areenwwd. N.S. A re- liort from a lighthouse keeper con- tirmed that the wreckage was that of the Grand Etang. There was no sign of the vessel's dnry nor evidence of the fate of her two crew members. Search by R.C.A.!'. rescue planes and the Trans-port Department ship Edward Cornwnllk failed to turn up further clues. I naofPetitlltsng. and tempts were made to get their id)- The Grand Etang. mptained by St 4 r stems N.S.. left Cheticarnp h Western view in the Arab sphere. Lebanon's foreign minister. Charles Mallk. has praised the Eisenhower doctrine a n d sug- gested Arab nations would profit by taking advantage of its offer of economic aid. Saudi Arabia's King Sand. I wealthy ally of Nasser. is going to Washington Jan. 30 for a dis- cussion of problems "of mutual interest to the two nations." Saud's government at times had appeared anti-Western but he has refused to follow Nasser's lead in buying Communist anna or in . gnizliig Red China. The king was reported annoyed at the man- ner in which Nasser nationalized Egyptian holdings of the Suez Cn- nal Co.. last July 5. suiting his Arab friends. Jordan's King Hussein has gone on record in praise of the Eisen- hower doctrine. The king. whose restive nation is shipping at Brit- Iall ties which have sustained it since 1946, told U. S. Ambassador Lester Mallory the new American policy was "welcomed and ap- preciated by peace-loving coun- tries and the Arab peoples in particular." Cape Breton Thursday for Glace Bay to pick up three crew mem- bsrs for a trip to the fishing banks With the captain was Earle Clarke of Rose Blanche. Nfld. A pesslng vessel reported sight- ing the dragger to difficulties in a hlisprd Friday morning. Meanwhile. eight crew emt s of the wrecked Marilyn Clair were being housed by residents on the coast of Mira Bay as at- ton vessel into the sea again. Earlier she had HI iseenfearedato sons. The Marilyn Clair left Grand Bank. Nfid. Thursda with a cargo of salt fish Halifax. There is no report of the amount of damage to'the vessel. Buffet fisheries of Grand- Observors Believe Pearson is 2 girl? I. 3 Ta 3 gE;II In M . still in current consultations. Egypt is reported seeking assurances its leadership of the Arab League will continue 'and that the Arab sltlateai willidact in concert rather t an ndlv ually toward the Am- erican overtures. A four-man Jordanian mission began talks here Saturday with Nasser and other Egyptian lead- ers on an old offer of financial aid from Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Siyjrla toJrre:lace the British sub- s y to 0 an. A three-man Syrian delegation is due in Cairo this week to ne 0- tibgte wlthsylllypt adfecgral on tween an Um. a Pfil)::Jfl by both governments E ii flmefliilithslatsfilltdiif national developments as the Eln- enhower doctrine. Find Body Of i Crash Victim LIMESTONE. Me. (AP-Scarclr era Sunday found the body of the eighth and final victim of an en- ,' ' which sent a B - 52 jet bomber to the ground in flaming wreckage near Andover. N.B.. last Thursday. The air force identified the dead man as Lleut. Anders P. Larson. Jr.. 3. of Wichita. Kan. His wile and their two-year-old son reside at boring air force base here. The search. in temperatures that never rose above zero. was I joint air force - army OPGPIIIN with co-operation of the RCMP. NAVY. ARMY SPLIT WASHINGTON (AP - The CW fence department announced Sat- urday the navy is developing its ownlntermedlate range ballistic own intermediate nose blllllue missllp-which means the davy D severing its collaboration with the army on such a protect. LOCK- heed Aircraft C0,. of Van Nuys. Callf.. is the major contractor in development of the "polarls. the name assigned to the WW , weapon. GREAT SOVIET VICTORY POSSIBLE Dulles Issues Warning .:..: - C.P.R. Rolling Normally Today MONTREAL (CPI-The Cana- dian Pacific Railway will be roll- ing normally from Atlantic to Pa cific by Monday morning, a Com- pany official said Sunday night two days after the end of the day strike. The company's 17,000 miles of steel were open for normal opera- tion by Saturday night, Vice - President D. S. Thomson said. Pilot freight trains. some push- ing snowplows. had made the first cautious runs. clearing the way for a fast-growing spate of passenger trains to begin moving Saturday afternoon. HUNGARIAN FUND TORONTO CP- Contributions to the Canadian Hungarian Relief fund now total 3413.773. a fund spokesman said Saturday. Objec- tive of the campaign is ssoo.ooo. ISTANBUL mi-runny sat- imisy published a decree forbid- E MONDAY. JANUARY 14. 1957 TWO MINISTERS WITH MILITARY ROLES REPLACED Macmillan Appoints Cabinet With Old Loo All the main highways in the Province were opened for motor traffic by Saturday afternoon but continuous patrols had to be kept up yesterday to keep them cleared. of snow which continued to fall dur- ing the greater part of the day. A strong ground drift during the the cuttings again start their rounds at 5.30 a.m. to day. i Continuous Snow Makes Road Clearing A Difficult Task weather forcast which predicts a discontinuance early today. It is expected however that temperatures will drop sharp- ly before evening. swerved many distress calls in dif- night is expected to fill in most of lferent parts of the Province. Most but the plows will of these have been in areas where Some relief is seen in the of precipitation The Government plows have an- persons require immediate hospi- talizatlon. LONDON (Reuters) - Aneurln Bevan Sunday attacked the Els- enhower Middle East doctrine as "calculated to plunge the world into the nightmare of final war." Writing in the left-wing Sunday newspaper Reynold's News. Bevan charged that the president's plan will undermine the authority of the United Nations. The pep cm Welshman. the La- bor oppostlon's chief spokesman on foreign affairs, said the doc- trine mnkes reference R: the United Nations only "as an after- thought." The Elsenhowe Doctrine. as re- vealed to Congress on Jan. 5. would give the piesident authority to use financial aid and military force. if necesss y. to block Com- ' t eapanston into the Middle East. Bevan complained that the plan would make United States mili- tary intervention ln the area aub- i5tS:.!.':i'?i.'i..2i:itiiiW”Si tei-it had started." In such circumstances. Bevan said. the whole weight of Ameri- ding newspapers to put out extra editions. an influence would have to be Sees DangersDemocracies In Asia May Go "Authorilarian" OTTAWA (CP) -- Health Min- ister Martin says unless dem- ocratic Asian countries are "uis da-stood" by the West. there is I danger of them Itfomptinii ”-Ills tlsarttarlan short-cuts on the road to modernisation." lie also said in an interview his arrival here Satur- day nlght from a nine-weclt tour of South and Southeast Asia that the Conlnonwealth "is a mighty instrument for peace. not only iii Asia but all the world." Mr. Martin said there is an in- tense desire on the part of Asians to maintain independence and to preserve their historical tradi- tions democratic Pfoctr durea. But. he said, there are enorm- ous phyaioal problems to be over- come. "There II I contlniiinlz risk that unless they (Asian Collnlrlcsl are understood by the Wvsi. 50'"! All!!! countries which have bc8ll' to travel the way of democrat?! may be tempted to try what ma! appear to he authoritarian short- cuts on the road to modernist tlon." the statement said. CANADA BESPECTED Mr. Martin and his wife were grostod at the airport by Prime Minister St. Laurent and External Affairs Minister Pearson. Mr. Martin, asked to comment on Commonwealth unity among Asian members, said: ''I think there is a recognition. not withstanding recent events. that the Commonwealth is an im- portant instnimcnt for peace. and an important instrument to which the Asian members of the Commonwealth can interpret the opinions and the points of view of other members of the Common- wealth to other nations in Asia. "I am sure the Commonwealth is a mighty instrument for peace. not only in Asia but all over the rat .” Mr. Martin. who said he would he Nportlng to cabinet shortly. said the strongest impression he uined was the high regard in Xztch Canada is held throughout a. Bevan Hits At Eisenhower Plan used in the Seurity Council to win a decision favorable to the United States action. "it is difficult to conceive I situation more damaging to the standing of the United Nations," Bevan said. The United Nations. not the president. would be left to make a deision on whether or not aggression has been com- mitted. he added. IMITATING BRITISH Bevan also took issue with the doctrine on the ground that "it creates a new type of aggressor . . .a nation alleged to be acting under the 'control of international Communism.'” Bevan predicted that if Ameri- can force was used against a na- tion so deflned. Russia would be forced to use her veto in the So- curity Council and possibly to go to the defence of the aggressor because the Soviet Union is part of "international Communism." M"! can think of nothing rude calculated to plunge the world into the of a final war." Bevan said that by defending the doctrine because it ,. ” for swift action in place of slow procedure in the UN. the Ameri- an administration is using the ar- gument put forward by the British government to explain their inter- vention in Egypt.-an action which the American leaders condanned. 35 Below In Parts Of N. B. CAMPBELLTON (CPl- A spell of frigid weather hit the northern sections of New Brunswick over the weekend with readings vary- ing from zero to 35 degrees be low. Campbcllton was the coldest town with temperatures on Saturday reported at 28 below and going down to as low as 35 in some areas of the country. in the northwest. Edrnunaton re- ports say the mercury plunged to 10 below on Saturday and was continuini! to go down last night with ll reading of II. in Bathurst the cold was report- ed to have eased off with temper- lllurcs hovering around the zero mark. On Saturday morning the thermometer showed I) below. Temperatures continued to drop in Dalliousle Sunday trig as the mercury dipped to is low fol- lowing I0-bclow conditions Satur- day. Two Jet Trainers Crash Over B. C. SQUAMISH. B. C. (CPI - TWO T-33 jet trainers of the RCA! ro- When Truck Goes Five Drowned Through Lake Ice KENORA Out. 169) - Police were attempting Sunday to re cover the bodies of five men drowned Saturday when a truck carrying is Hydro construction workers plunged through ti: ice on a lake crossing 20 miles north of here. The eleven other men. all men- bers of an Ontario Hydro Com- mission construction crew erect- ing tawers for a transmission line petween a power pm! i at White- dog Falls and Kenora. 40 miles to the south, escaped. The victims were identified as Charles W. Franklin. 32. of Swan River. Man.; Alec Morriseau, 43. of Pine Falls. Man.; Leonard Morrow. 37. Snow Road, 0nt.; issue A. Firth, 56. of Mlnakl. 0m.; and John Essex. 27. at Lecelstershire. England. Constables from the Ontario Provincial Police detachment at illisaki, 23 miles north ofhcre, supervised attempts to recover the bodies of the drowned men. Diver Bud Ross of Petawawa. 0nt., went down in 15 feet oi water but was unsuccessful. Po- lice will later try to raise the submerged truck. The group was driving back to a campsite at Gunn Lake. five miles south of minaki when the rear wheels of the truck broke through the ice on I lake cross- ing and left only the cab of the truck above water. The three men in the cab clambered out onto firm ice and helped cut a hole in a tarpaulin coverln the other men in the back of the vehicle. Eight of them escaped into the freezing lake waters and were pulled to l WEATHER Inowflurrles and drifting snow; extremely sold; north winds 20. Low-high at Char- lottetown sore and I5. Retain Position the ”grey eminence" of the servative party who has LONDON (CPi -- Prime Min- i.-ier Harold Macmillan today re- pointed Selwyn Lloyd, an ar- chiteci of the Suez intervention. as foreign secretary in a new cabinet with an old look. Macmillan called on most key ministers to stay in the posts they held when he succeeded Sir An- thony Eden last Thursday. Only four ministers in the Eden cab- inet were dropped. Macmillau's chief rival for the prime minlstcrship, 54 - year- old Richard Austen Butler. was reappoint 1 lord privy seal and government leader in the House of Commons. He was given the additional post of home secretary. The new prime minister re- placed two ministers who held military roles in the Suez attack. Antony Head was dropped as defence minister. He was re- placed by Duncan Sandys. 47- year-old son-in-law of Sir Winston Churchill. Head's new ministerial post-if any-was not announced. The first lord of the admiralty. Lord Hailsham. was shifted to the post of education minister. As civilian naval chief. Lord Hails- ham. 49. was not in the cabinet. THE NEW CABINET Foreign Secretary - Lloyd. 52. onetime Liverpool insurance law- yer and former British delegate to the United Nations. who has held the foreign office post since December. 1955. Lord privy seal, leader of the House of Commons and home sec- retary-Butler, 54. who was cool to Eden's Suez policies. Lord president of the council clan in Britain. trade-3' David Eccles, 52, merly minister of education. formerly minister of housing local governments. Minister of power - Sir Parliament. Mills will be giv peerage so he can sit for the atomic energy in industry also will oversee the steel try. MANY REAPPOINTED Colonial secretary - Alan nox -Boyd, 52. reappointed. 56. reappointed. Secretary for Comrnonw reappointed. Scott Maclay. 51. who serv 1951 and 1952 as minlate transport and civil aviation. - lieathcots - A m o r y, 57, pointed. 43. reappointed. Mini of housing. locII' crnment and Welsh aff safety. Temperatures in the area wre reported around 20 below. Henry Brooke 53, formerly The Marquess of Salisbury. 04, cm .wnm,yvm me u,” N " of the Duchy Russia Warns U...S. President MOSCOW (AP)-Rustin warned President Eisenhower urday light that his Middle III! pl!)- g'ram can lead to dangerous con- sequences "the full rsswnsihilliy for which will rest with the U. S. government." A 3.000-word official soviet de- nunciation of the E nh Doc- trlne said the president's message of war. not the voice of peace.' The statement, releaud by the merit behind it. Eiscnhowu.-i's program, the statement said. "co dicta the principles and aims the United threat in the peace and security of tho Middle East." The world and ihnt the Eisenhower Doctrine uas designed to take Id- vantagc of the British and French I 3 for refusing to join with Russia in to Congress "rings with the voice. opposing the British-French inva- governmcnt news agency Tess asitrine is a "program of colonial an oiiicial declaration carried the ism." full weight of the Soviet govern-i' ither than the notorious trlparite ideclaratoin of 1950 and the plan ifor establishing the so-called Mid- idle East command in 1951," Tass Nations and amounts to I aeriousi said. statcnient said Americalthe Arab states had ”st-lfish aims” in the Arablsources of strategic materials. caster-Dr. Charles Hill oil, merly postmaster-generil. Minister of transport - ll Watkinson, 46. reappointed. Minister of education -- llailshsm. FEW DROPPED Besides Head. the dropped from the were: Sir Walter lllonckton. 66. merly paymaster - general. has ion gwsnted to Gwilym Lloyd - George. had been home min over reversals in the Mdidle East. 3 ' CHARGE COLONIALISM The statement charged U. S. govemmant circles with making slande assertions regarding non-exsitent threats to the Arab countries emanating from the Soviet Union." It attacked the United States Patrick Buchan-licpburn, 55 had been minister of works. , Au three were offered - ages. Head has been under sharp - lcism for the conduct of the l invasion. However. in a lctt him made public Sunday Macmillan said: sion of Egypt. it charged the Eisenhower Doc- "This program goes much fur- 5 country. You have had a vcry it contended the United states tinsuished beizinmna to your and other NATO nations regard ical career. I am sure thatvi "merely as will prove only a break andi much lies before you . -v shall all remember with ad lion the way you undertook and a sphere for the investment of capital to rake in maximum profits." ELI)-iPtIS'l' (Reuters)-Sweep ing changes in Hungary's martial law making almost a new antl- stiite arlixily punishabe by death came into force throughout the country Sunday. A dcrrcc enactcd by the Soviet- backed government gave new powers to summary courts set up in December i0 if)! :'Wl"'”""""' olutionary activities." observers said the decree was so all-inclusive it would make it illegal for workers to discuss among themselves possible strike measures or for foreign T990119" to question workers. Enactment of the decrfe clmi of fresh industrial disorders in audaizest -Id "mm . up pantsan acuvity in Western Hungary. Justlfying the new decree. Hun- garian justice commissioner Fer- eiic Neaval said: ”New energetic strong measures In defence 0' NewiDisorders In Hungary As Government Stiffens Penalties Appointments announ nt I fill most of the key D0915 I" new government. some senior many Junior offices still mus filled and the prime ministe expected to announce the tional appointm his by Tue The new Macmillan cabinet gllghlly younger than the old average age bezlllfz 53 C0mPl with 55 in Eden's team. Macmillan presented the! loci list to Queen Elizabeth day afternoon. She made I cial trip from her countl'Y at Sandrlnghsm to recet Macmillan lllent an hour minutes with her at the -- workers at some factories on Cse- pel stopped work Saturday after run-iors that four workers were arrested in connection with Fri- day's disturbances. NEW DISORDERS New reports Sunday told of partisan activity in Western Hun- gary and the shooting to death of a senior Communist mllltla offl- ;:B;daputk:,sdlo saldt :.n.mIH!lCd I ICC-T mtmui. west of ks Twg Highway There were unconfirmed ports of a battle Wednesday be tween miners and Red troops in the Tstabanya coal mining 1) miles west of Bode at Fatalities In N. 1 YREDERICTON fCP)- A ills is! sis is s In II Most Ministers Chancellor of the excheq Peter Thorneycroft, 47. who -A president of the board of tra the Eden government. As -is cellor he succeeds Macmillan I President of the boar .' Minister of defence - San Mills, 67, a Birmingham ind triallst who is not a member ernrnent in the House of lo - He will be concerned with use Lord chancellor-Lord Kllm relations-The Earl of Homes. 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