Maxims of 1 More Man low Help is no help. 12 PAGES LONDON tReuters)-Two lead- is that coexistence will gradually lug statesmen. Earl Attlee and turn into co-operation." he said. Foreign Secretary seiwyn Lloyd, and told his young listener! of Tucst'la.V defended the United Na- what he considered the immense ll ins against criticisms that it had imllortance of the United Nations tin doing just that. f.".'lP(l. nuth Attics and Selwyn Lloyd in-re making their first public :ilr'0Cl1f'S in their new roles-Attica .-is a ncivly-created peer after his : - timitiii as leader of the Labor pm-tr anrl Sclwyn Lloyd as foreign am rclal'.V .-ittlcc told an annual "Tomor- rmv's Citizens” conference of sen- ior school children that the time socms to be approaching when tiicre will be a recognition of col em--niicc in the world. "ll'h:it we have got to hope fort "Certainly. the United Nations ity” to the United Nations. Yvonne De n He said that if it had not tiller- vened in Korea. the United Na- tions might well have gone'the way of the old League of Nations. One of the reasons for the league's failure. he said. was that no one was willing to take action against Japan when she inwaded China. HAS FAULTS In his defence of the United Nations. Selwyn Lloyd conceded that the UN had shortcomings. ies Quinis Shunned Th ei r Parents UONTREAL, (CPI - Yvonne Dionne Tuesday denied in tears a stern statement by her father that the famed quinliuplet sisters shunned their parents at Christ- ma..s. i ”it.'I not true!" cried the dark- eyod. 21-year-old qulnt when I reporter read I stuement that Oviia Dionne made at North Bay earlier Tuesday. Then she turned and run sob-. hing into a room at the hospital where she and her sister Cecile sire nursing trainees. J- FAME AND TRAGEDY j it was the latest episode-in the 1 life of the family that has known tragedy as well as fame since live daughters were born to (min and Mrs. Dionne on May 2ti. 1934. Emilie. often described as the gentlest of the five. died in Aug- list, 1954. at a rest home in Ste. Agatha. Que., from suffocation following an epilqxtic sellure. Oviia Dionne said the girls have been. turning away from tlwir parents "for I long time now” and the attitude heel be- Chill? more pronounced iince cacti came into 3150.001 on their Zlst birthday. "Don't believe it! It's not lruc." cried Yvonne. when a reporter referred .to mile Dionne's statement that the ouin-is hadn't "even seivt a rant" at Christmas. Yvonne said: "We did send one. Can we help ti if lihetv did-nit get it?" FNITEI) A'l' HOSPITAL Yvonne and Cecile now are in their -second year of nursing Tom Collins Originator Dies ST. LOUIS iAPi-"I'll have I drink like that one you make for Tom." John Diftrlch. I bartender at the Old Planters lfotel in the early 1900s. knew this meant gin, lime. sugar and lemon. Members of the Diitrich family say Dit- trich named the drink for the customer who habitually ordered it---Tom Collins. . St Louis news open Tuesday. "1 Fenortlng-Dlttrl,clt'e death of I twirl attack Christmas Eve at tn. credited hlni with originating the drink. Coming Events Movies Hampton Hall Friday 7-ts. Cards Hall toni Dance in Mt. lath Ill NI! Thursday night. Salvation Army Chrlahu Con- cert Thursday It 1.I. - Dunstaffna e .Y.P.U. Ionctt gdgshfieid all Wednoaday night Itllld Irohilolo. Vlltsblre ii . . New Year's Dance Mt. Itawart Memorial Hall Friday. Inna N- chestra. ' ' D aniline nail. 'I'liuF:dc:y. wobau'eu&IatI. r. A. mum. can-uti Ierrtsa. Dance Went IIII. '& nesday. Rollie M 'I tra. Canteen sarvioa III b nil. Card party in Belfast lali. Mon- day. January 2nd..- at I p. in. Lunches. sponsored by lildon. W. Buying pigs Thursday at bd- ericton. Paying 816 I pair for good pigs over 32 lbs. each. Will also buy smaller ones. land -loruaseii. ton special meeting of the P. I. l. Guernsey Breeders Association to '30 held in Department of Agri- culture landing. Charlottetown. training at the Notre Dame dt l'Esperance Hospital in subur- ban Ville St. Laurent. The other two surviving qulnts. Marie and Annette. had been patients in the hospital. receiv- ing treatment for a run.-down condition. until last week. when they were discharged in good health. it was thought they would spend Christmas at Callander. but reporters learned Tuesday they went to an exclusive apart- ment house at suburban Mont- real West. It was their first Christmas away from borne. 'I'lie apartment was in the name of a nurse-trainee at one httsnital. A door gallv-decorated with a Christmas wreeltli was slammed in a reporter's face. St-ill rinevi is the question of New Year's hwildtivs. Yvonne said Tiuudnv "iilarie and Ann- ette are !1ll)')nSl'(l to be going home" for the holiday. There were cnnfilctinn reports as whether Ct-ctin and-Yvonne will be on rtutv at "H hospital. BLAME "IN'I'RUDP7RS" At North Bay, Oliva )ionnc said he and Mrs. Dionne "have realized for some months that they have been drifting away from us." "Both Mrs. Dionne I nd I blame outside intruders for this separation.” He said that "under no circum- atancas" would be identify the "fiiltn-lxleIn" at this ttime. He led- ded: "It's not something that just happened at this Chris-tmac. We hsve seen it growing for a long time now. We suspected that out- siders were trying to influence the qulnis some years a 0. and we were sure of it by t e way they acted towards us after fliey had left home. and then more so when they reached their 21st birthday and came into their money." C.N.R. Revenue For November Higher MONTREAL iCPt--Net operat- ing revenue of Canadian National Railways for November was S5.- 276.000 from gross revenue of 361964.000 and expenses of 555. 788.000. it was announced Tues- day. In November of last year not operating revenue was 33.975.000. in the CNR'a over-all picture for the first 11 months of "I55. net revenue was s52.9oo.oo' an increase of S.'i9.4lili9.000 over the same period last year. Figures include operating rev- enues and expenses only and do not include taxes. equipment ren- The Guamfia It cnsawfri-:'row'N.TANAna. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1955 has its faults. I think its sessions last much too long. Matters are frequently discussed which are not withinn its jurisdiction.. "But what we have to remem- ber is that every other method of trying to preserve the peace of the world has failed." Lloyd was head of the British delegation at the United Nations from 1052 to 1954. Lloyd said "if is the policy of the government and all parties oi this country. that I world in- strument endowed with the neces- sary authority is the only way to promote peace." He added that ”it would take many years to give that author- Aussie Cify Hos Fierce Si-orm SYDNEY. Australia (AP)-Two persons died in.Sydney harbor Tuesday as the worst electrical storm in the city's history bowled over scores of yachts and cabin boats and blitzed thousands of homes. Holiday makers were chased from the beaches by a blinding, 45-minute display of lightning and crashing thunder accompanied by 60-mile-an-hour winds and torren- tlal rainfall. The two dead-a man and woman - were drowned when their boat overturned. One other man was missing. SEIZE NARCOTICS ROME (AP)-Turkish police and American narcotics agents made a Christmas Day seizure of 660 pounds of opium destined for the illicit U.S. dope market. it was an- nounced Tuesdny. The opium would have been worth half a million dol- lars in the United States. I ll emf Elli; -ills tilt. .. PROPOSED it An architect's sketch of theVpro- Montreal firm of Rother. 'dleiitil.'lu'ard lot the design (if this SEVER- for Ottawa. The and Trudeau has won a s5.0(l0.slorey. posed city hall Freighter From Here Damaged HALIFAX tCPt-The salvage tug Foundation Josephine If left here Tuesday night for Sydney. where the 500-ton Norwegian freighter Seagull put into port with damaged propellor. The tug will escort the freighter to Hall- fax for repairs. The Seagull reported trouble after she sailed from Prince Ed-i ward Island with a cargo of po- tatoes for U. S. ports. a NEWS IN BRIEF V PRAIRIE BLIZGARIT '- EDMONTON. (CPI-The second Prairie blizzard in tlrree weeks dumped more than 10 inches of snow on some parts of Alberta. Tuesday and headed into Manit- oba leaving a trail of below zero. temperatures. - FLOODS SUBSIDE SAN FRANCISCO. (AP)-A fair weather forecast Tuesday less ened tension in flood ravaged noriihern California. Rivers there and in southern Oregon dropped sharply as the death toll re- mained al 41-win California and 12 in Oregon. T0 SURVEY CEYLON TORONTO (CF) A Photo- graphic Survey Corporation air- craft took off Tuesday from Mal- ton airport for Ceylon to start I photographic survey of the island Commonwealth country's resour- ces. The survey is part of Can- ada's contribution to the Colombo Plan. JEWISH l.l-ZADER HERE TORONTO i(iPi eMrs. Bernard Cohen. presidcnt of the National Council of .1:-mxh Women in Aus- tralia. will nrrirr in Canada Jan. 2. the rnllnrll's office here an- nounced Tiicsrlay Mrs. Cohen is the second wnnimi chosen to visit Canada and the United States under the Council's travel 'ellow- ship programme During her visit to Canada illrs ('nhcn will Silldy the social work of the council. EISENHOWER HOLIDAY WASHlNCT(t.N i.-ilii-President Eisenhower will fly to Key West. Fla.. today inr ahniit two weeks of sunshine and cvrrclse recomend- tale and fixed charges. New Chemical Possible Clue To Mental Illness ATLANTA, GI. (AP)-A chem- feel that can produce temporary "silliness" in normal people may be a. clue to at least ontcause of Ieiuaophnala. elation he he Science I coda, A Ca scientist ropvrtcd to the organisation's Iliad annual mating. that I-clll1Mtll' ienlvad from adrenalin. one of ”- key substances of'tiie hum: body, 001!”-WIIOI . nut. lnal, volunteers-produce "hang. very .Iimliar to the primary changes characteristic of achin- lthrenin. or "split pcrsossltlygos. of the maior mental manna. Dr. Abram lloffer. director of psychiatric, research at Uiilveral Hospital. Saskatoon; said the I ficlal production of these changa by I derivative of adrenalin tht this Many. go It in p.ni. Crapanl llhl tonight. skating ft time Thursday . 'I loan! of Rat sllo crank vs. 3... 1 kl 'r- rlittis1;'1'ltinU1'ir i ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. iCPl-Sc of parishioners who knew him as "the people's bishop" paid final tribute Tuesday to Rt. Rev. Phil- lip Selivyn Abraham. Anglican bis- hop of Newfoundland. who died many became eligible Tuesday for big weapons shipments from the United States. as a full ally of Western democracies. ' money. West German Charge d'Af- faires Albrecht von Kessel form- ally handed over his government's ratification of a mutual defence as- sistance agreement. modern American weapons to he- gin flowing into West Germany to I , help. create ,a..Garxna;n.,u;p:y. of ;12 divisions along with naval and air force units. of perhaps a billion dollars worth of military equipment. already have been earmarked for the Ger- mans from previous foreign aidtTuesday after I short illness. West Germa For Weapons From U.S. WASHINGTON (AP I -West Ger- In a brief state department cere- Thia act cleared the way for Some of these weapons. the first HALI lbilize their 250.000-man army with- tau. .. A4.-.1 c..,,,. OTTA in stone-andvglas building. ny Eligible funds and stockpiled in Europe. The West Germans hope to mo in three years. adding air force and navy contingents by the end of the fourth year. The document deposited at the state department. approved by the German Parliament.was signed June 30 It was negotiated after the 14 Atlantic Pact allies agreed last May to accept West Germany as the 15th member of NATO. Ely Culbertson Dies In Vermont l BRATTLEBORO, Vt. (AP)eEly C u l b e r t I o n. .64, internation- ally famous bridge authority. died l WA Proposed cost is 32,625,000. t HOWE FORECASTS NEW B00 Slalesrnen Defend U.N. Against Failure Criticism (CP Photo! blew Home For "ereaved Family PICKERING. Ont. (CPl-Neigh- hors combined to make it as good a Christmas as possible for the Ronald Gulliver: who home and three of their six chil- dren last Oct. 5 in I fire. lost their On Christmas Eve they moved nto a five-room. furnished bun- galow which had been built in a race against time by their neigh- hora. The Gullivers' friends. who be- gan building the home right af- ter the fire. worked late into the night all last week to complete the house. when the Gulliver: moved in they found a Christmas tree and I turkey dinner. cooked on I neighbor": stove. POWERFUL ENGINE A new diesel locomotive for Brit- ish railways develops 8.300 horse- . power and weighs only 106 tons. here Thursday. SEEK HUGE DAMAGES NEW YORK (AP)-Sperry naatl Corp. Tuesday filed a civil .antl- lrust stilt against International iusiiiess Machine Corporation ask- ing 90,000,000 damages for al- legedly monopolizing the tabulat- ing machine business. OFFERS PEACE TALKS JERUSALEM (AP)-Israeli Pra- mler David Ben-Gurion has of- fered to meet with Egyptian au- thorities to "do everytliing 5105-: slble to restore peace." an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman said Tuesday. PLANS MINING I'RO.IE("T LAC BEAUFORT. Que iCPl- Steel magnate Cyrus S l-Salon of Cleveland. Ohio. annoiim--d Tucs- day he soon will place licforc the Quebec government plans to start iron ore mining in thc suharzictlc region between Hudson strait and Ungava Bay FIRE GUTS FACTORY HAMILTON .tCPI Firemen worked in sub-rero temperatures Tuesday to quell names that swept I frame. one-storey rubber factory The fire caused heavy damage to the production dcpartmentt of the Novelty Rubber Company but there was no immediate estimate of the loss. Howard Smith. ii company spokesman. said flames did "tre- mendous damage" to equipment ed by his doctors "adrenolutin" and it ls derived from gnofhpr chemical railed "sdrenochrome." which. in turn. is derived from ndrcnalln. CAUSES CHANGE The scientist virclarcd that pre-4 vlous lasts hat: -hown that adren- oe .when tidminlsterrvi to normal people. rriultl also nuse temporary schizophrenia ' l k e Fchanges. The new finding with a break- down product of arlrenochrome. he said. bolsters the theory that an abnormally produced body chem- ical derived from adrenalin may be "I cause" of schizophrenia. When adrenolutin was admin- istered 'In normal volmileei-s.he relates. it produced "marked thought rltsoi-oer. lttanvrnvrimn- up of moms, reduction or removal of anxiety without any insight in the turnout that change has or.- and the building. and behavior inappropriate to the situation." In another report to the meeting two Cleveland researchers an- nounced flirt-ht! findings reg ' I previous report by them benzpyrene. "I we'll-known cer-product egent' is presc- the smoke in eigaret paper. VERIFY FINDINGS 'I'hIY utd thoyhad improved their research techniques so as "to burn whole cigarets under as not mi- in n. mayhem?" CONFERENCE succssrro Christmas Holiday Toll Raises Weekend Fears CHICAGO tAP -- The record Chr.stfnss holiday traffic toll in the United States raised hopes- and fears-for the New Year weekend just ahead Deaths on streets and roads during the Yule wcekciid reached the 600 mark for tho first time in any holiday period. The final tabulation shoireil 605 traffic deaths. There were 68 deaths in fires and 105 from a variety of other acrizlcntal causes. The over-all total was 778 In Canada. with about l-lflth of the population and loss than l-10th of the cars. in traffic deaths were reported, ll ncrsnns died in fires and six in other accidents for I total of 85. The North Anicrirsn toll of mm: than 650 deaths in auto accidents prompted Attorney-General Kelso Roberts of Ontario in call for an international con”:-rt-nce to discuss means of contrnllimz what be de- scribed as a "cancerous growth somewhere in the automotive field of endeavor." ' ..I would like to set in motion I call for a movement heading to a hemisphere confer- ence at top levels of government, manufacturers and builders. and enforcers to find the answers and apply them." he said in Toronto. QUns'l'loNs PICTURE , "How much longer will in civil- ized nation create or endure such Ned H. Denrborn, president of the U. 5. Safety Coun- cil. asked in I statement. "Let us hope and pray that the slaughter we have lust expe- ror WENT Loottmo son sanra cuus TORONTO (CF) - Three- year-old Cami Hall said she wanted to be sure to ace Santa Claus. Io Christmas Eve she went out to look for him. She was found at 1:3) a.m. Christmas Day. dressed only in her pyjamas. I pair of red socks, and her father's snow shnel. wander:..., down an east- end street. A couple who saw her took her into their borne ni..l1.ts..- ma rlenced will cause all of us to' make and keep a New Year's resolution to drive better. not only over the New Year's holiday. but-' from here on in.” The Christmas holiday period .was from 6 p m.iiocal time) IFrlday to midnight Manda y- Friday and continue for the same lcngih of time Christmas fatalities. was fear that history might repeat. During the four-day Christmas .ihe record Just shattered .:..:m wi "' FAMILY MA A loll nil Ilium: asvoanieainnlfor on-fa Ira2il.g Southern Alberta honinaf was hope among safety leaders that it would inspire caution in the New Year that followed. In- stead a traffic death record for a period-407 deaths- New Year was esiabllshcd. BEAT ESTIMATE counted as lhi-cc days although it The "am" m” i" W3 -V9”'3 actually was 73 hours. The New Chilsim” ,, .yN". period Wm hog." It 5 p m National Safety Councils advance period cstlniatr of 560 i The 1955 tnlal nf pimus record for a three- i7.'i-I in 1950. l The record all-accident death toll for any holiday was estab celebration in 1952 motor Vfllll('lf'.ilIs'l1Pl'l during the three-day Inde- fntnllties numbered 556. That irasipcnrlcnce Day holiday this year. exceeded the accidental While the rounrll pinned new.rlcatli: nf all kinds topped the pre- iycar hopes on ”-shock" reaction to there also Christmas period. That total was day (Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew lniecis Cauhon OTTAWA, (CP)-Trade Canada in 1956 but injected buying too much too fast. The 1955 boom. nessme-n. go," he said. "Given appropriate restraint on the! part of all groups in the i expansion appear bright indeed." "Considering the rcrcnt tempo." he said at another point. "the sur- prising thing is the degree to which the economy has thus far been. free of those strains and I-xcesses which cvelltualiy lead to vlclerlora- PACE REGULATED "Some materials are in short supply. credit is tightening and in- terest rates have risen These fact- ors. however. are simply a reflec- tion of current marlzet strength. In the present circumstances they are not likely to dampen expan- sion but they may on the other hand. provide a necessary means of regulating its pace." The scarcity of some materials is expected to continue in 1956. In fact this scarcity may he an im- portant limiting factor on the size of next year's capital investment program, Mr. Howe said. In 1955, Canadians excelled them- selves in many ways. The gross Corfoonisi Hum Fisher Dies NEW YORK (AP)-Ham Fisher. 54. nreator of the comic strip "Joe Palooka." I favorite for decades. was-found dead '.Neldiy1!fIM”I,h his Madison avenue studio. Fisher's wife. Marilyn. became worried when the cartoonist failed" to return home after a day at the drawing board. She sent a friend to his studio. The friend found Fisher dead on a couch. Fisher. a sell-taught artist. be- gan his career on his hometown newspaper. the Wilkes-Barre. Pa.. Rccordlie emigrated to New York and in 1930 he started "Joe Palrioka" with tlie.McNaught Syn- dicate. At the time of his death the strip was syndicated in some M0 newspapers. When it started "Joe Palooka" was about a not-too-bright young man who was projected into the boxing business by a cocky. fast- ialking haberdasher namedl Knobby Walsh. CONSTANT CHAMPION i It didn't take Joe long to win the world's heavyweight cham- pionship and be kept the crown far longer than any of his real-. life prototypes. i As the years went by. Palookal changed He didn't look quite so. much like a yokel. and his gram-l mar improved cnnslderably.He. married a well-horn girl named. Ann Howe and took up respectable-' suburban life. But he never grew older. and the championship never left his pos- session. although in later years Joe became sportsmanllke to a fault to his opponents and always tried to give them a break in their hopeless qucsi for the crown. T. . EV i -,4. - up i. . M of Laruldru do hi. gathered around to show Mrs. Mo holdiagnborothy. they arrived at th Combe hundreds of snapshots and Mrs. Mu. 'Iouven' . of the l5.o0tHnils trip. insert photo shows Mr. Orr. 8 r joinstorr'I bother. lira Charlotte lfe- From the laftare Jimmy, I; Rob- Jamaa combo of Champion. The family art. 15; Trudy. 9; McCom1t;o ; Jean. 14? and Joey, IT Jouev Esther. YEAR forecast another big year of economic expansion for Canada's best economic year in history, is "solidly based," he said in his year-end re- view. But whether "speculative excesses and other dia- locnbing influences" develop will depend on future atti- tudes and decisions of individual consumers and busi- Canada's reom-rl expansion ”still has some way to national product a value of all economic:go0ds and services produced-rose community, prospects for a relat- by an vely prolonged period nl Cyt)fl0H1lCi;;4.0B00'I(l:)g?(;g) hiuher in 1956. Some of hiI.0m- rials nearly W crease was in volume. some of the tion. liiio increase is expected to ciude higher prices-the result of pressure of demand on I limited supply of amine goods. CONSTRUCTION AT PEAK Tniaih Slight Noie Mirliniler Howe Tuesday a note of caution against unusually high 10 per cent 000.000 from Mr. Howe believed it will go still later said it may reach 328.000.000.000. However, hlle virtually all of the 1955 in- A ...... in- In 1055. records were made in other economic fields. Oullaye for construction and other capital in- vestment will exceed the depart- ment's 36.000.000.000 mid-year fora- cast, the of 1954 and the previous high of in 1953. And there may be another increase in 1056. Mr. I-Iowa said. A record of 126.000 new home: was completed in i955. up from 102,000 in 1954. The question on the minds of many officials was: Can Canada keep up this high house- bullding place? Mr. Howe observed the carryover of unfinished lionsea was much higher at the end of 1955 than in 1954. Officials placed it at 73.000 dwellings. up from 00,- 000 last year. They said this record carryover will be an important in- fluenoe over the whole 1956 houn- ing program. xportain liasniovoduptoar estimated high of If.350,m,1JilI:”'I gain of 12 per cent over 156.co- peak in volume and equivalent the 1952 record value. And in ' is no major sign of slackening on the exports front. Mr. Howe Ioid. Ha argued that the current shift in Canada toward export industries is not necessarily a one-aided de- velopment of the economy. Such a shift was likely to be associated with continuing growth in continued on page 1, col. I ronorrro (CPI-Temparltlmll issued by the public weather of- fico: Min. Max. Night Day Dawson ... ..(7b ?4b Vancouver . -- 3" Victoria . .. . .35 5'0 Edmonton 9b 6b Calgary .. 5b 2b Regina ...l7 '97 Winnipeg .. ...i9 .13 Toronto... . D 21 Ottawa ... ... 5 17 Montreal .. .. ... ... 8 31 Quebec .. ... ... ... 3 1! Fredericton . . ...13 34 Saint John ...12 21 Moncton . . ...1S 3 Halifax . 29 Charlottetown .. .. ...2l ff Sydney . .1 3 Yamiouth .. .. ...so I St. John's .. .. ..24 if HALIFAX (CPI-The weather office reports a high pressure area centred near North Bay. Ont. is moving east and will cross the Maritimas tonight. Un- til then little change in weather is expected. Thursday southerly winds are likely to bring a thaw to eastern Canada. Regional forecasts: Northern Nova Scotla. Prince Edward Island. New Brunswick: Variable olondineea with a few light Inowflnrries: not much change h temperature: northerly gow II and II. Charlottetown II and IS. Mom-ton. Fredericton and saint John IO and I. llrnaaO- ton and Calnpbellton I and I. High tide today at Charlottetown "at 10.10 mm. and 9.17 pm. sun- niarsfde tide alghtan minutes lat- er than Charlottetown. sun rlaesat'l.ua.n.andIda at us pan. winds 15. bow-high It New Glan-- ' :x.-: g -:h.-.4.-a...-, .. .-.. .-.; I l .