their wives. Ema Minister Attends Annual May Court Bull I By CAROLYN WILLETI‘ Canadian Press Staff Writer ‘ OTTAWA. (CP)—Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker helped light birth- day candles Friday night as cap- ital society kicked up its heels at the annual May Court Ball. Mr. Diefenbaker, first prime minister to attend the ball, helped pmident Mrs. Harold Mulkins light candles on the May Court club’s fpur-tier, 60th anniversary cake. Nearly 1,000 formally-dressed guests attended the charity ball which served a six-course dinner. dancing, a cabaret and a “prim- Ifose path”—a gavnes alley guar- anteed to shake loose a fcw bank- Tolls and provide funds for club projects. The Diefenbakers had time -£01‘ I dinner and a look at the cabaret. But they left the party early to «atoll an overnight train to To- ronto where Mr. Diefenbaker is to address the Canadian Bar As- soclation. PINK GOWN ’Mrs. Diefenbaker wore a,lilac vink evening gown styled with a draped bodice and I full skirt. She carried a gold and jewel em- broidered evening purse, gift from a group of parliamentarians who brought it back from India. Sixty years ago Lady Aber- V Ileen, will. of s governor-general. Slsarked form~ation.of the Ottawa May Court which’ now also has Iiranches in five ontario cities. ,Governor-General Massey, usu- llly a guest at the ball, was miss- ing this year. He left Wednesday I!!!‘ a holiday in Barbados. Eroihers Make ,Good Singing =HOLLYWO0D (1‘P)-—'l‘his del- lflw Nick Todd looked familiar. N096, he wasn’t related to Mike 'llodd-—that’s not Mike’s real name, anyway. Nor is it NIck’s. The light dawaned when he said his actual handle was Nlck Boone. That was it! In profile, Nick ‘had the same handsome looks as P31 Boone, his brother. Darker “ll 3 Yam‘ younger, Nick is also ‘FY1118 to carve a name for him- self as a singer, and he’: having 301% success. Tonight he ap- llféars with Bob Hope on televi- , 51011. and his records are selling I W611. But he admits that follow- , {"8 a famous brother can have ‘ hazards. Bllorunn HELPS often asked if being Pat hurtnes brother has helped or me, said the tall 22-year- . ‘both were born on June 1 .y°a‘l‘ 8P_art>. “I can only say mes: that it certainly has helped ‘B g°_I my foot in the door.” I All In other respects it can be i-ea Yawback. That's one of the eh5°1lS he underwent a name flllge. I‘ aw:-know that I can never get Pat)’ from the fact that I’m .. S brother,” he explained. of .et°l’1e Will always be conscious cogs-e'l3ut Ithmk they will be. less envious If my name 15 differ- Last 511 be 3 card mmer, when his first Was about to come out, he S associates scrounged argéléld for a new handle. Of all Odd Presented, Nick favored Randy Wood, mentor of head B‘0f0ne boys’ careers ‘and agre 0 Dot records, d1dn’t - 9- But he ca.me around after Was ‘ [ spelled \:<:rd(;Ilt what Todd SAYS HOPE you idked Bob Hope: “It's lIIcky Vn 3311'!‘ record for Capitol. Lofipawll 1e name might to Nick nofilcélq doesn't sport white shoes, bmmgfh. he carbon - copy his (‘ugh In other respects. But tenasi other kind of famous en- N.‘ '19!“ complam of their lot. seems remarkably well “But he has giver. me some ad- vice» He told me that when I OTTAWA‘ (CP)——Housing units sang a song to be sure to Iihink started in December more than about the lyrics and really be- lieve them.“ MORE HOUSING UNITS , PLAN DINNER FOR MEMBERS oI= ELECTRICAL INDUSTRY Plclllred 9-b0Y€. as they finalized plans for National Electric Service League of Prince Edward Isl Kirby, Executive Committee members; A. E. Committee member. Seated are: H. B. Bugd and W. R. Brennan, Chairman of Standard was absent when the picture was taken. Mr. J be guest speaker at the dinner which is bei Electrical Week Feb. 9th to 15th, are officers of the _ , and. Shown, left to right -are: Standing: Neil Maclnnis and J. w. 8"“ “mhm ll" sdminislrwtiw MacLea.n~, Chairman of Finance, and A. D. Cameron, Executive {M §r°P°sal‘ simflar I-° flmse en, Secret ary-Treasurer; W. V. Burke, Chairman of the League, urge by Humphrey’ It is be' started in the month rose to. 8,241 from 4,074 a year ago. For the weapons tests would have to pro- full year 1957 starts were down vide for an inspection system doubled the total for the corres- about four per cent from 127,311 within each testing country and WASHINGTON (AP) — Demo- cratic Senator Hubert Humphrey . of Minnesota said Tuesday U.S. insistence on a package disarma- ment, agreement is “doomed to defeat and ridicule.” He said the United States should break up its proposals and negotiate first for a two-year ban on nuclear weap- ons tests. Humphrey, chairman -of the Senate disarmament subcommit- tee, said no power, least of all Russia, would be willing to ac- cept the U.S. disarmament pack- age “all at one time.” And he questioned, in a speech to the Senate, whether the United States itself would agree to its package “if the Soviet Union were to surprise us by accepting the proposal.” ASKED ASSURANCES President Eisenhower has said a ban on nuclear tests would be ineffective without assurances that an agreement also would be reached on halting the production of nuclear weapons. However, Humphrey said he has ,told Eisenhower there is “no military reason" for insisting on a combination of the two points. The senator said he had dis- cussed this with Harold Stassen, E-isenl1ower’s disarmament ad- vrser, and came away convinced that the proposal to negotiate the points separately is sound. Stassen is reported to have ar- lieved Stassen had little success, S. Dalvay Murchison, also a member of the Executive Committee however, and officials said last . C. Nlcker son, Manager of Northern Electric (Moncton) Ltd., will Weekend it Seems almost Certain ngheld this evening for all members of the electrical industry and Sta5s~°“ will "Sig" 1“ the “ea” future to run tor governor of Pennsylvania. . NEED INSPECTION Humphrey : '.d that any ban on ponding month in 1956, the bur- in 1956. The record was 138,276 near each test site. eau of statistics reported. Units In 1955. trip —- too often? I s..,.... fuses s... .. or A’ He said that the Russians pro- \ With -more than 3 out of S of Canada‘: . ‘_ homes under-wired for eod2y's eiecaical I ‘ living, it‘; likely many of the following ‘aft-I7 Checks apply in your home. warm? 2. Do the electric wires in get hot or the walls around outlets get /1 3. Are there any bare electric wires? 200_r30ampfuscs? 4.. Have you replaced 15 amp fuses? 5. Are there any pennies behind blown 6. Have you had any electrical work done by an unqualified electrician? I ‘pole. by two wires only? 7. Is your house connected to the street 8. Do appliances —- irons, toasters. kettles -- operate too slowly? comes on? 9. Does your TV picture shimmy or shrink when other electrical equipment 10. Do you have to disconnect one appliance to plug in another? *€l.IusIed_ hell 3_Sl<ed II‘ Pal gave him anyl ,_p\}11 his career. “It specifically," he said. tragedy. If you have answered “Yes" to any of the first six questions, you should call 1 qua- lified electrical contractor at once. Faulty wiring is all too often a source of family If you have answered " Yes” to any of the last four, you are suffering frornlan acute, possibly dangerous, lack of HOUSE- POWER. Your electrical utility consumer , service representative will tell you how to \ remedy this lack of electrical capacity. It I will cost less than you think. I BECAUSE.......THEIR HOMES ARE WIRED FOR SAFETY, EFFICIENCY AND HOUSEPOWER Electricity is like any good servant -- badly treated it can cause serious trouble, overworked it will do 3 poof lob. Properly and cflicicntly used it increases your enjoyment, enables you to Live Better -- Electrically. 66584 , U.S. Disarmament Bid ls ;DoomecI To Detect, Ridicule Hepbron recently released his re- port on the city’s crime rate in — NATIONAL ELECTRICAL WEEK sv_TI-IE Northern Electric €0Ml’APL\;!_!MlTED posed a testing ban which, he as- serted, apparently envi aged such safeguards. “We rejected the Soviet pro- posal out of hand,” the senator said‘. . . by rejecting the Soviet proposal, and not giving cogent reasons for the rejection. we let them score another of their many important propaganda victories." Police Dogs Can Keep Order By JOHN LUNDQUIST BALTIMORE (AP) — Nothing strikes the fear of the law into punks, Baltimore's police depart- ment is convinced, like a ‘dog triggered to snarl, pursue, leap and bite.‘ The department found, for ex- ample, that two policemen ac- companied by dogs could keep order in a throng of rock ’n’ roll devotees after a show or a dance where» formerly eight officers were required. _~ The department's K-9 corps- 2l carefully trained German shepherds — has taken over in some of the city’s worst trouble spots for the last year. CRIME DROPS When police commissioner 1957, it showed a drop of 6.5 per cent from the previous year. Hep- bron said that the deterrent ef- fect of the K-3 corps had a lot to do with the improvement. It showed up particularly well in categories where a patrolling dog puts a scare into would-be law breakers, like purse snatch- ers and automobile thieces. Purse snatchings were down from 286 to 192 and auto thefts from 6,182 to 4,836. The police department prob- ably gets more for its money in eager animals than in any other phase of its operations. The dogs —a1l pedigreed—have been do- I "I-‘rIIII:I~‘\' PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST or nafed by interested people. such the corps has many more offers than it can accept. Each officer who has a dog as- ; signed to him keeps it at home‘ when off duty. ~ WORTHWHILE BUDGET The first year’s budget for the dog corps was $13.570—$8.170 for its director’s salary and $5,500 for dog food and medical care. The sheps are trained in the celaring of a wooden area, When the dog has learned to obey com- mands, he jumps hurdles, scales a 71/2 - foot wall, .grabs at a “thugs” wrist protected by a padded sleeve, and sniffs out a “fugitive” in the woods. The dogs also learn to climb ladders and track down a man in a building. The K‘-9s have proved they’re worth their weight in dog biscuits on scores of occasions. Officers use them mainly in an area .of about six square miles in the Rowhouse district fringing the downtown section. It’s full of T PHONE cnarsun 23 I Monday, Feb. 10. 1958 The Guardian Page 11 dark alleys and board fences where a fugitive with a head start could lose a patrolman with- out trouble. RARELY ESCAPE But they rarely get away from the K-9 corps. . The dogs have climbed ladders to get into buildings and track down a burglar in a fraction of the time it would take one or two officers. Sometimes they start the inves- tigation on their own. Patrolling a beat near Johns Hopkins Hos- pital, officer Calvln Fillings saw nothing amiss as he passed a parked truck, but his dog stopped arid snarled at thevehicle. Fillings took a closerlook, saw a head duck -below the dash- board. A 16-year-old surrendered, confessing'he had been trying to hot-wire the truck and steal it. Defend Stamps OTTAWA (CP)—-Labor depart- ment officials took the stand Thursday tr~t if their “do It now” postage-cancellation marks again are baffling People aI31‘°ad~ that’s just too brd. The mark was doing its job nicely In Canada.“ The question arose for the sec- ond time in a year-—in th_e Lon- don Daily Telegraph ,OSSlP col- umn signed simply Peterborough-., The cancel‘ tion is ‘put on mall in Canadian post offices by ar- ’ rangement between the laborand post office departments and Is aimed at encouraging household- ers to undertake odd jobs in the winter when employment is slack. It reads (‘Poutrquoi attendane u printemps (why, wait until spring)” and, to the right, “do It now.” 1' I MORRISON & MacEllCHERN ELECTRICAL, PLUMBING It HEATING CONTRACTORS MEMBERS ELECTRIC SERVICE OF P.E.I. FULLY ENDORSES "RED SEAL" STAN DARD or wIRINe MoRRIsoN and MacEACHE'RN mmrron, no.1. new. Assures your fami comfortable, economics electrical contractor . ; Better—EleCtriCally. Full HOUSEPOWER increases the resale value of your home—old or living. For a more complete HOUSE- ' POWER rating . ; . call in a qualified cI-IEcI< vouR HOUSEPOWER RATING To . LIVE BETTER . . . ELECTRICALLY 0005000IO0OOOOO+0COOO&OO#0fO+64000O$O0OOOfl&4000JO£4000&O0OOO&O4tG Q. Who! Is‘lIIe llolsepower capacity of roll’ smog? ; D 30-amp D 60-amp D I00-amp C] more; I takes at least I00 amp: to operate efiicienfiy The electrical equipment, lights qnd appliances ‘II today's’ homewithsomeullowunce for fuluregrewlb. So check the maid service switclu... make ‘sure I is rated 106 ampere: or «higher. IOOC.OOCDOa.OOCCOCOCIOQOOCGOOOOOOOOOCOOOOIOOOCOOQOOOQOCCCDOC 0. low many electrical zlmils supply your Irene with power? [14 [:16 [:13 Elm I:]I2 [:]more I. Count the fuses or circuit breakers in your electric service panel. In addition to your range, drier and other special circuits, you need at least twelve for modern living with — full HOUSEPOWER. ’ -eoeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeepeeeeeeeeIeeeeeeoeeeeoeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeoo44; , 0. What size fuses do you use? El -I5-amp E] 25-amp ‘D 30sampq A. 15 amperes is sfondard—excepf where otherwise speci- fied. If fuses keep blowing or circuit breakers tripping, it's time to have your electrical wiring checked by e qualified electrical contractor. CCIOICIICCUUCQCCCOIOIOOOOOICCOIIOOCCCCOCO-CC.‘-COO-OOOOIOOIOCOOD0000. Q. How many electrical appliances do you |Iave‘f B5 I310 I315 I320 EI25 Dmore A. To-day you can enioy the convenience of more than 70 different electrical appliances. Full .HOUSEPOWER gives you the opportunity to benefit from all these labour- savers. For your protection, make sure uII»your appliances 1 are Canadian built and CSA approved. 1 guesses-o-eoaeooeeoeoeeeueeeeeeeeeaseeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeceeeeeeaeee "HERE'S ly of clean, I and safe 6 and Live -~ ELEcTRIc sERvIcE LEAGUE oI= R.E.I. BOX 428, CHARLOTTETOWN. ‘ Call a qualified electrical contractor. Check below or In the Yellow Pages for the name of a contractor near you. 9 Call the consumer service department of your electrical utility. 9 Send for "Foch About Electric Wiring for the Home"obIain¢ble FREE from your Elec- tric Service League. WHAT TO DO ’