CFCY W CHANNEL 13 FRIDAY .00 p.m.—Atternoon Musicale :15 p.m.—-MoVie time _. 2:45 p.m.—l\'ursery School Time 3 00 p.m.—-Adventures of Hiram Holiday 3:30 I.m.——Howdy Doody 4:00 p.111. Hidden Pages 4:30 p.m.—-Open House 5:00 I.m.—P. M. Party 5:30 p.m.-—Mighty Mouse Playhouse 6:00 p.m.—Sword of Freedom 6:30 p.m.—Christmas ream and Rhapsody 6:50 p.m.—CFCY TV News 7:00 p.m.-—Star Performance 7: 0 p.m.—“larlybird Theatre 9: I: 0: W 00 pin—Here’s Duffy 9 0 p.m.—The Plouffe Family ll 00 p.m.-—Patti Page 1 30 tam—Country Hoedown 11:00 p.m.-—Cavaicade of Sports— Iz:00 p.m.—CBC TV News 12:15 a.m.—Viewpoint 12:22 a.m.——Friday Playhouse CKCW — Moncfon CHANNEL 2 ' FRIUA! 1:00 p.m.-—Friday Playbill News, Weather, Sports Movie: East Side of Heaven 2:30 p.m.—-At Home. With Helen Crooker 2:45 p.m.—Nursery School Time .A 8:00 p.m.—Adventures o! Hiram Holiday 8:30 p.m.—At Home With Helen Crocker 4:00 p.m.—Hidden Pages 4:30 p.m.~—Open House 5:00 p.m.-—P. M. Party .30 p.m.—-Mighty Mouse p.m.—Supper Club p.m.—News p.m.4upper Club p.m.-—Weather p.m.-—Supper Club p_m.—Spotlight On Sport! p.m.—David ’ Grief p.m.——The V se p.m.—Tenessee Ernie Ford p.m.—The Rifleman p.m.-——Here's Duffy n.m.—The Plouffe Family 10:00 p.m.—Patti Page 10:30 p.m.—Country Hoedown 11:00 p.m.—Cavalcade of Sports 11:45 p.m.—Jim Coleman Show 12:00 p.m.-—CBC TV News 12:15 a.m.—CKCW News 12:20 a.m.-—Showcase Johnny O’Clock ’ RADIO C.F.C.Y. FRIDAY 58 i 5 6 6 6: 6: 6: 6: 7 7: 8 8: 9: 9: sasgassens (STANDARD TIME 6.58 Sign On 7.00 Hebrew Christian Hour 7.15 Country and Western Round up 7.30 News and Weather ~ 7.35 Country and Western Round- up 7.40 Cites Cooper Time 7.55 Interlude 8.00 News 8.11 Weather 8.13 Country and Western Round up 8.45 Weather 8.150 News 900 Morning Devotions 9.10 Morning Moods 9.30 Top Tune Time 9.45 Who Am I 9.55 Interlude 10.00 News 1“ 05 Magazine of the Air 10.30 Salada Quiz 10.35 Melody Parade 10.45 Swift Money Man 11.00 News Headlines and Wea~ ther 11.02 Women’ Institute Bdcst. 11.17 Magic of Music 12.00 Weather 12,05 Rhythm Round-utp 12.30 News and Weather 12.45 Mostly Music 1.00 News Headlines and Wes ther EOE—Mostly Music. 1.17 Mostly Music 1.45 One Man‘s Family 2.00 School Bdcst 2.15 Mostly Music 2.30 Back to the Bible 3.00 News Headlines and Wea- tlter 3.02 Best. On .equest 400 News and Weather 4.05 Best on Request 4.30 The Outports 5.00 News Headlines and Wea- ther 502 The Outports 600 News 6.10 Interlude 6.15 Music for You 6.30 News and Weather t1.35 Music for You 7.00 Sports Roundup 7.05 Music For You 7.30 News and Weather 7.45 Don )lesser‘s Islanders 8.00 Tonight's Music 9.00 Assignment 10.00 News and Weather 10.15 Starlight Serenade 10.30 Rhythm Is Thiesr Busi- 12355 11.00 Cavalcade of Sports 12.00 Dominion News 12.10 Sign Off CBA FRIDAY DAYLIGHT TIME 7:15—Marine Weather and Fill 7:30—News 7:35—AM Chronicle 8:00—C'BC News and Weatha 8:15—Mfaritime Sportscast 8:20—A. M. Chronicle 8:45—Morning Devotions 9:00—News 9:05—A.M. Chronicle 9:55—News 10:00—Nationa1 School Broadcast 10:30—A. M. Chronicle 10:45—J0an Marshall. 10:55—For Consumers 11:00—CBC News 11 : (IS—Showcase llzlS—Kendei‘garten of the Air ll:30——Unl\'el‘slly of the Air 12:00—Jamboree Junction. l2:30—-.\laritime Farm B‘cast. 1:00—(LBC News and Weather 1: l5~Record Program :30—~Operat€c Highlights rig—D 0. Time Signal .OII—Atlaiittc School Broadcast 8 The Guardian, Charlottetown. Fri.. Dec. 25, 1953 WAS SAVED FROM DEMOLITION BY SIR ISAAC REBOAI IN 1727 $0 #5 COULD HAVE THE SATISFACT/M 0F 5500514771“ IT AS A BURDEN 70 HI! WASTREL MD PENN/LE.“ WWSW NOT it) RATTLES uses IN ANCIENT EGYPTIAN oncussms wens MADE IN THE mAmmen mmosmumflu gunman CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER You an seats, sou: sides vui-' net-able. 'nie bidding has been: tut South West North 1. Pass 1‘ Pole 8. has 4. Ps- Be Well cord do you choose as your opening lead in each of the following four hands? 1. .110 85 ex; .1042 4.1073 :. ¢J7s exit Mes 4.1m 3. 43533 V013 685 “I982 s. .10 .1093: “(52 Miners 1. Two of diamonds. The blind lead, partner never having bid, frequently presents a difficult choice of plays, and this hand is typical of the uncertainties of the opening lead. The trump lead is recommend- ed because there is a good chance, on the bidding, that dum- my has distributional values and is short-suited (probably in clubs) Repeated trump leads may there- fore cut some of dummy’s ruff- ing power. Any other lead is in- herently dangerous and may re suit in the loss of a vital trick. 2. King of hearts. This radical lead is based on the hope that partner has the queen of hearts. If this turns out to be the case, there is a reasonable chance that the queen will win a «trick, that a heart mfif will follow, and the trump ace will score the setting trick. N.B. Livestock NEWCASTLE (CP)—— Decision to form a local artificial insemin- ation unit was given unanimous approval by a representative group of Northumberland County CHARLIE’S FLING OVER LONDON (API~Charlie the homesick horse was home and safely corralled Sunday night. trapped by a farmer's cunning and a herd of bullncks. The ruse foiled Charlie's at- tempt to hoof it back 300 miles westward to his native Wales, “You don‘t know how re- |said his owner, Mrs. Anne Tomkin. “Charlie is six now and really old enough to know better." Charlie set out fmm the Dun- mow, Essex, f. m of the Tom» kins more than a week ago. with the apparent intention of fording rivers. crossing rail- roads and dodging police until he ended up in the Welsh county of Cardiganshire where he was born. A farmer at Baldock. in Herb fordshire. sighted Charlie at that town 50 miles due west from Dunmow. He thought nothing of it until he saw the missing Charlie stories in the newspapers. man. They fig u r e d Charlie must be hungry, so they drove the butllocks down to the cattle yard to eat. \ “Charlie, being sweet natur- ed and very hungry, followed and was duly rounded up," Mrs. Tomkin said. “They ship- ped him home Saturday." 3:00—CBC News and T-C Mat— inee 4:00—Daydreaming 4:30—0ttawa Concert 5:01—Maritime Fish Broadcast 5:30—The Don Tremaine Show 6:00—News and Weather 6:15——Regional Commentary 6:20—Maritime Sportscast 6:25—Musical Interlude 6:30—Rawhide 6:45 Roving Reporter 6:55—Byline 7:00—Music in the Evening 7:30—Fall Festival 7:45—The Enchanted Hills 12:00—Caravan Quiz. 8:30—Gerald Rutridge 8:45-Maritime Comment 9:00—Curious Canadiana 9:30— Now I Ask You 10:00—Song‘s of my People 10:30—Concert I Hall 11:00—CBC National News Round up. 11:30—.\ athan Cohen lnteI‘I'Iews l31~3"‘-‘ slit—The. Happy Gang filo—Woman In My House 12:00—Here‘s The Weather In"! Sign Of! lieved I am to have him back," ‘ He called the village police- I QUIZ In the previous hand, where spades were moderately tied up. so that the suit could not be readily established and run, a passive defense was adopted. But here, where there is little hope of winning three defensive tricks on stri'ght play, the attack is bold. Ultra-safe leads too often turn out to be ineffective. 3. Queen of hearts. With this trickless hand the best chance seems to be that partner has either the ace or king of hearts .as well as a side trick. The neart lead may well prove to be suc- cessful if this is the situation. A club lead, to be effective, vir- tually requires partner to h a v e two high honors in the suit. There is less chance of finding th0 club honors with partner than one high heart honor. It is true the queen of hearts lead may turn out bad- ly if dummy has A-lO x or K-lO—x and declarer has the missig should not deter the Opener from making the most promising lead. 4. Ten of spades. Leading the top card of a sequence, such as the queen. of clubs or ten of hearts, is generally a desirable lead, but the singleton lead has a far greater chance to beat the contract. It must be assumed partner has one trick, otherwise the cause is hopeless. The de- fense is planned on the basis partner will at one stage take a trick, give 'us a spade ruff, and that the king of diamonds will provide the setting trick. Owners Form Artificial Insemination Unit livestock owners at an organiza- tion meeting held at the North- timberland (Xi-operative h e r e under the chairmanship of J.C. Fredericton. A provisional board of five was appointed from the 10 charter members who signed the applica- tion seeing incorporation under the Cooperative Associations Act. Lusing the requested name of Miramichi Artificial Breeding Oo- operative Ltd. The decision to form a local =unit resulted from a survey con- ] ducted among livestock men in the ‘Chatham-Newcastle milshed. Cat- tle owners in the area signified their intention of having approxi- mately 1,000 cows inseminated by . artificial means. This has been the only county in the province not served at least partially. by a breeding unit. All ‘ such units are affiliated with and. Ireceive assistance and supplies from the central unit in Freder- icton, directed by Dr. Moore. Prince Edward Isl-and is also {served from this centre. The local unit will require the jservices of an inseminabor, who ' will receive additional training at Fredericton. The position is being adventised with applications re- l I l ‘ 12; ‘ 13. high honor, but this, possibility Bennett and Dr. D. G. Moore of - ; quested to notify the district agri— . ‘Iculturalist A. W. Hutchison, for I further particulars. l A follow-up general meeting ‘will be held early in the new year, when a pemanent board 'witih officers willl be appointed. Won’t Steal Immigrants OTTAWA thl—Australia does not subsidize immigrants from Canada because it does not want to "steal" people from a Com- monwealth country which seeks to attract immigrants, Acting Australian High Commissioner F. T. Homer said Tuesday. “Canada is a migration coun— try and a member of the Comv monvwealth,” Mr. Homer said. "There is an unwritten agree— ment that Australia will not at- tempt to steal people from Can- ada." However. he said Australia wel— comes Canadians and “does everything possible to help those who decide to settle in our coun~ try." )lr. Homer was commentm; on at Dec. 21 announcement by Aus— tralia that ii will pay about $160 toward the fare of every Amcrr can who Immigrates to Australia. .The subsidy also applim "I an» proted migrants from Denmark. ‘Suerlen, Norway, Finland and ISwuzerland. DAILY CROSSWORD c! It") O l L ACROSS 4. Property 22. Hebrew Hrbrew IL.) prophet stringed Clues tposs.) 1. 5. 5 p H O S T E R instrument 6. Peel 23. Units 5. 7. Mast China, of Kind of J span. pressure leather etc. (phya.) Artist’s Aver Boy stand anew helper S‘shaped Scotch at Mass moldings and Speck Ascend 11. Reduce Harass Unexploded 15. Topped bomb 17. Hastenl Football 18. Blunder shoes 21. Tree of Robin Trinidad Hood‘s men Like ‘ French river . Apportion 23. Thirteen 26. High cards 27. Ripped 28. Recto (aber . Goes 32. Related 35. Mrs. Cantor 36. Colorers 37. Fests 39. Grub ~-——— 40. Supreme Being (Mon) Formerly (archaic) 42. Fail to hit: DOWN 1. Foretell 2. Caraway cookie 8. Poem DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR l BLONGIELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this mp1: A i used for the three L'sfx for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. apostrophies, the length and formation of the words are m hints. Each day the code letters are different. AGryptogramQquon _ MVL MVCS'r I"! MVA. GPBVFCT cx MVA AJFMCSFHW GVKl'l—MYKGYA- SHO. Yesterday’s 'Cryptoquote: GOD REST YE, MERRY GEN- TLEMEN: LET NOTHING YOU DISMAY—MULOCK. 10. 8. 24. S Omlzlo<x> TlmI m—Inn-‘o PZ" N E N U T l A 9. SE 6 25. 29. 30. Old Norse 83. Shakespeare works Part of window frame 14. . in km; 34. Vexes 37. Millpond 38. High priest 15. 81'. 16. 19. 20. 41. WHAT HAPPENED? some BOY HAS BEEN BRINGING ETTA HOME AT A GOOD Houe How's THE FAMILY." - Bur II= ouo CA2 IsN-r IN ms GARAGE 5y MIDNIGHT HE CAN‘T USE IT FOR WANTS To AWEE . \n y C 2’ NOPEIHE CAN saw our As LATE AS HE a ‘ ‘1‘ _’ g. I ’rré ., ’ I {.3 1 V; 11,0/ « l '51::- ‘l “‘6 EU” t. "We. ' "N I MUGGS & SKEETER ' I - , You DON’T HAVE W . § To TELLME MIA? - ,. I-ll, ‘é'fl'l’ g Youeonlon ;: €. ARTHUR... : s 3“"? s CHRISTMAS... o ,1 " fl . é . r lllful, Kill! “we H) AND GUESS . WHAT i’M GONG To 651' FOR NEXT J. CHRIGTMAS... ll" meme CHOICE MEEFZSCHAL‘M F012 CHRISTIIASAHTLE 1., REALIZING 1 AM Now -' EARTIAL TO CIGARS! u... PERHAPE ONE OF You WAGS HA5 SOME UNWANTED GIFT soon CAQE: To / TABLETS, . GOOD Fog ' snoezmamt. CHOICE OF oaway‘ AT MANILA BAY, 02 TEDDY LEAD- ING THE CHARGE AT SAN JUAN GRANDMA TILLY THE TOILER SECRET AGENT X-9 THE LBNE RANGER -.——.— Stewart MacKay JOE PALOOKA LI'L ABNER H-M/ WHV DOES GR’ANDMA ALWAYS PUN IN TH OTHEQ DIRECTION WHEN SHE HEAESJ AN AMBULANCE SIREN ? [THINK ’l-EY A'_L LlKE maroon WAcgif’g‘lB pro HEQLQN \.__fi ,, \ ' g. © ,’ \_ \\l‘.1'l",'/’ . ’@T@\.\ ., ' ‘ ILL GIVE e 30K AT ms WELL! OF ALI. THE Low, NEXT if"? OMECNE A 1:0 T1 @000 CHEAPst n’ o s “ L E NPIMAGINE PULLING WHOU-‘PFRWW A STUNT - \\ LIKE THAT! ” O ’c. GET FIRESTo—N? rowu & couumr I": That nug, A . . . be sure now that you won't have 9 ' f. d those “wintertime blues" for winter driv- I ing. Bring your car to us have us install s a pair of Firestone Town and Country Nir- treads. And have carefree drivmg ul ’ NUTREADS ' l ' winter long. . FIRESTONE HOME 8. AUTO HOME AND AUTO CO. LTD. ASSOCIATE STORE 187 Great George St. "We Trade Tires Dial 5547 24 cent“! st Dial 3200 5mm ileMmfi’aMtvi‘tufithW I . fire Hands... to snow sort the men. 9'3: I I m Imus ' ., Tau. vou HOW most common “PesssuS' 15....YOU mow WHAT HA5 BEB‘ REPORTED 0'5 ms: I'LL SEE W IN VIGA‘ MENTIONED IN 1H5 mum's WARM _ on 1143 YEAR, , ISN'T rr? r s In . ls was mas-ae- m: s \ aAII/K mars/es m woos-p? ‘ I H ' . . it o“ ' that. it?” ’1 'w ‘: . . . In...“ I 3‘ ‘ “‘Kfiwmflllmiflflmlmm . DRESS THE KIDDIES WARMLY FOR WINTER You'll find plenty of smart warm clothes for the kids at S. A. McDONALD'S and at prices that will please you. Choose from our wide selection of Car Coot-s. Snow Suits. Hats. rrr Children’s Department I W. TCI-I,TCH...StE SIDRE DI I I g evsusvummreg'i: AH-‘W'VE GONETOSLEEPN ‘ ' THANK You. MISS r you our m. eve some as “'5 CELLAR “DOW-HERE! N0 A v’gtlnmiowgu CERTAMY M‘FOOD T'THAT PORE, $30ng mica/II KEE?ING fin - mm-wom' ARVED A 'smcw.’ ' W ., occsscosu ’ .wv‘ can...“i - n r‘ It 3 vs: 3 [Q i like 4 \9 E. / we've JUST gamma: ‘ UL ABNEZM HEREFUSES 70:47,- ‘ ‘Q’lrr FROM DOGPATCH, THE M0575£ZOVED ppm/K0,? Exact/557 . If" GOOCH !!-\/ou DON‘T BOY IN ALL 71,055 HE’S MAST/AG AWAY/I 9. I “out; _‘ KNOW vousz OWN #1154st 704 SIMPLE/14mm) “Kg .1. * Q“ 1" srasusmeovt! Ava/OED YOKUMS,7Z/E#A77?ED ‘ ; ore/5 COMMUNITY PII CANAL-'45 54734:. 1 TI” Aswan/1' l a .4' \“\\ \-- . p . v “59“: I a R. Q ""»