A .cnaunr-it fab git re pit. ; '5-.4tta.atl:'1.a ”-I-5r&&3i5tI.i&t.. - - -2 . . i 'g. .4 -us-u-7..-. . . ' .&''iT” ' s-..-- . Page l2 The Guardian Wed.. April 10. 1957 DIRECT VOTE Th. ptesident of Venezuela is elected by direct vote for a term of five years. , tit, ,.i i ' M It-sin -N J! D. Winn oust” ' Way TH; PT I iFASHf!lIff FPOM . 50!?!-' TIIIIIMT ; DUE TO COLD When you hm a Suie Throat iiuetoacoldyouwaiitieally tail relief train the paiii. .. and heieis how to get il' lust gaggle three lllllE5 (ldlly with 3 Aspirin tablets dissolved in one-tiiiid ot a glass of water. Vouill teel better last! AIliV0Y5'A:A'p:aIH N E ly AVI J. WILKIE DETROIT tAPl - When Henry; Ford died an era in rugged in- tuv” " ended. A decade after his death at M on April 7. 1947, historians. ec0no- cumstance that made him the out- Decade After Henry Ford's Death Brings No Assessment imists, industrialists. financiers and sociologists still are trying to evaluate his place in industrial history. They do not all agree. Some say it was a force of cir- LONDON (CF) - Chancellor of the Exchequer Peter Thorney- croft, presenting Britain: 1957 budget to Parliament. announced today that the government pro- poses to reduce taxation by .C100,- 000.000 is280.o0o.oooi. Thorneycroft told the Commons there were "some grounds for cheertulness" in the country's eco- nomic outlook. But he stressed the emphasis must still remain on exports at the expense of belt-tightening at home. Cheers from government benches greeted Tborneycroffs as- sertion-. "Against the background of a budget so nearly balanced over- all I can make a reduction in. the burden of taxation by around 21oo.o0o.0oo, t First tax relief went to Britain's hard - pressed entertainment in- dustry - especially theatres and movies-iiliich have been affected Big Tax Cuts Announced In British Budget Speech by television. He abolished the tax on tickets to stage ihz-atrc-. uliich have been hard hit. and slashed the taxes on f!l0lli' tickets by an es- timated l:ts.300.00t) a year. TAX ON SPORT CUT An (ayes lll.'l'P lifted from tick- ets to sports cit-tits. Telexisiou and radio taxes. how- ever, xieni tin---lllill the licences for set miners increased from 123 to 24 a xcai Among tVilit”ii in cuts announced were: One siiiliiiig it-l ('PlllSl off gaso- line -- the iuiiiporary extra levy put on in Der-eiiibcr with the ra- tiomng of petrol alter the closing of the Sin” tiaiial A rt-diirtioii in 13 per cent from (it) per i-ciii -n the purchase tax on dt)1n('si!t' kiiilien iiare. carpets and linnlciiiii anti sortie furniture. British tirnis carrying on busi. ness met.-eas were exempted from int-tiiiie tax and profits tax on for- ei:ii eariiiiiss Shipping and fi- nant-e at-tiiitics xtIl'l1 as banking anti iiisiirani-e will not be included in the proposals. i r- rj South dealer. ll FE N North-South vulnerable. s. NORTH A K Q 7 3 . WORTH IIVIIIG7 W 3 Q J 7 5 2 Th ak li a A 6 4 You knofncoLlils:patavdef:!ling1 i wmsr EAST Itrnaybocau:edhytbeliver.lfyourl.ivet A1094 .352 Inutrtpourouiuptotwopinuofhilcaday QKI07633 '9 tour food may not digest property. gaa bloaui Q Q 10 9 8 6 it iI3I.;'l1T.:2'? til.-i”3.'f:'.L'?l.l'.'.":J."3it as I s Sou;-"10 9 5 2 auld gentle cuter. Little Liver Pllll. Tbeut Iuuoua vcgetabk ptlla help niiinulata the flow Q J G anim mi. Soon yourdigcslionllnrla hinctior Q Q J 3 4 in properly and you feel that happy day: an . A K 4 3 hen again! Don't ever nay Junk, Airway: keep g K -I 3 Carter": Little Liver Pills on hand. The bidding: South Weat North East 1. Dblo Redble Pun Pan: 1 C Pan: Pass 1 NT Pun it NT Opening lead-queen of clubs. . It is interesting to observe how, an the play progresses, declarcr is able to gather information about the makeup of the defenders' CONTRACT sniper By B. JAY BECKER hands. Declarer starts only with the: sight of the 26 cards in d .mmys'i hand and his own. but each tricki played sheds new light on the com-7 position of the opponents' cards un-' til. eventually. declarer reaches af stage in the play where. for prac- tical purposes. he knows each card each opponent has. Once this point is reached it be- comes a relatively easy matter for declarer to achieve his maxi- mum result. This hand. played in a recent tournament. sh o w: how South worked out a sure way to make three notrump. West opened a club and contin- ii-rd the suit when South allowed the queen to hold. Dummys are took the club return. and a spade to the jack lost to the ace. A third round of clubs went to South's king. and the queen of hearts was led and ducked by both West and North. Declarcr could count eight trit-k.s,p two in each suit. The problem was to get a ninth. He led the are of diamonds, and when west showed! out. his problem was solved. E East had started with five dia-' monds for a certainty. He had fol-,- lowed to three rounds of clubs.l Counting the heart East had at-I ready played. he could not have started with more than four spades.' A diamond endplay was therefore sure to succeed. The K-Q of spades and are of hearts were cashed. The count be- came more exact when East failed in hearts and discarded a diamond. Now the count showed East to have. started with five diamonds. one heart. three spadcs and three clubs One card was unknown and It had to be a black one. A low diamond from dummy brought the nine fi'om East, and South allowed it to hold the trick. East cashed his club. the fourth de- fensive trick. htit now had to lead away from his (1-10 of diamonds. declai-er's holding being R-4 and dumm.v'a J-7. in Electric Ltd. on and Electric Ranlar on or Coal Ian. on - Edrigeratora - Vacuum Cleaner! - ll - Quaker Oil Ranger - Cabinet or BEDTIME STORIES Two Ways Of Hunting FPIDIOIIHIII1-K lXIBlIlIIl'I'.A Ihlfbl, f v -- . nu mm C Wu mejmxufmu PW" Th:avy"yam:m.::g It:-;olI"l:l!mIJeC. lei-en unis they were less likel) tgua typo) Furnace Burner: auaraatood.i Inmadlau delivery and installation. Cash. rain or Reeatahllanmlnt Credit and int V. A. 101 Windsor St. Halifax. N.S.. an Great Geufla St. Barlnttattown P. E. L Dial Au). WEDNESDAY : p.m.-Afternoon Musicale 2 p.m.--Sign On : p.m.-Howdy Doody : p.m.-Hidden Pager : p.m.-Hin Tin Tin 2 p.m.-Tales of the Texas Rangers p.m.-CFCY Television News : p.m.-Weather : p.m.- International Har- vester Program . p.m.-TBA :. p.m.-Disneyland p.m.-Cross Canada Hit Parade .. p.m.-Kraft Thcatra p.m.-Black Judge p.m. CFCY Television News 8: Weather p.m.-Wrestling pm.-Sign Off a nausea 888393 gas! 03 33 as 8 8 3 :15 88 POI-I pg... 83 THE WINDMILL I Specializing in TAKE-OUT ORDERS DIAL 1181 CROW -- Menctol Channel 2 Television Programme Schedule WEIIESIAY -Redtnil the Hawk. All members of the Hawk family; are famous hunters They live bvl hunting. They are meat eaters antli their food must be obtained by: hunting. They cannot just find it and pick it up as the eaters nf needs and fruits do. But they do not all hunt alike. 9-74. i t - "I wonder which one will catch a E. altful first." raid Peter. Very many Mice live on the Green Meadows. and Mine are the favorite food of most of the Hawk family and the Owl family, So the Green Meadows are a favorite hunting ground for these hunters. eapoclally for Redtall the Hawk and Harriet. who II sometimes called Tumbler. the Marsh Hawk. Of course they wererlvala. Harrier had one way of hunting and Red- tall had anohter way of hunting and each was sure that his way was better. Probably that was a good thing-ehunt-hag in wholly dif- Im p.m.-!'.hI. concert Hall 1:55 p.nI,-News 1:up,tn.-Farm Program (Net) 2:! p.tn.-Coffee Chatter l:tII pm.-At Home with Helen Cracker 4:0 p.rn.-liiacla Jack at the 4211 MC S:D I23 0:0 0:8 pa.-Early luau :0 an 9 to interfere with each other. Rcdtriil hunted by sitting still. Does that seem a funny way in hunt Rediail is sure that it is the best way. Harrier the Marsh Hawk hunts by flying. He flies low just above the grass where he can look right down in it. He files this way. that way, the other way, ready to pounce the instant he sccs a Mouse or anyone else he wants to catch. It sometimes seem; that he flies all day long. Of couise he doesn't- He stops to rest iiow and then. When he stops to rest it is very seldom in a tree. He usually is on the ground or a post or low mound of some kind. "I don't see any sense at all in huntit g the way that cousin of ours does." iiiaii Ii”.'l3t'iil to Mrs lied- tail. "1 should iliinit he would be tired to death. It is a limisih AYIV of hinting if yo: ask me. He doesnit catch any more than I do And I never wear my wing feathers out flying The way to hunt is to find a good tree at the edge of the Green Meadows and then sit per- fectly still and it atch for the hlice and others to show themselves." Mrs. Redtail agreed that this was 30. Over at the edge of the dear Old Briar-patch. Peter Rabbit and Mrs. Peter were watching Harrier and Mrs. Harrier flying low over the Green Meadows as they hunted for their breakfast. At the same time they could see over on the edge of the Green Forest a lone tree stand- ing out from among the other trees. In it sat Redtatl. He was high up on a bare limb. Probably they Ivouki not have seen him had it not been they were looking that way when Redtail arrived and per- ched tn the tree. "I wonder which one will catch a breakfast first.” said Peter. ''I know which one lim most a- (raid of." said Mrs. Peter. "i know which one youtre moot atrald of." said Peter. "One of those two flying over the gran." replied Peter. "Wrong." replied Mrs. Peter. "You are quite wrong. The one I fear moot in the one over in that tree. it I were a Mouse he iii the one that would worry me most." "Pooh!" Illd Peter. "Vhy that fellow isn't even hunting. H01 Just sitting still." "That in the reason he is most M be feared." retortcd Mn. Peter. 'Vhlcn one" said Mrs. Peter ' standing figure in me autoniotiv. llldltslryz that he appeared on the scene at exactly the right mo- ment. that had ha not developed mass production of motonars some other individual would have done so. some of Ford": critics say he was ruthless when he forced mi- IIOHIY Itookholdera out of the com- pany in 1919 by threatening to sell his own holdings and start a new company. DEDICATED SOME SAY .Otber acquaintances describe him as a dedicated individual - dedicated to an obsession that he was placed on earth for a definite purpose - to provide Jobs for his less fortunate fellow men. They point to his action in boost- hm wages from an average of a und 32.40 a day to 55 a day in 1914, which he described as "a matter of simple justice." It was my good fortune to have been acquainted with the elder Henry Ford for many years. To me Ford was an intensely warm. individual. easy to talk with. Yeti he was never unmindful of the; fact he was the outstanding indus-! trial figure of his era. He was' convinced his greath wealth would enable him to do things that were Impossible. His peac ship. aimed at endingt the First W old War. was impos- sible. lie chartered the steamship Oskar ii in 1915 and led an ex- pedition tit 10 pacifists to Europe. The party wandered from capital to capital and finally disbanded. The venture cost 5400.000. Similarlv impossible was his cf- fort in break the 1932 depression by f'al.slllE wages to increasei "V. 'pi:?ani.a rseen an initial invest- ment of 328.000 BY 55'3"" "Id ' dozen acquaintances grow Into I billion - dollar industrial empire. at. "stubbornness" or "deep- geated convictions". IVGIIIIIIIIY made it wholly f3F!"lY ' 9W5”- tNine years after his death stock in the companygwas made avail- able to the publlC.' , I once asked the automotive pioneer what he considered outstandinz lCh,l9VFm9"t' w'u”" a second's hesitation. he said:. ”Winning the Selden patent Iuit; without that victory the" WWW have been no automobile industry as we know it toda.V-" Ford atone refused to pay WY- alties to the association holding the patent issued to George B. Selden. New York lawyer. for an automo- bile engine. FORTUNES IN DECLINE It is no secret that the fortunes of the empire iicre in a decline when the elder Ford Vncaltd the presidency in 1945. in favor of his grandson. Henry Ford 11. A com- pany statement some months ago said the company was losing money at the rate of 39,000,000 I month in 19-16 - 1; has been said - and never denied A that the elder Ford was confronted iiitli the same ultima- tum he gave his minority share holders a quarter century earlier. ttlemheix til the faintly threatened to sell their stockholdings publicly if he dP(lllllPfl to step down. The elder Ford lived less than two years after his retirement. in GRANDMA MICKEY MOUSE HENRY DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 4. Garment 1. Turkish title border 6 Rurnple I. Like I0. Dull pain 6. Motion II. Precloua ple- atone lure II. Pluck guitar 1. Java atnnga tree 13. Egg-shaped 3. Glut 14. Willing 9. Slim 15. Dried grape l2.Cunnlng 16. You (dial. I8. Rowing var.) Implo- I1. Flaming ment light 15. Beam 1l,Publlc notice 18. Youth 20.Thra.sh 20. Bog 21. Devoured 21. Solemn 22. Raine wonder 24. Arbor 26. Operate 17.Tit.le of respect 2!. Jewish month 29. small hill 3l.Glrl'a nick- name 3:. Velvet 35. Send out 31. Qiotce group ll.0ld woman 30. Part of chair but 40. Reigning beauty 41. Ruulan news agency 41. Regulated the pitch DOWN I. Courtyard 8. Land mau- ure 3. walk atop- Du! the decade that followed his death the roiiipaiiy under Henry Ford It has set production and sales records. 22. Moat coura- group 23. German meulea Itstorage place 25. Me- thodl- cal 17, Girl'I name Ioelularu Answer 2!. Mongrei M. A eerie: of dog: bluish rock; I0. coin to. Burrowing tswed.) animal 31. Marked 38. Letter 32. Indian V0. Book (Utah) (Ibbh) IO DAILY CBYPTOQUOII - llore'a how to work Ill AXYIDI. II LONGI IAAXB ELLOW One letter atmply stand: for another. In this sample A la und for the three L'a. X for the two 0'1. ate. Single lettera. apoc- trophea. the length and rormation of the word: are all liinta. loch day the cod- letter: are different. Acryptegramquutnuoa BK NM!-I HRCXI: GREW irz MBW OFQI-lC...Ml-I WRXDNHW HUI-ICI FKII QM?! Ml-I SHHNW-OXRNP. Yulerdaya Cryptoquote: A DAY CAN PROSTRATE AND UPRAISE AGAIN ALL THAT IS HUMAN - 8OPHOCLE& OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR I-IOOPLE AF-TEIZ HE'6 TUCKED IN MA302, ' we-i.i. ewe HIM-A one To cs2i.iNci4 so He wosier cued esAo,5Pooi4v.IT2u5T HOOPLE WGENUITY TO 50!-V5 THE Q PROBLEM or TEANSPDQTING LEO 8Aci4 to June: IZENO-N' ....Ti4i-3 OLD NET THAT SIR SNIHBLJRNE P0?RID6E AND I USED TO i:-NTRAP we JUNGLE CHEETAH is ?&5T WKE U'R7I.gQ3nO: nun. - HIS WAV 0t.iTA THE BAG: 4 .. is 1'i4AT NET EVER 6P?lN55 A LEAK. YOU'D BETTER LATCH or-no THE CEOSSTONN EXPRESS! OUT OUR WAY IY J. R. MUGGS 8: SKEETER TILLY THE TOILER ETTA KETT oi-i,wNGsv-ere, i JOE PALOOKA t Mo D mt! it 10 win sreves 5IMPA1'ltV...Al.l.'9 FAIR at L-Love! PLEA5t noon I-RUIN EVEkY- mine av 1-TELLING... SECRET AGENT X-9 THE LONE RANGER D UTTEQLY L01! Ahutniin i-iw..uum'a nub fmibwpiitoiin hiaf W