l ON THE AIR ’The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. Dec. 2, 1964. 11 I WEDNESDAY PROGRAMS CFCY TV I 30 p.11-.~Musicel 2 til) )I m.—Fi|m Festival 2 '1” ,i m. ~lhrs »s The UI Still p.m.-As The World Iurm p.m.—Raule Danie 5,00 p.m.’FOfeIT Ranger! p-m.—Mum Hop p.m.*~Pf9thCliI Mieirl Premier 5 ew p.m.—CFCY TV News p.m.—Purity Photo QUII p.m.——Bowirched p_m.-—Ths Rogue. p.m —Red River Jamboree pom—Perry Mason p.m.——Festivel ’65 Waiting For Godot p.m.—Nationsl Film Board The Transients Lon—CBC TV News e.rn.-—I.oce| Weather l.m.—5ign Off CKCW TV 9.57 s.m.~$tation Sign On 10.00 p.rn.-—Nationa| Schol Telecast 10.30 a.m.-—Nova Scotis Schools lI.30 p.m.—Across Cans I100 p.m.—Friendly Giant 12.l5 p.m.-Chez Helene p.m.—ButIernut Square p.m.-—CBC News p.m.—Wsdncsday Playblll Long Dark Hell 10.30 11.30 12.I5 LUNDUN ICPt ~— sir Mail Aitken, S-i - year - old chairman of the Beaverbrook newspaper group. credits much of his father’s success to the influence of the first Lady Beavecbrook who died in I927. She was Gladys Drury. daughter of Gen Charles William Drury of Hall- ax. In an interview in The Sun- day Mirror. Montreal-born Sir Max says of his mother: “She was the daughter of a Canadian general. very beauti- ful. and I loved her more than any other human being " ' lather would never have got where he id but for her and certainly he would never have made the friends he did." Of his present position ul master of the late Lord Beaver- brook’s empire. 0M L "i love the life I’m leading now. It‘s the best time I’ve had. I’m completely happy." He says there won‘t be any change In the policies of the Beaverhrook newspapers and as chairman he will be both a businessman and an editorial man. "You‘ve got to remember I’ve ‘Beaverbrook Success Credited To His Wife e . ‘when Lord Besverbrook final been an executive here for 35 years and when you've worked where he a professor a Alberta. Dr, Corbett was appointed at- rector of the education associa- tion in 1938 He was also a member of the board of direc- tors of the Dominion Drama Festival. During the Second World War he spent some time with Cana- dian forces overseas and in 1949. headed the Canadian dele- gation to the UNESCO world conference on adult education ntleyears ass Creeka bylatethls the University of week. with my lather that time there's change. "Inbred in me is a feeling for .the Commonwealth and for the British p e o p le. here and D 0 w In the interview Slr Max denies he was “just a cypher" on the newspapers during the ;Iife of his father. who died In June. He takes credit for the lcditorial s t a n d 5 taken by Beaverbrook's Daily Express or support of former prime minis- ter Sir Anthony Eden at Sun and in supporting the late prost- dent ennedy over .Remembering life with father. Sir Max says as a youngster he h s and to a heart ly aid: “Well. get the hell out of It and earn your own living No- ] body's indispensable, least of all you. ' Sir Max took his advice and went off and got a job with an aircraft firm In Los Angeles. Her “came back a year later with at car and $1,000 more than he set I out. p_m.—At Home With Helen Cracker p.m.—As The World Turns pug—Take Thirty p.m.—SecreI Storm paw—Rania Dazzle p.m.-—Forest Rangers p'm.—Fun Time p.m.—-Provinrisl Affairs p_m.~5up er Cu Lionel Television News p.ni.~—Vt‘eather . p.m.—Dr Kildare p.m.—Red River Jamboree By DAVE MclNTOSH OTTAWA (CPI — Two cabinet ministers have given indications the government is getting a little fed up with the lobbying of the Canadian aircraft industry in Ottawa. fnformants said the govern- ment welcomes the views of the aircraft industry. or any other. pertinent problems. p.m»~Perw Mason pun—Festival \Nailiug for Godot 11.30 p.m.-The Transient 12.00 p.m.—CBC-TV News 12.15 a.rn.-Viawpoint 17.20 e.m.—lionel Network News 12.25 a.ni.v»$tatmn Sign Of W 10.30 CICY RADIO NEDNISDAY bill—News and Weather GEE—Morning Roundup 6.45~Island Weather. Mer. bub—Morning Roundup eds-News and Weather 700*Hal-iraw Christian Hour 7.I5-Mornlnq Roundup 7.30—-News and Weather But it was becoming irked at the almost constant pressure from the aircraft manufactur- ers Defence Production Minister Drury said in the Commons de- fence committee Tuesday that there is always pressure on the government from the aircraft industry based on economic - that is. contracts for the military needs of the country r Di‘ury said defence nerds should dictate defence expendi- tures'rather than the needs of the economy or any particular, segment of it. He said the aircraft industry" would be "very. very modest" Government Gets Fed Up With Aircraft Lobbying without Canadian defence can- Itracts. In 1962. deftnce expen- ‘ditures by the Canadian govern- Iment accounted for .of the industry's t business. ‘iMAY PUT OF!" DECISION i Last month, Defence Minister Hellyer told the Commons his $352,000,000 TEE—Farm Report 7Al—Mnrnmg Roundup 7.45—Island Weather, Mar. Temp IAN—Mornan Roundup 8. Scoreboard 7.56—-Snnrtl Capsule fl r‘l—Ne I E lI—Wosth 8. I h-—-an|ng Roundup 8 45~Wuther 5 50—Atlsnhc News 10.00—Newl Ind Weather Ions-Kitchen Comer With June Ashley "HO-Notes Incl Music 10.I5~'5top The Record Tilda—Notes and Music 10.55—Calling All Consumer: 1I.00—Newl and Weather TIM—Notes and Music 11.30~Siop The Record Il.33~Notss and Music HAS—Bulletin Board 11.50—Notns end Muslc 1I.55—At|ontic News Roundup 12 OO—Woathar and Country Time and Weather and Country Time 2.00—News and Weather J 2.05—Mostly Music ‘1 3.nn~News Headlines and Weather: 3.03-Trsns-Clnedl Matinee I 3 ITO—Tops In LOO—News Hudllnu and Weather» Loft—Canadian Roundup lift-Tops In Pops AS7~Stop The Record son-Now: and Weather 5.05—The Outports 5 25-Merlne Weather sao—sob Goulet Show 5.35-The Outpom 6.00--News end Weather 6 l‘r—On Parliament Hill 6.70—Today's Editorial 6.25—Sporll Parade 6.30~—Buslnau Barometer 6.35—-Tonlght’s Music 700-—Bsck to the Ilble 7.30——Newa and Weather 7.45—~Program Schedule 7.46—Tonlght’s Mullc SSH-News Headlines and Weather 9.00<-Vancouver Chamber Orch 1 lotto—CBC Nst. ‘ Perllement In the; Pravlncn 10 flfi~»$ound of the Sintlos lIM—News and Regional Weather l I .05~Starllghl Serenade Il Sit—News and Weather ll .‘tS—Stsrlight Serenade Tim—CDC News. Weather and Sport News. On Hill and CIA IADIO WIDNISDAY 600~The Morning Show. Dart l foo—Tho Morning Show, Part I “Vi-{BC News end Inland Wit. 0 95 Jim Bob Goulet Show ills—Mu Ferguson 9 OO—CIC News 9.1l‘Commentsry m30~Untvenlty of the Alf II-m—CIC NOW! ‘l-OS—Joen Marshall II-IS~For Consumers ll 20~Racord Album l200~lamborse Junction 12.15—Tonnlssee Ernie Ford 12.30—Maritime Farm I'Cnt LOO—CBC News and Weather I.I5—Ths Tommy Hunter Show I.45~Tima Out For Melody I.59—D.O. Tim. Signal ?.OO——Tima Out For Melody lift—Atlantic School B’cut " ylmo" 2.30—Atlsntlc School B’csst "Things of Nature" 2~45—John Dremie Tells A Story n It Happened Today 3.00—CBC News 3.03—Trani-Cenldl 3.30-TranmCansda (GO—CBC New toil-Canadian Roundup Linn-Music In The Air Matinee Matinee Lilli—Countdown 6.00»CBC News 6-I5-~On Parliament Hill bio—Today] Editorial 6.25—Inlnnd Walther and Sports Score! 6.30- Business Barometer 6.35-Jllttsir In The Evening ISO—Radio Int‘l 8.00—MidWeak Theatre 9.00—Vnc. Chamber Orchestra "LOO—CBC Nat'l News, On Parliament Hill and :— .. r . 1! - o video: 10.30—-The Sound of The Siktlu 100 —Music of Handel—- Allan Sangstor 12.00—CBC News 12.03—Sports Scores Inland 8: arine ea or 12-15~—Muslc In The Night CONTRACT BRIDGE By s. JAY BECKER . department could postpone a da- DURING THE ,flSltflfl Ion. acnuésjittmn p01f a has!i AMERICAN ‘ . ac ica ie I er ane r - 'some time. “vague” ,‘,. ‘ "But in view of the turgenicy cmuggo . fl . of giving support to to is r- ~ _ 3113;: craft) industry we have . 53/7/55 T,“ ‘ " " * ‘ "- "'F‘fi. givmg early consrderation to this 5 TIME? CITY NAIL of AmeliaJtaIY, 2&0 FEET IONG, matter and hope to .pscAp/NG HAS NO CEMENT OR OTHER BINDER make a decision soon." he said EACH TIME °YETITIMSENDUHDIDR3400 Informants said Mr, Hallycr in effect was warning the 1m ._ ....___, *— dusiry not to try to push him i‘ntotbuyinhg a plage ‘he doesn’t D 4 van- or e wou imp y pu ‘ off a f‘IECISIQI'I. ACROSS 43.Ship‘s 11. Game glam sum i Despite this warning. lnform~ 1.6011 canvases puyed BEE ‘ t ants said. the industry has kept ltro 45.Lettered from - ;pushing for a contract to build 5.411st telephone 1101'” itlle U.S. McDonnell r-4 Phan- in late! back tom jet fighter - bomber. at Belgium 47-Em‘u' A least three times more. expen- 9-lefll “5011‘”? SHORE sive than the U.S. Northrop F-S Win! ‘9 Alrfm box ijet plane the defence department 10. 50 Girl: 16- £1? avors. ‘ 11.Driod 111m DOWN 19. Nltl ..: racism: smarts? amino: mm or Am- A source said the air force rec sum ‘13er 305w" 33"”an cards the Northrop plane as lit- 1‘33"“! kn 1° ,, 'soa'kf] ‘8 In u. more than a miner I ge 8.Armored -4 Each. abbr wax 15. Arthur’s cars: mil 26 Pronoun 34. Sumsup foster A. specie.) enace: 87. Move 0 O bro plouun abbr. sideway- Educahonist :7 mm s. met: m: w R 6. Greedy dwellers 40. Egypt-la ' council 7. Kind of 80. Large dancing 18 Large 'ddle tropical ' o 8.A lizard Fastcnwifl 0 crustacean certain 31. Reputation: tchee Accr ent name n 4mm TORONTO rcro ._ Funeral zgfifw services were held Monday fort '6..th Dr. Edward A. Corbett. 02. of! 33.3mm Toronto. forme director of the} Ming“ Canadian Association for Adultt h‘ymk Education and founder of the ‘ 35.13.“); Banff School of Fine Arts. whol 33.31.51; died Saturday at his home when l m a shotgun he was cleaning accig substance dentally discharged. ‘ .51.“? Police said Dr. Corbett was} totho 'cleaning the gun in the livmgj taste mom while his wife. Anna Rae. g 8!.va [was upstairs taking a bath. Itasca ‘Shc heard an explosion and Ami: came downstairs where she‘ “bf- found her husband slumped in a l 351’“?- chair. ‘ 86. Recom- Coroner Harvey A. Brown t mew said ideath was caused by sc-i - Vere nternal injuries. i Dr. Corbett. the son of a man dawn“ l t i m e Presbyterian minister. I ,, m‘”‘ was also an ordained ministcrl “'33:” of the church. In 1914 he was stricken with. tuberculosis and after his re- covery. he moved to Alberta South dealer. Neither side vulnerable. mm .KQJDT‘ .0106 ‘1": W158! ‘ e" gluon ens: vans 9x754 .32 ‘10”: 985 so .3 OKSB eAQJM .KQJs The bidding: South West North East 10 rm 1. Pass 831' Pa- 3. Pass 0 Opening lead—nine of hearts. Suppose you're pinyin: three cc shown and West opens the nine of hearts. Of course. you don't see the opponcmts' cards and the question is him to play the hand so that you will have the best chance to make th 9 contract. I When it comes to playing the dummy. declarer should of course look upon the hand as a whole and not upon the play of each trick on though it were a complete problem in itself Thus. in deciding which heart to play from dummy on West‘s ninc. South cannot settle this ILSO‘Yhe Archers Wm e- we ‘ ' to question is ithout reference w oil of finding notrump on the h'ddinz sequen- . the best sequence of plays to produce nine tricks. rve what happens in the schist hand it South covers the nine with the ten, East plays the jack and declarer wins with the king. South presumably leads a spade to the jack. which East takes with the Ice. $244,000,000 : ' Mild Weather Delays Start Of Oil Well HILLSBOROUGH. NB. (CP' A new attempt is being made to expand output in the Marl- time provinces' only producing oil and gas field. New Bruns- wick Oilfields Ltd. hopes to start drilling a new well on the l Southwest edge of its Stone»: Petroleum Ltd. of Calgary. RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT \ I Mild. wet weather has rio- layed construction of a road to‘ the drill site The well will be‘ drilled to about 3.100 feet wrth‘ natural gas the objective. It is. the first attemp to cxeud It» producion area since 1956. The Stoncy (‘eeek area in southeastern Now Brunswick il Canada‘s second oldest continu- ously producing oilfield. it was first tapped in 1909. The I963 production of natural tailed 101524.000 cubic output was 7M1 barrels. auction has been dropping and i; grow about half the level M l 5 . HAS Goop GAS Field engineer James Mao. and does not require ing"—the removal of impuri- ties. It is piped directly from the well to the city of Monoton. 13 miles north. for distribution by Moncton Utility Gas Ltd. New Brunswick Oilfields Ud. has 37 gas and 14 oil will. all in Albert County. The Company is controlled by Western Decalla A osvrcs mvsurso or: QEANING ENGLISH C H IMNEYS m I826 9‘33» (lift A OJIMNEY SWEEP DAILY CBYPI‘OQUOTE -— Here’s how to work It! A x Y D I. I A A X I h I. o N G I I 10 L o W Ono letter simply utends for another. In thll for the' three L's, x for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. ope. trophies. the length and formation of the words all m Each day the code letters are Mount. AWQuohflol MDRTLS W [01338 Vt 230 W JGLWON YVRODI new. Who: mm All! m m HOVING MEN—INTEREST AND "Ala—NAPOLEON C III. Kills rm Winch. he.) s-x movniioas VIONVIE) vouuo Willa m STOPPED BY we»! HAS WANTED BREAD AND .IELLY.’ ___——__________________ ___.__.._.___ .. _____._. 3500" BIO!" Ll!» V1.13 ME women. SHE'S A EN... ANO HENS CAN‘T CROW! AM I OFFERED FOR THIS FINE. BIRVANP CAGE? AND WHAT-5 so WRONG wrrH some srconr . / GEE.’ I WON'T EVEN LOOK AT ANOTHEQ GireL, HONEST.’ semi-Al :0- .1 “bane-gun .1 / ‘ "‘Il M”, r. ' /:l I its? \ .mml" 1’. MEAN.’— How DO I KNOW You WON'T CHECK up ON ME.“ ). fennel VI END‘ DP CNDGIR.- "I East returns a diamond. i uth goes down whether he ; finesses or not. Assume he flnr eases West wins and returns the eight of hearts. Curtain. The same result is obtained If the four of hearts is played 0 n the opening lead. Eac s and the rest of the play is the same. Only by playing the queen on the nine can make the hand. East is forced to win with the ace: otherwise declarer can obtain two heart tricks. But East cannot successfully return a hurt because of dummy'l ton Whatever suit he shift; to. de- clai'er has time to build up nine ' ks -— four diamonds. four: clubs. and a heart. .. .., =. queen of hearts? Because than is good mason to believe th s t West's nine of hearts is a top-of- nothlng lead and that East ac- cordingly has the A-J. Declarcr can therefore tie up the suit by covering the nine with th e omen and forcing East to shift his attack elsewhere. ; nce the pressure on the heart I suit I: relieved. Smith has noth- ‘ ing to fear. Nine tricks are sure! h . Why should South play the. ‘ A iNCiDENTALLvm-ie CHAIR- AN 0F Ti-IE CAMP a.) CLAIMID you STILL owso , F A no or oooKies ~rat.) IDUOi-IT m THE.— SPRINé Eicumeiucs .COMF‘LIMENTQ: 88" 11.1 AINEH 3128! {Liliql 3H1 Halls ’8 5990" Li: powsi mo sou overt! o’wsu! ROLL OVER! m: VXOO'WJ 30f mus WW!!- Acoonow' 10 CL! 5' PRE- > DICK-SHUN rrs EITHER ‘0'"- 1. 'f I (‘9’: ' i.