. -':,;r..:w.:r.r-sg.-, - . . . P 15'.-"re tr.-. - F g ,1:-r.-,t : re s '7 star. -per-H ea-v " 4': 7.-.-I Tu , -.--i?t"KZ1'.3i'7H”?”'Wo-M. ,. .. Page 10 The Guardian Monday. April 15. 1957 and loss at out us an Iladder troubles. try OYIT X. Quick. mplete satisfaction or money has. Over .: THE ,”t HOUSEHOLD ; .- OINTMENT l ; 593 t . City ii CFCY-TV CHANNEL 18 lpeasored by Ilse Boas Burner & Electric Ltd. PrIdo0lteailaraes-aioeIitdianBana- m-&akaa-0tll.ansae- mace ill lealera - lama- hora coal. wood and garbage. Power type) . luraeza guaranteed. lllssldlala delivery Ind fluallation. Cash. terms it leeatahlialunaat Credit and D. V. A. III Windsor St. Halifax. NS.. Ni Great George st. MOIIAY E t l:45 p 4:28 p.m.-Sign On 4:!) p.m.-Jiowdy Doody 5:00 p.m.-in The Story Book 5:15 p.m.-Peppermint Prince 5:80 p.m.-Kiddies Kartoons I200 p.m.-Open House 0:!) p.m.-CFCY Television News 6:40 p.m.-Weather 6:45 p.m.-CBC News 6:55 p.m.--Vlewer'a Guide 7:00 p.me-Meet Corliss Archer 7:30 pm.-News Magazine 5:00 p.ru.-The Millionaire 8:30 p.m.-TBA 9:!!! p.m.-I Love Lucy 9:30 p.m.-Denny Vaughan tozoo p.m.-Studio One ll:lll p.rn.-CFCY Television News & Weather 11:05 pm.-Boxing 11:05 a.m.-Sign Off THE WINDMILL Specializing in TAKE-OUT ORDERS DIAL 7131 ,ggg,.g....mmm.... CKCW - Moneton Channel 2 Television Programme Schedule liillllll till p.m.-I-KM. Concert llall 1:5 p.m.-News 3:8 p.m.-Coffee Chatter Izw p.m.-At Home with llelen crociier. use na.-Uncle Jack At The Plan 4;” ,,m,-steeple and Places 4:! p.m.-Howdy The Story Book In! pan.-P lzl p.rsI.-Range Rider e:oo p.in.-rite Merrvrnlkerl .. ,,,,..g:u-ty Events: News 0:45 pan.-Weather s:ss pm:-SW1! 1:Q pats.-U.N. nevi 1:13 pay-lweenssorelaad em pl--no pals.--VanLitveI'I Farm e:sIssa..sna-VV ,,iI:Ip.ma-ItabOae ,, TV News - lIp.m.-cICWTVNewsand - Westin- By B. JAV nnsous south dealer. l Neither aide vulnerable. l Noun 0 g. as North East 1 9 Pan 3 NT Opening lead-three of clubs. Some brickbats may be flying this way tomorrow from two di- rections as a result of this piece. One of the controversial ques- tions frequently asked is whether men or u omen play better bridge. My answer would have to be that of the 35.u00.tX)0 people in this coun- try who play bridge it will be found. on the whole, that women are the better bridge players. On the other hand. though. if you go to the very top of the bridge heap. there is no doubt. as the rec- ord shows, that the men stand out. Not more than two or three women CONTRACT BRIDGE BECKER HANDS could be ranked in the nrst twen- t . you of these. undoubtedly. would be Mrs. Edith Kemp. of Miami -Beach. Here is I mllhi-50931 llllld she once played. partnered with Sam Stayman. Edith tsoutht went right up with the ace of clubs on the opening . lead. resisting the automatic tamp- . tation to finesse. it was an inspir- ed stroke of her which was well grounded. She could not afford to run the risk of losing the finesse to East who might decide to shift to a spade. if this finesse also lost the contract was doomed. Mrs. Kemp saw In opportunity to develop nine practically sure tricks without the club finesse. She could make no more than two club tricks regardless of who had the king of clubs. and the early club fl- nesse could lose important timing. Five rounds of diamonds were played ending in dummy. A low heart uas then played toward the king. If East had the ace and went up there uould be two heart winners. making nine tricks. If East had the ace and ducked. Mrs. Kemp could return a low club to establish her ninth trick. lf west had the heart ace. a spade return would be most wel- come. as would be also a club N- turn. Either one assure game. A heart return could be taken in dummy and the jack of clubs led. again developing a ninth trick. All possibilities were covered by Mrs. ltempis openml ill!!- IED'l1ME STORIES Bleat is he with ready wit. Always making use of it. -011! Mother Nature. Mrs. Peter Rabbit is a qiilet little person. She is a timid little person. That is what Peter thinks anyway. This is because she does- not take the chances that Peter does. She is too wise for that. Mrs. Peter keeps her own coun- sel. This means that she keeps to herself what she thinks and what she plans to do. So it is that few of her neighbors know how really smart she is. Folks who are smart and out wit others are said to be foxy. You know. Reddy Fox is con- sidered the smartest. slyest of all people on the Green Meadow Mrs. Peter was being foxy right now. "I knew that fellow was watch- ing." said she to herself, Out in the tall grass on the Green Meadows she had a secret. it was a very precious set-ret. Not even Peter knew it. it was an open- air nursery in which were her five precious babies only a few days old. Not even the Merry Little Breezes had yet found out that secret. From the time jolly. round. bright Mr. Sun started to climb up in the blue. blue sky each morn- W”'Ww. Afte E Chew refreshing, delicious Wrigley's Spearmint Guns. Helps keep teeth clean- dd. I. . Foxy Little Mrs. Peter ing until at the approach of night he went to bed behind the Purple Hills, Mrs. Peter kept away from those babies. She did this E she knew that the sharpest of sharp eyes. belonging to certain hun- gry folk. were always searching the Green Meadows. Those eyes belonged to several of the Hawk folk. to Blacky the Crow. to Reddy Fox. She knew that they knew she probably had babies hidden some- where because at this time of year there always were babies. "They'll be watching me all the time." thought Mrs. Peter. ”Thcy'll watch to see where i go So it won't do for me to go near those babies while any of those folks are about. I will have to visit them after dark. Then Hooty the Owl is the only one I have to keep special watch for. lie is the only one who has eyes that can see in the dark well enough to make him especially dangerous. Even he can't see me unless he is very near." So it was that the five little babies under their blanket of fur in a little hollow surrounded by tall grass slept most of the time all day. Baby Rabbits do that just as some other babies sleep all night. Not once during the day did little Mrs. Peter go anywhere near those babies. When she did go to ano- ther part of the Green Men- dows she psElElIdCd to do it very carefully. She would hop a few steps, then sit up and look all around. Then she would hop a few steps more and do it over again. At a certain place she flattened herself down in the tall grass and there she lay for quite a while. Then she went back to the dear Old Briar-patch. She made two or three visits to this place during the day. After the last visit she saw just what she had thought she would see. Out from a tree at the edge of the Green Forest flew Redtail the Hawk. He flew straight over to that place she had visited. There he circled above it. Mrs. Peter chuckled. "i knew that fel- low was watching,” said she to herself. "He thinks he knows now where my babies are. He thinks he is smart. but he's got to be smarter if he finds out my secret.” Mrs. Peter chuckled again as she watched Redtall fly back to th e tall tree on the edge of the Green Forest and start watching again. Foxy little Mrs. Peter. LIDYDMINSTER. Alta. (CPl- Davld Johnston. who raises an ac- credited flock of small white turkeys here. has shipped too tur- key egga to Japan. fining an or- der from the Japanese govern- ment throudt the federal poultry service. ..;nh., BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT - ls moans sauna Prue lads: ldiier Canadians. increasingly active in the ailairs of the international Chamber of Commerce, will have a substantial round of speaking en- gagements and other official ac- tivities at the cliamber's May coa- greas in Naples. They will also see a lot of Italy. The Canadian representation will number more than 70. includ- log 89 delegates. many of whom will accompanied by their wives. and 54 of the group will leave Montreal April 22 for Milan by chartered plane. - In Milan they will meet with Italian business men. visit the international trade fair and be guests at a reception given by the president of the Milan Chamber of Commerce. 1!. C. Berkinshaw of Toronto. president of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company and president of the Canadian Council of the Cham- ber. and Paul Bienvenu of Mon- treal. president of Catelli Food Products, will speak in English and French for the delegation and a presentation will be made to the Milan Chamber. TOUR VENICE Following the Milan large part of the group northern Italy. including Venice and Florence. They will spend May 1 to May 5 in Rome. where meetings of the senior administrative bodies of the International Chamber will be held. and the Congress proper will be held in Naples May 6-11. Theme of the Congress will be New Factors of Economic Pro- gress. Major discussion subjects visit. a will tour visits to 70 Canadians Will Fly To Milan For Chamber of C. . hi i insufficiently dud- Sxa ezfuntiies; obstacles to free flow of trade: the I-'0m1'll0'l ml” ket for Europe; economic NP!!- cussions of automation: and World monetary and trade problems. CANADIAN SPEAKERE Canadian speakers will include: it. D. Harkness. Montreal. ll"Gl-l- DNA dent Northern Electric 1' . on Impact of Automation; Bruce Hill. St. Catharinel. 0nt.. president of E. T. F. Tools. on The ilole of international Fairs and Shows in the Expansion of Multilateral Trade; H. H. Lank. Montreal, presi den i. Dil Post! Company of Canada. on Market Research. an instrument of Busi- ness Management; and Yvon R. Tasse, Quebec. general mullet. trade and industrial bureau of Greater Quebec, on Higher Prohts Through improved Purdinsa and Stock Controls. Mr. Tasse will also be co-chair- man of the meeting at which he will speak. Thomas Oakley. Toronto. vice- president. Oakley. Jackson and Farewell. will be co-chairman at a meeting with the topic Towards a Free Multi-lateral System of In- ternational Trade; and Howard N. Walters. Vancouver. vice - presi- dent. Pleasant Valley Gas and Oil Cm-npany. will co-chair a meet- Ing of the international informa- tion bureau of hambera of com- m tries are expected to attend the Naples meeting. The chamber. formed in lillil, has its head t- ers in Paris and holds a general congress every two years. The last congress was in Tokyo in 1955. its only Canadian congress was in will include international co-oper- ation for economic an ' pment; Quebec in 1949. Year In 1956, MONTREAL (CPI-Foundation Company of Canada Ltd. and sub- sidiary companies had record net profit in l956 of 3.681.669. or 33.65 a share on 460.926 shares is- sued. compared with Sl.l55.9l0. or 32.53 a share on 456.226 common shares issued. in l955. Dividend rate on . mmon shares was 90 cents in 1956: up from 8) cents in l955. . F. G. Routley. president. says in the annual report that the com- pany's work stretched in 1956 from British Columbia to Newfoundland and from within the Arctic Circle to the international border. It had entered 1957 with "a large carry- over" and had secured a good volume since. it appeared that the year would bring "still greater construction activity" in Canada than in 1956. High cost and scarcity of money tended to limit the companyis ac- tivities and the sale in early 1956 of 34.000.000 of (Va-per-cent sink- ing-fund debentures had proved to be a "a timely action." Mr. Routley noted that about 9754: per cent of the company's stock is owned in Canada. He said there is still a shortage of engineering and technical per- sonnel and. to assist in the prob- lem. the company has instituted a scholarship plan to aid engineer- lng students in the four Atlantic provinces-"where there are rela- tively fewer industries available to offer help to students." MARITIMES SCHOLARSHXPS The scholarships-31.000 a year each-are open yearly to five stu- dents from seven universities who enter their final two years in en- gineerlng at either the Nova Scotia Technical College or the Univers- lty of New Brunswick. The company. Mr. Routlcy sald.l is studying the possibility of ac-I Foundation Co. Hod Good Report Shows quiring a replacement for one of its salvage tugs which has been in service a number of years. The Canadian east coast. he ad- tied. requires a year-round service of not less than one powerful sea- going salvage tug for rescue work. To have such a vessel built in Canada at present costs and to operate it on a 24-hour-day basis the year round would be too costly. "It is uneconomic." said Mr. Routley. ”to operate such a ves- sel in competition with foreign- built. foreign - operated and for- eign-subsidlred deep - sea rescue tugs. "The class of vessel Canada should have on her east coast re- quires some form of assistance to make her operation economics", feasible for a commercial com- pany. "Without such a tug, much re- pair work for Canadian ship-re palr yards will be lost." Block Jews Go Back To Israel COCHIN. India flieulersl-The Black Jews of Cochin. whose fore- fathers sought sanctuary in indie 2,000 years ago. are going home. About .l.fl)0 persons from this community already have gone to lsrael, leaving only a few hun- dred, most of whom intend to leave as soon: as they can. Most of the White Jews. who for centuries have lived alongside the Black Jews but never mixed. are staying in lndia. The White and the Black Jews never have got on well together. Many White Jews claim that the Black Jews an converted slaves. wit:-eovs IN Tile Juana.” , TOLD Me suoea I'?eN(t-N V06 so TOUGH HE sfaiukteo M&L!--r an I GOT A Praise -ALL. I-te DID was I eiieeetaiss - FY, IRIIIR IOVILTIII Choose with -conhdeuce from (Lapedfs inst selection of Package Chotolatee . . . sad ettseetive latte: Novelties in per: talk chocolate. - 4 GAI LY s .3 OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE oi: CFCQ. About 1.500 people from 34 coun; tits tons asuoeit seciter seem x-9 MICKEY MOUSE HENRY '-I-l-eI--Iu--na-.vnI-o- MUGGS 8: SKEETER TILLY THE TOILER THERE-' YDUGUY5 GEE! HA.'HA.'.' NOW 1'6 X errA's Nor HO state I Diorglr HAVE JET oven AND TELL WlNGEY.'St-4E we”:-' ' . TOAMOVIBWITH A 5 east who wins i-teize . WHEN vou FHONED-' E'l'I'A KETT JOE PALOOKA ltlON,Ul'fttDQ N70 'fiiI MAI-EM MM!-D