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M. Chronicle. ‘8:00—CBC News and Weather- 8: 15—Maritime Sportscast 8:20—A. M. Chronicle. 15 me uuarulan, Lilariottewwn. ‘iilur . Dec. 11, 1306 RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT s“ owned by MRS. JOSEPH (APPS WAS ser ON FIRE By WATER THE sun’s RAYS PASSING THROUGH A GALLON o: DISTILLED WATER IGNITED THE ueuorsrewy Pueblo. Colo. l' ls lo FEET HIGH AND 9 FEET wuss GARRETSON “BOO-1859' ._ ‘ A VELING PREACHER. \ mwr‘fli‘ Talbot County/.Md. ms ANCESTRY harassment. \ W “a... '52 fit: (sagas-3'3 EMMA?ng D cap-um ro READMWRITE , mum S CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. JAY BEC ease. It so happens in this deal 1. 1c 8. 81"! Opening lead—lung of hearts. 'Ilhis hand comes linom a pub- ber bridge game. South was play- ing (three nonrulmlp. He got. a. heart lead. ducked the king, then the queen. and won the third heart with the ace. He entered dummy with the queen of spades and led the eight of diamonds, losing the finesse to the singleton king. West cashed two hearts and South went down one. The point we’d like to make is that Sohth should not have taken the diamond finesse. His play was based more on habit than reason. After winning the ace of hearts the proper. play is the ace of dia- monds. rejecting the possible fin- OTTAWA [OPl—Support for a new political party dedicated to social and economic reform was expressed Tuesday during a panel discussion organized by the na- 9:00—News 9:05—A. M. Chronicle. 9:55—News. 10:00—Atlantic School Broadcast 10:15—A. M. Chronicle. 10:4Hoan Marshall. 10:55—Ruth Harding 11:00—News 11:03—Pre-School Children's Pro- gram. 11:15—Kin-dergarten of the Air 11:30—Speakers Choice. 11-:45—-In Reply 12:00—-—Jamboree Junction. 12:30—Maritime Farm B'cad 1:00—CBC News and Weather 1:15—Record Program 1:30—Music from Montreal. 1:59—D.O. Time Signal 2:00—Atlantic School Broadcast 2:15—The Happy Gang 2:45—Woman in My House. 3:00—CBC News and TC Matinee 4:00—Music by McMullln 4:30—Marine Investigator 5:00—Maritime Fish B’cast 5:30—The Don Tremaine Show 6:00—News and Weather (HS—Regional Commentary 6:20—Maritime Sportscast 6 : 30—Rawhide 6:45—R0ving Reporter 6:55—Byline 7:00—Music in the Evening 7:30—Fall Festival. 7: 45—Explorers 8:00— Vintage Goons 8:30—Sweet ‘N’ Sour 9:00—‘Prairie Playhouse 9:30—Citizens Forum m m "I. mm. l. that the ace would have caught “an” a. ' «the lone king and resulted in mak- xom' ing ten tricks, but before we get .‘Q‘ accused of l basing our play on '6‘: , ' a peek at West’s hand we has- ! I .Q‘”‘ ten to give the reason for the 'm T l WW ' 872 410955: It is a basic principle in prac- .1¢Q:u '78 3.. ideally all hands that declarer's x 148 first concern is to make the con- “!0!‘ r 853 l tract. The proper method in most hands of handling a specific com- OKJ bination of cards in a suit (in 'A”’ this case, diamonds) may easily .5110. not be the proper method in a “Q43 lp‘a’l‘lllllClulllar hand. ’3 mul‘ The question of which oppon» New Political Party Heard At Ottawa Meeting out may win the trick if a nor- mal finesse is taken may be suf— fiicient to persuade declarer that the finesse Should not be taken if it unnecessarily jeopardizes the hand as a whole. hit his deal South cannot lose the contract if East has the king of diamonds, whether the finesse is Ilalren or not. Declalrer is still sure of at least. nine tricks if he first leads the ace of dimoands and then concedes the jack to Elast'ls hoped for king. Decllarer therefore lmlproves his chances by leading the diamond ace since it gives him the added chance that West may have been dealt the unguarded king. So while it must be granted Soluth had moderately bad luck in losing the diamond finesse, the dam is he also contributed to his own defeat. . Talk tional conferenceonhuman rights. l Asked from the floor whether workers should seek representa- tion by a political wring, lawyer- economist Pierre Elliott Trudeau of Montreal said Oanadla defini- tely needs such a party. Organized labor shouldn’t have to march on Ottawa every time a grievance arose. Workers should spend “less time march- ing and more time voting,” Mr. Trudeau said. William Mahoney, nation-a1 di- rector of the United Steelworkers of America (CLO), said he is “absolutely convinced" that pro- tection of workers should be strengthened by labor action in the legislative field. Prof. Harry Woods. industrial relations expert at McGill Uni- versity, said he is uncertain whether university personnel should identify themselves with a particular political party. Per- sonally. he had no objection to a partly of social reform. No reference was made to cur- rent efiforts by the COT and Canadian Labor Congress to es- tablish a new political party based on organized la‘bor and farm groups. The panel discussion was one of three on the second day of a three-day conference organized in connection with the 10th an- niversry of the United Nations universal declaration of human rights. The meeting. described as alnational stocktaking of Canada‘s performance in relation to the UN declaration, ends today. 10:15—Vancouver Chamber Or- chestra 11:00—CBC N a tio n :1 News Roundup. 11 :30——Even tide 12:00—Here‘s the Weather and 8 : 45—Morning Devotions Sign Off. white. n Thaks! Put an open box of Wrigley's Spearmint Gum under the tree Let family and friends help them- selves to this wholesome, satisfying treat. Everyone likes it, and it’s so inexpensive. Put several boxes under your tree or around the house. They’ll appreciate your thoughtfulness. Note: Wrigley‘s Spearmint Gum comes in. bright Christmas colours~md and green on ‘ lCanadian Montreal newspaper man Jean- said Canadians have less individual freedom than citizens of Britain, Sweden, Bel- simply be. cause intellectuals c o m m a nd HIGH PUBLISHING COSTS l A panel devoted to civil liber— ties produced general agreement that minority opinions are hard to get across to the public, partly because of the high cost m may, Dec. 11, 195' DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 2. Chief 20. Pillagen I. Heart. Norse god 21. One. 5. Bang 8. Peruse spot 9. German river 4. Sea eagll card 10. Signal 5. Twist 22. Man’s system 6. Plunder name 11. Of birds 7. Moved 24. Over 12. Wanderer forward I poet.) 14. Furnish 8. More 25. Ruin 15. Deliver over humle 26. Blunt 16. Land 11. Exclamm 28. Ameri- I measure tion of can Yesterday’s Anna 17. Dog’s foot sorrow inventor 35. Noah's 18. profit 13. Network 29. Finished eldest son 19. The Formosa. 15. Military on. 31. Tiny 36. Peel gagements (colloq.)' 38. Mandarin 22. Measure 17. A dessert 84. Journey tea. of land 28. Sour like vinegar 25. Solitary 27. Covered with a heavy metal 80. Siberian gulf @035.) 8!. Thrice (mus) 32. Perform 33. Narrates 35. Revolve 37. Constitn. tional capital 0! Bolivia 38. Follow 39. Epidermls 40. —— and Leander 41. Deacry ‘2. So be it! DOWN 1. Private DAILY camoouorn — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXB ISLONGFELLOW .l One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the two 0’s, etc. Single letters. apostrophles, the length and formation of the ,words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. Aaryptogruanhflon err VBQU 3D x MBQZRPN IV IIYXPZCN...GB CIIRL, DPPU, HB MQVC xv BRP TUPXVPV—IKWUYCC. Yesterday's Oryptoquolle: THERE IS NEVER AN 1N- STANT’S TRUCE BETWEEN VIRTUE .AND VICE—— THOREAU. A role in». mum-n viullc-MQ. Inc. ETTA KEI'T ’ MOM .‘.’ THE Guys TOOlC A POLL N CLASS.{’GUESS I' THE MOSl’ TEEEIFICALLY WONDERFUL THING HAPPENED! ALL Mv DATES VOTED ME THE canal. wm-l THE 5551' cooK Foe A MOTHER! .j: . L\~§ I?" -- o as a '4 v \ . .\ - 1.. .x GRANDMA Q'zANDMA. MAY 1 BORROW THAT BOOK YOU HAVE? ON WILL POWER. ll: CAN DEV E'PER'IQON WILL... .._.. 1 _. ._..._._..__.—_._.. TILLY THE TOILER 7 THE LAST MIMTE TO STAY ‘N' 70‘ CE T4E BIG adT ALI. Tl ' I THE ‘7 “WE” ‘0'” HOTELé ARE FULL! A 3‘18;- ’ GET us. VES.‘5|P..I HAVE IM LUZEVID “E 5056 DEC‘DED AT raquigusll‘AfglA A sum snare THAJE l‘rru. mas FOR ME LEFT... no BATH! TA . TO SLEEP? MI. In: W Wu. Int. Wadi rum. mud Stewart MacKay A I] . _ .. For snug’ TOWN & COUNTRY ' Satisfied Feeling... treads. winter long. “ FIRESTONE HOME 8" V HOME AND AUTO CO. LTD. ASSOCIATE 187 Great George St. I GET FIRESTONE . . . be sure now that you won't have those “wintertime blues” for Winter driv- Lug. ' tall Bring your car to us have us ins a pair of Firestone Town and Country Nu- And have carefree drivrng all “We Trade Tires Dial 5547 24 Central St. on! m MUGGS & SKEE'I'ER .1: 9:12.,aur l? I’D L|l<E TO I'LL elve You 25¢ lF YOU'LL DRY THEM FOR ME... 50221 GRAMPS... we HADA BETTER I THOUGHT You AGREED TO DRY MAI-(E Vou AN The planes FOR / OFFER} GRAND/AA quill .7 Tonsil-r, lll’i‘llll’ill'lllllll‘lllll‘r‘*.:‘llll|1l:rllllm ele/vlps... 0 Arm. hm. mm “£3.35: V GRAND/MA Pkowsso ME 354: , 1F I’D WASH THEM F02 HER... . -: I 1: "17;. .I l. i llllllinlll'W'“l“ “ml BEFORE r COMMIT l" MYSELF, wouw You 1' . LIKE TO muse you: ., , t s 7.! ll. lflllllllll 3H“ ' H1 ugnglg-pmwwr/vvvvrvv vzoevrere-gg'g of publishing. Rumblings of discontent about the place of the intellectual in society were heard. Louis Gagnon gium and France, greater respect there. STRONG-ARM TACTICS Montreal union official thods against strikers. Mr. a case against a policeman. A third group. discussing social rights, brought a complaint by Gerard Pelletier about strong-arm me- Pelletier ’said he doesn’t think a Canadian would ever win, OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE ‘ w _ H NthlYOUBEHOLDAMAN . - 4 “#055 FERTlLE lMAelNATloN HA5 3 mama) AN loEA THAT vim. ONEDAY ' / PLAcen-ie NAME OF HOOPLE BESIDE . WAYOFWMASWAND «j . ,, THE CORNER, r ALEXANDER GRAHAM Barnum “ D“: WATS TOO I mu. ee emu To TAKE-TIME 1 MUCH TO CARRY our FROM MY asecuremsl o AN MENTAL mamas 0° C mNC’ TO BE or: essence “2”” If,“ To 'CU MATEV.’ mm. IGNORE Your: mammal JOE PALOOKA sexiest“ The little tots are always hard on cloth es . their clothes . . . be sure to see the fine array of children’s clothes MCDONALD’S. 0 PYJAMAS o BLOUSES ‘~ 0 SWEATERS 0 House COATS S. . I All “@Wl dt’ - VILLAGE - . HALL YT I 766 .u v‘ 5' 'BARBER g sevle I.|.l makers H I #1. $2 $3 . a-” we", ' I I ‘ ‘ .elm I DON’T HAVE TO I’M SURE GLAD I sTUA‘IéE 1&5; Lle’T-rZHE 1“ v ‘wémm-w r H. CO . 3 FOR. MlPNlGl—l‘l’ ' ‘3 sNAcKs'. > '- ‘ u: V. = a o . I 3 ~ ‘ ‘ \ ° 1 '1 our n-ls sure I WOULDN'T was ’ COBRIGAN,MIGT ‘ ' some uulsom... me sueuresr TEIEfl WEST-'3‘ . .‘_.‘ ‘ 0. “PW”: 73395“ , You maceo MEl N019: n: r wees W 95152. N ml. ’5‘ a I is A names: 0: _ . 1.”, GET My MEN nsmss mu: ME , . l .q x l-lstfgezfiogND-m mum,mo=em m - i l- .a z . [u i J 2 5 “‘ l s a M a WHAT pm .[1 y I MAN wAs mas-o 719 no? ~ . l °‘ '1 3 . E a: l “‘ 1 Z O l —l ‘ . I" ' aLcw TAE’JAEEW m5 ' i I I i ‘7‘ ‘ ‘ _ BANK, WIS/V 9/225wa I R 1‘ a q I" emmmmmxxumxmxumummmxm. v - 4 ... .<.. a ‘M‘H— Gift Suggestions For The Little On . m'nter really plays I“ A :. on, MY GOSH...HE LOOKS EXACTLY THE WAY HE DID WHEN HE SAID HE WAS IN A TRANCE STATE BACK - AT TIE BOWLING ALLEY .’ rvseotismeflsm ' “I oaws'u. lotus! LI'L AENER MADAME .'.'— WHO lSTHE SMILN' MOST ZACK, MERCENAIZ‘I, NATCHERL‘II! MERCILESS ' KlLLElZlN ALL THESE HILLS? HE HAlN'T MEAN. EXACKLYH—IT’S uesr THET lem’ CRITTERS ANNOYS HIM. HE DON‘T LIKE TH' SOUND o’ BREATHIN' !!