Citizens Of St. P‘ierre Are Calm HALIFAX (CPl——’l‘lie citizeiis of st, Pierre, capital of France's only North American colon). Tuesday were “awaiting with calm" the outcome of the French political crisis. The Canadian Press corre- spondent on the islands of St Pierre et Miquelon. said in a cable “everything is quiet and nobody is taking a position." The cable said no committee of pub- lic safety has been set up on the island, 14 miles off Newfound- land"s south coast. The 4,500 French citizens have been traditionally pro-de Gaullfist since a Free French admiral de- clared them independent of the Vichy government in 1941. The islands send two rep- resentatives—a deputv and a sen- ator——Io- France's National As- I RADIO (‘FPY THURSDAY STANDARD TIME 5:58—<.i~zn On 6:00-—Hebrew Christian Hour 5:l5—Musical Moments 6:.'l0—News 6:3.’>—Weather 6:40—Western Hoedown 7:00—News 7:05-—Weather 7:10-Country and Western Roundup 7:40—Ches Cooper Time 'I:55—Interlude 8:00—News 8:11-—Weathar 8:l6—-Country and Western Roundup 8:45——Weather 8:50-—News 9:00——Morning Devotions 9:10-—Morning Moods 9:30—Top Tune Time 9:45-—Freddy Martin Show 10:00—News 10:05—Magazine of the Air 10:30—Melody Parade 1l:00—News Headlines Weather 11:02-—News and Groceries 11:17—~M1agic of Music 11:30-—New.=i 11:40—Weather 11:45——'I‘he Magic of Music 12:00—Weather 12:05—Eddy Airnold Show 12:30—News and Weather 12:45-—Dinner Serenade 1:00-—Fifty A Day 1:10-—Dinner Serenade 1:30—Dinner Serenade 1:45—-One Man's Family 2:00—News Headlines Weather z:02—Sammy Kaye Show 2:15—Eddie Fisher Sings 2:20—Back to the Bible 3:00—News Headlines Wbather 3:02--Best On Request 4:00—News and Weather 4:05-—Best on Request 4:30—The Outpoirts 5:00-—News and Weather 5:10—Interlude ' -5:l5—The Outports Icont.) 6:00——Music For You 7:15-—Today’s Hits 7:30-—News and Weather 7:45-Red Cross Safety Talk 8:00—Assignment 9:00—-News and Weather 9:15—Music by Mantovanl 9:30-Looking Back with John Scott 10:00—Court of Opinion‘ 10:30-Shadows 11:00—Dominion News 11:l0—-Sign Off and Views on and and CBA THURSDAY DAYLIGHT TIME 7:15-Marine Weather and Fill’ 7:30—A.M. 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' CFCY TV CHANNEL 13 tiiuiisniiv p.m.—-Afternoon Musicale p.m.-—Open House D-m.—1-Iowdy Doody _ i>.m.-—l\laggi_e Mugging P-m.—Fables oi LaFontaine D.m.—The Lone Ranger p.m.-—Western Theatre ' p.m.———CFCY TV News 3 D.m.—Gazette P-m.—CBC Wrestling 33 P-m.—Don Messer and His Islanders 9: 9 iiie Air I News I: S 4:I‘ 4: 5 3255 5: V-‘ U 5 6: I 7 U1 w >583 09$ Sci- p.m.—-I"T"sic Makers :- p.m.——Climax 10:30 p.m.—-Loretta Young Show 12:20 a.m.—CBC TV News 12:43 '58 no O.) a.m.—Local Weather Forecast 12:45 a.m.-—-Viewpoint 13:52 s.m.—6ign off Page 20 The Guardian Thur.. May 29. 1953 I RI!‘-‘LEY'S BELIE II? E I’ rgI'Rf‘“"sAc-A ON JAN. I.I780- VI/A5 SWEPTOUT F025 MONTHS AND I7 DAYS! /73 CR5 W EX IS 750 ON PA/9,6!-ED COCOA AND INDIAN CORN , ‘All!’ W/T/IOUTBREADDR WAIFR ‘ JUDGE 2' Joni: IIELM ‘ - o Hannibal. Mo WAS ms sou OF A «RIDGE Ti-Ia GRANDSON OI: A JUDGE AND 7/?! "-_' carnr-c/eauasav, . ‘ W A JUDGE ' me SHIP Losr HER RUDDER WITHIN SIGHT oi: HER HOME PORT oi= CAPE ANN. MASS SEA AND FLOUNDERED I-IELPLESSLY VE IT OR NOT TO WHICH FORMERLY INCLUDED THE MYTHICAL GARLIDA BIRDTO PROVIDE TRANSPORTATION i=oI2 THE Goos NOW DISPLAY INSTEAD THE oumue OF A MODERN A/RP1./Ml! CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER ‘Eastdealer. Both sides vulnerable, NORTH QKQ3 I 9764 9.1109 QK1052 was: EAS1‘ 4.15 410962 QK92 VAQJ1053 9653 08 ¢A8743/ I-Q6 SOUTH AAI374 Q8 QAKQ742 ' QJ9 'nxebIddIng: East South West North Pass 10 Pass INT :9 24 80 46 Pass 59 Opening Iead—two of hearts. The, factors that comprise -skill in dummy play are not easy to enumerate. Ask the top declarers in the bridge world why it is that they consistently get good re- sults. and play practically every hand as though they had seen the opponents’ cards, and they will grope for 0. suitable answer. I think they treat each deal as a new experience and simply work out the problems that arise without particular reference to general rules, prior accomplish- ments. or exceptional knowledge. Observe this,hand where -de- clarer heads straight for his goal, dealing with the situation he faces in step-by-step logical style. East wins the ace of hearts ' and returns the queen which South ruffs. Declarer sees a club loser i inevitable, and that to avoid "going down he must not lose a second club, nor can he make the contract unless a. spade I loser can also he escaped. If he draws trumps. declarer notes, I spade will have to be lost unless the suit breaks 3-3. The preliminary survey com- pleted, South leads the jack of clubs, West playing low. The king is played from dummy because the ace is marked to be with Wed. East Iiannot very well have passed originally If he had the club ace, nor can West have raised without it. The first hurdle is passed. Now t.he.p1-oblem of the spade loser must. be dealt with. To rely on I 2.2 trump break or a 3-3 spade break is dangerous. There is A line of play available which can overcome either suit breaking badly. The answer lies in dummy. reversal. Accordingly, (I u m m y’s last heart is tuned high and the nine of clubs is conceded to am‘: queen. He returns a trump, taken in dummy. 7 ' A club is ruffed high, dummy is entered with a. spade, and an- other club is ruifed high. A dis-’ mond is led to dummy and West’: lasttrump is drawn as declare: discards a spade. . South's eleven winners consist of four rurfs in his own hand, dummy’: three high trumps, 0 club, and three spade tricks. in 195: King Features syndicate. Inc. By JOSEPH E. DYNAN PARIS tAP)—It is a tragic paradox of modern French his- tory. Gen. ‘Charles Andre Joseph Marie de Gaulle, a man who gave his utmost for t-he unity and wel- fare of his countrymen, has been for neanly two decades a source of deep and bitter division in France. The chances are that he will continue to be for another dec- ade, even if he comes to power again. The tall, brooding mystic has been a controversial figure since the days just before the war when he upset -the French high command with some novel the- ories of warfare. He favored mobility, expressed in tanks. versus the fore-doomed immobility of the Maginot Line. But the high command told de Gaulle, then a colonel, to mind his own business. I TOLD YOU SO Hitlei-’s fast-moving. end-run- ning Panzers proved him right. The wehrmacht had not over- looked de Ga'uille’s book, Vers 1’Armee de Metier" (Towards a Professional Army) and his other works. When the Germans overran France in 1940, de Gaulle was in a position to say “I told you so.” and did. Then came his flight to London to carry on the war alongside the allies, at the head of the Free French forces. His now-historic broadcast. from the‘ studios of the BBC on June 18, 1940, gave the Free , French and the underground anti- Nazi resistance a slogan and a rallying cry for the sombre days of German occupation: “France has lost a battle, but France has not lost the warl” KEPT FAITH IN FRANCE De Gaulle had faith in France 7////’’///’’///// ¢ Chewing WrigIey’s Spearmint Gum helps to keep Your Teeth Clean... Your Smile‘ ttractive Buy some today. I I Trcigic PcircicIox‘De Gciulle Hcis Been Source Of Division and in the Allied cause. He deeply believed that Hitler even- tually would be overwhelmed. At first, de Gaulle was an ob- scure, ihsubordinate seditious of- ficer who wanted Frenchmen to continue fighting Eng1_and‘s bat- tles for'his_' personal glory. This changed as the BBC spread de Gaulle’s message to France. But" after the Allied land- ings in North Africa, ii. new split arose-—ibetween the original Gaul- lists and those who joined the Allied cause in 1942-43. This came to a head in rivalry between de Gaulle and Gen. Henri Giraud whom the Allies -had selected as field commander of French troops. For months de Gaulle andlGir- and sparred for leadership. De Gaulle soon manoeuvred himself into top position. Two of the levers he used are of interest in the present crisis. _ One was a deal whereby de Gaulle gave government posts to Communists who were operating the most efficient resistance net- work in France. The other was the shadowy and suspicious operation of de Gaulle’s secret police under the firm hand of Jacques Soustelle. After liberation. only the pres- ence of millions of Allied troops in France prevented theiCommu- nist underground from seizing power. Fortified by overwhelm- ing Allied strength, de Gaulle successfully disarmed the Com- munist resistance movement. But de Gaulle kept Maurice Thonez in his cabinet as a con- tact with Moscow. One of de Gaulle’s first acts in foreign pol- icy was to fly to Moscow to sign a mutual aid treaty with the Kremlin. A few years later, when de Gaulle organized his Rally of the French People as a political ve- hicle, he conceded that this had -been a mistake. He explained he had thought Russia would keep its word. Immediately after the war. in a fit of disdain, he suddenly quit the provisional government. With the sad example of the third republic’s latter days in mind, he despised the political leaders in the constituent assem- bly. He despised their partisan bickering. He could not under- stand their reluctance to sub- merge personal or party Interests for the sake of the one great ideal. I . 40. Teacake DAILY TCROSSVI/OR"D T DE coas ACROSL M 3. Tennis .21. Encoun- l R E 3: 3: :3 T T 1. Seize serves , tered E5 5 B A R V A 5. HIgh- _ 4. Flower 22. Perform AD 3 I 0 pg explosive gardeln 23. Cereal Q O 3 O I; 3 I2 1’ projectilc 5. Missi a 3'3"‘ g_ cu; weapons 25. 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In this sample A is used for the three US, X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. npostrophies. the length and formation of the words are all -hints. Each day the code letters are different. A Cryptogrun Quotation N IBSMNWB VXOV OYBINWO IBANAVBH-—LNVV. Yesterday’: Cryptoquote: NOTHING MORE AGCRAVATES ILL SUCCESS» THAN THE NEAR XPPROACH TO GOOD 3 FIELDING. ' ’0A ETTA KE'|'T 1 MEAN,‘/OU DO vou MIND WON'T 55 ANGIE‘/.3 ' D DON'T TAKE THAT N VOUQ OFFICE? You ALWAVS GET so ‘MAD WHEN EMPLOVEES DONTGIVE you TWO weeics NOTICE THAT THEY'RE ‘ QU irriue.’ ___\ C I. I 5.29 -‘-O. wei.I'.,I SI-lOU|.D HAVE TOLD ‘/OLI BEFOEE = 1'|-IAT' 1 WA$N'T TAI<ING II’- In MUGGS is SKEETER _ oi-I, DEAR... I wAs JUST HELLO. MR5. I wisi-I ~/ou ABOUT To TELL CANT I-IE Af£6INNI$...l'M HAD come I SKEETEIZ we I i>RAc-rice iieize To TUNE * TIME FOR HIS I LATER’? PRACTICE... ‘I I_ ' / ' ‘T lJlJJJlJJJ ...I WAS WONOERIN WHY HE IH5I$TED I COME AT I=ouR O'CLOCI<.'.’ N0...I-IE'LL JUST HAVE TIME TO DO I-{I5 BEFORE I-IE GOES ‘ID A MEET‘IN6..~ THAT EXPLAINS EXACTLY L. OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE -w/W26. GALI. WILL CHARGE /., DOWNSTAIIZS AND BARBECUE ' ME Fora I-I‘/PNOTIZING ' HER wo2I<I-Iorzse wII.Tor~J.’ - WE'LL FIND HAVEN AT THE, OWLS CLU8 -4-I‘LL DASH our ToMoRRow AT DAWN BEFORE SHE CAN so ME.’ ' comma UP, LIKE KRALIT ' NITI-I RIBS!-«I ONLY HOPE P002 ow WILTON DOE5N‘T FOLD UP IJNDEI3 HEI2 BARIZAGE.’-we ' » IF I-IESTICKS To HIS LINES. THE si-Iow MAY RUN LONGER TI-IAN UNCLE Toms s2Auci-iez __‘_ WHILE Tl-IE Fer“ ----«-:-.. ---T E-‘.=-W ism"-E?= POLITICAL PUB CRAWL [to consider whether their province.‘ Isliould have more retail liquor VICTORIA IC‘Pl—Ten inern-bei'si 0v_1t1gt5_ They are in British C0_ of the Saskatclie-wan I€‘f;7,lSI8lllI‘€i1un-1b'1a to Study the m.m,.m(.e~s “em on a pub crawl Monda)'~ four-year-old system of cocktail night but not to drink. The‘ \\'PI'e bars and see if it has proved suc- members of a committee set up-cessiful HENRY Stewart MacKay TILLY THE TOILER GRANDMAr ‘SECRET AGENT X-9 THE LONE RANGER MICKEY MOUSE Li'L ABNER JOE PALOOKA TH’ DOOR... 6EB,GI2A‘fi6M'K.Vfi£ ' THIS ooo BALI. BAT I FOUND BEHIND‘ u? I? TI-IAT’S Mv FAVORITE SI-IILLELAGI-I . N ' FUNCTIONS,’/_-/Y s°¢K_L_ . s o~-i=I2ieNT>LvUsE ‘Biz -‘ 4. \\ \ys.\ ' /r/‘>>‘>>7>///4 \\ ':—>> super Champ FIRESTONE HOME & AUTO CO. LTD. can, moon rrnaoron BATTERIES $10.95 WITH TRADE wia rix FLATS DIAI 5547 "WHILE You WAIT‘-' \, WE RETREAD ANY SIZE OR MAKE OF TIRE 670 x 15 4 PLY - $ 0.00 AND YOUR OLD muss \\\\\\\\ ‘E7//-/////>2} 4+. , \\\\\\~_-.\\\\\ - 77;,//y>/z/////4-/>4-j ‘R -.-"I-'5'. .‘. oiIJ‘ii.i~iiame¢ — 5 § § e E . o _ Z " '4. I I AI1 ilieh ‘fl-IESE INDOOIZ-OUTVOOK ‘ i=I“'°’ -JUST ¢°N"K°'- |§‘¥L;JI.?5I§;°YUI'iI I<NO\N\I/ER ‘?:‘vV)''\§‘ — I IJII it I‘ :33? L "BET: T‘ I is ’ sr , .~ M [1111 . -3“ I "I ‘\ “ r..IIPI;I[ "" ,..ii 'I__, it//4,’ _.. vim ¢,;\I"//L/, __,..i wm/,.,, ‘. o ‘I 1. ” \\ ‘ WI’/"r//0 1'1, "“I“"'/ 0"” " III ______._ , M M "C T ’= " ” ' I . nrgrno/v'reesr7/u.7z£Y WHYD my 729!//I/KBI9TOMAN' gig spUARE mm 7’7;IELOIVEB¢I/IIU£ CUTTER can/< CAME NEAR MY E; FOR oapwn//v EM. -3 5,: as -.5 is UD I I -naicks pa//vrso 771$ may agree: M-'.1.osr 7}/EM. Hundreds of Bargains! MAY-TIME SALE Special Event On All This Week ‘S. A. McD0-N ALI) Ii...s...-riie FABU- Lous HUMPHREY PENIMNORTII REACIEV DESPERATELY i=oR we ROPES-... IT LOOKS I.ii<E WHAT'S IN THAT CRATE GOING ON T HE PLANE TO 210 ? ‘ Ag-suuvnéilzil ' T r-“LIZ/‘ LOVES 7/-/E/M FAA/CY F‘?/PP//V C4E5.'.'—‘) \ ' M‘I!!— LISSEN TO TI-IET MOTOR PURR3 AN’, cuss ME. EF, . someeoov DIDN T, LEAVE A COUPLA LI.I. GREEN LIGHTS ON