/ 3 th “toughen Peking’s ‘purge that * ture of Premier Chou En-lai, is { Scores ithe end of March. ~ 2 ay a ’ unacceptable educational stand- | » le Ee Cor | The only criticism he got an Guile the ccoteey: ‘The ACROSS DOWN. , 21. Nour- | f CKCW-TV ie ee i pe-| army, for_example, has raleed| %-Gresting 1. Exclamation lulled — aN —— ——- riod exch concerned His standards. ae ETE > BY : i 12.57-p-m.—Station: Sign.On ast paragraph of the story, car-| “Secondly, the army has a Pa sai oh . a 1:00 p.m.—Wednesday Playbill ried on CP wires Tuesday night. \program of putting ‘youths into | 11. Farewell da hens 24 hae Tr ‘Ae Hae With Helen, That paragraph. said: ‘extended and: technical training | 32’ stare 4. Russian “blue sce aeons se Dea a *" “One source said the forces programs. The minimum educa-| 43 Saturn's svar 26. Happen im: 300 To Tell’ The fruth jnow are so hard up for recruits |tional standard for these young | rings 5. Ejects ‘27. Loam _ UEIRISIEMMWETA 6) 00 p.m.—To Te he fru | ee hing 2.30 p.m.—Take Thirty jthat they are enlisting youths |men is at least equivalent to the | Projection 6. King of _ deposit |TEleiSiEria: eee 4:00. p.m.—Woftd’ In Gontrast jof normally unacceptable edu-;minimum educational evel, 8 15, Indian Bashan 29. Pigeon = | 4.39 pum-—Ranse Daze leational standards -and-senging jaulred Wy (eno oe ites Fae as 5.0 p.mesSecret_ Squirrel... ithem sc’ i ee TTS ape . Rector’s yom : . Threée- . 530 EME Hop _ ‘«_ Replying to Gordon Churchill; Commons 8 peake r..Lucten | assistant 8. Transport toed 40. Com- 6:00 p.m.—Provincial Aééaiee: (PC—Winnipeg South Conta. Lamoureux intervened at that! 78. Waleed 9. Italian ; zai as patent 6.15 p.m.—TV News who asked about “repeated /point, saying the minister was | “Alc . ; . j €.25 sey oo alarming reports” about declin- going beyond the scope ofthe 20. Were yeeee 34. oo 43. Arete 30 p.m.— port , at j le . r 1 gas cue ch [img forces’, strength, Mr. Hell-!question, | 22. Kettles... 16, Mytho-.....36, One kin — 47. Notice of "00 p.m.—Man From UNCLE = |) : —? 25, Born logical of boss a sort es cca Valley ' @ s 26, Chemical archer 37. Concise 49. See 23 9:00 p.m.—Mickey Finn | stairs : : ending 17,Islandof 39. Engineor down 9:30 p.m.—Bob Hope Theatre j T O Nn © r 28. Homer’s Western motor: 50. Pronoun, 10:30 p.m.—Talent Festival ea FN epic Samoa - abbr. old-style 11.30 p.m.—Max in the Morning * : ‘ 30; Athenian. 12:00. p.m.—CBC-TV News | ; jawgiver ale 12.15 a.m.—Viewpoint ! / ee 32. People 12.20 a.m.—LTV News ? of the it | 12.30 a.m.—Station Sign Off a Uu O n e ‘Nether- : ‘ e lands; CFCY RADIO : abbr. — snag WED NES AY enone nrsenoneee evnenneB¥-- SAMES--NELSON ~~~ idea: ‘that~while~the~money ~sup- like OTTAWA (CP)—How tight 1s | Ply figures reported by the bank pacar | Po! _6:30—News and Weather | the—Heht-me situation? | of Canada each—week—show—a--~g5-rre 6.35—Morning Roundup aida aeaiel oth general upward trend, the ‘‘cost/ . oat 6.45—Island Wr. and Mar. Temp. Economists, politicians and | of money” as represented by in| 9g Ps 6.46—Morning Roundup government officials have dif- seit failed eisai da en ae : 6.55—News and Weather fering views and there is no ac- rising : | a6: rpnhiie 7.00—Hebrew Christian Hour cepted measure of tight money | aaah vor oa Vi i Gall 30: Behoot 7.30—News and Weather on which all of them agree. iit Gr ak vieney, ith bel _ pabieok, 7.35—Farm Report 4 _ It's a combination of shortage gi bd to grip the construction | \ for short + 7.41—Morning Roun! up ‘ of money for investment in new lj y and’ sottie other lines 41, Conduits : eg ‘emp. en and Sik deca tae of endeavor tightly. 44, Hillside —NVMorning uU J sin . an . : t r S| 3 as 7.56—Sports Capsule and Scoreboard that ck ae and © home| ee 50 6 roan rao veer ic bee Bee sd tut owners must pay for borrowed | tight “money that « | 46. Barton 8.55—Weather tight money that there was in : money. 6 ni _ or Bow 8 16—Morning Roundup ee se the middle and late 1950s. 4b Views 8.45—Weather Opposition critics of the gov-| CITES FA ORS $1, Hacked i 8.50—Atlantic News Roundup ernment ‘make no bones about| Dr. O. J.. Firestone, noted Ca- 52, Scary : f 8.58—Thought For Today i criticising the Pt t ng nadian ec now vioedean | ; . L. “9.00—CBC National News—CBC | tight money. ernmeént - | of social sciences at the Univer- DAILY YPTOQUOTE ’, 9.10—Notes “and Music | cials, on the other hand, refer) sity.of Ottawa, said in an inter- OR AXY eee to work it: 1}.do—News and Weather to-it: as taut money. So do bank | view recently. there are two ls LONGF 10.95—Notes. and Music | presidents and some economists | uation that -differ_from the sit—|_ ——— GFELLOW --- ae t Oe ‘ By EUGENE LEVIN “TOKYO (AP)—China's army and party leaders appear to bave strengthened: their hand in|. nas Army And Party leaders : Strengthen Hand In Struggle ,down for Communists by Marx }and Lenin. 'NO NAMES MENTIONED The purge inside China is de- | market conditions to be right for | investment. At the moment this large pool of. money is inactive, though it’ is: part. of ‘the public money ‘supply. : For this reson, the $19,600, 000,000 in currency in circula- | tion and chartered hankdeposits " ‘ ‘held by the public, reported ‘by Peking’s hardline leaders, pre- the Bank of Canada, does not sumably in a bid to stamp out give a true picture of available the unrest, have intensified their money. : |The Guardlan, Charlottetown, Wed... June 15, 1966.17 | funds on deéposite without inte- rest. ; This is,,a. detérrent to a bor- rower of doubtful But it is also an added expense to, the commercial firm a good: credit rate ‘ FISK with rat — es ‘ PASSENGERS DROP OTTAWA (CP)—The ‘number of subway passéngeérs increased to 6,356,437 during. a leadership struggle likely to tected in the West only through ward both the United States and | pers. No names are. mentioned the Soviet Union. ’ but a picture can- be drawn At the same,,time, a growing |from the editorials and broad- some — Bpeculate Casts. « For example, tt was never re- ported that Peng had been fired revéaling strong opposition to 8 first secretary of the central China's Communist . régime—|COMmittee of the Peking Com- could hit someone with the sta- attitude to-) Peking broadcasts and newspa-- campaign against’ dissidents: in the process the party organs overriding the situation is the are urging increased vigilance six-per-cent ceiling om the. inter- against, ‘‘U-S. imperialism'’ and est whichmay—be charged for | Soviet “ré v:i sionism:"” | loans fromthe chartered banks. | In this “atmosphere, . actions In fact, interest rates are ins ‘that appear to be retreats to-| clined to go higher than. that, |ward the Soviet Union or fthe| through market forces. First | United States become next “to, mortgages now. are costing as ,dmpossible. Stiffer policies ‘in| much as eight per cent. The ‘other ‘factor currently |pared with > 3,538.642.'in Febru- ary, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported Tuesday. All other’ systems of Canadian ur- ‘ban transit suffered a loss of patronage with the result that the number of initial passenger fares collected during the month fell to 90,284,978, a. decrease of March com- | | two per cent from February. particularly. among students. The purge reached a high) point Saturday with an official denunciation of Mayor Peng Chen-of-Peking,-once considered. a possible successor to Commu- nist party boss Mao Tse-tung, China's real leader. The’ official Peking People’s | Daily accused Peng of “‘spread- ing revisionist poison in a futile | munist' party, a key post: But an announcement was made that |i Hsueh-feng, 60, had been named first secretary of the Pe. | king party, leaving’ no doubt as to the fate of Peng The purge apparently started in the army as a move to elimi- nate civilian oppenents in strong positions in Peking. So far no | military figures have been de- nounced. ; | the Viet Nam war ‘and in the). But the six-per-cent bank in- ° |. “ WELSH WEAR LEEK attempt to ‘restore capitalism.’\.. Editorials” indicate ‘the purge ‘The Chinese use the world re- has not been a smooth one and visionist’ in reference to Soviet | is“not- complete. There have leaders who, Peking claims, been reports that students at international Communist move-| terest’ ceiling does not mean ment become more likely. that "money is available at six The Peoples Daily editor- | per_cent from the: banks. Ac- -tal-Saturday said that anyone | coring to reliable sources, on;Welsh to wear leek blossoms on Lopposing Mao, “however high| some loan applications, the |their. hats March 1, the“ feast may be his position and how- ‘banks will require a-borrower|day of their patron saint, St. lever old his standing. . . will |to keep a sizeable amount of ‘David. | be struck down.” It was a broad RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT erfough warning to include just about every Communist . party leader except Mao- | Mao's role in the purge has been obscure. He dropped from public view for six months, | emerged briefly a month ago at | For centuries it has been a popular. custom _amongthe \ if fave gone off the track laid! Peking University might be | sympathetic to those purged. If +3 reception for Albanian Pre- | ON THE AIR |} true; this would— indicate . that China, despite its control over ation, has not completely EK) id The tollowing. program list- ings are publifmed free of charge as a public service and appear as presented to us by the—stations concerned. ‘WEDNESDAY ‘PROGRAMS .CFCY-TV 2:30. p.m.—tAusicaie caped the student unrest sWeeping Asian countries. .~ X \ Manpow wer Story ;mier Mehmet Shehu, and has disappeared again. There are | some who. feel Defence Minister | an Piao is sharing Mao's man, | le"; : , 'y ' CATALONIAN -ISHERMEN SPREAD THEIR NETS AT NIGHT AND ATTRACT THE FISH ’ TO THEIR BOATS 8Y USE OF GIANT ARC LIGHTS ] OFA | NEAPOLITAN S ° | Mi : fi | SEVTE OTTAWA (CP)—A.‘ Canadian; yer said he presumed the ques | | Press story on manpower loss tion was based on the.CP story. | jin the armed forces ‘‘was both SAYS PEOPLE CONFUSED | ,inaccurate ‘and _ misleading,”| “Whether intentional or unin- |Defence Minister Hellyer told tentional, stories such as this | | the Commons, jean do nothing but create con- He did not mention figures in | fusion and consternation both 3.00 p.m.—Te Tell The Truth 3.25 p.m.—Take 20> 4.00 p.m.—World In “Contrast | 4.3] p.m.—Razzle Dazzle §.00 ‘pem.— in Tin Tin 5.30 p.m.—Atom Ant 6:00 p.m.—Provincial Affairs 6:15_p.m.—Live ‘Longer 6:30 p.m.—Gazette e IA PLANT South America 7.00 p.m.—CFCY TV News 7:15 p.m.—festival 7.30 p.m.—Walt Disney Presents 8.30 p.m.—Bewitched 9.00 p.m.—Mickey Finn’s 9.30 p.m.--Bob Hope Theatre 10-30. p.m.—CBC Talent Festival 11:30 p.m.—Max In The: Morning 12:00 p.m.—CBC. News 12.13 a.m.—Local Weather arid Sports 1-25—Sunlight Eye 19. 30—Preview Commentary 19.55—Lucky 7 Contest 11.00—News and. Weather, 11.05—Notes and Musie 11.45—Bulletin Board 11.50Notes and Music 11.55—Aagriculture ‘66 12.00—Weather 3 12.05—Town and; Country Time 12.30—News and Weather 12:43—P.E.1. Road Report 12.45—Town and Country Time 11.00—News and Regional Weather 11.05—Starlight Serenade 11.30—News and Weather 11:95—Starlight Serenade ' Sports—CBC 12.00—CBC News, Weather and 12.15—News and Music—CBC 1.00—News and Weather 1.95—Town and Country Time 1.15—Gordie Tapp Show ‘ 2.00—News and Weather 2.05—Mostly Music ! ‘ 210—Mostly Music 27.30—Assignment 3.03—Trans-CSnada 2.35—Mostly Music 2.58—Thought. For Today 3.00—News Headlines and Weather 3.90—Pop Caravin 4d0—News Headlines and Weather Foscansa sn Roundup—CBC 4-19—Pap 510—News and Weather 5 05—The ; 5.25—Marine Weather 5.28—The Outports = § 45—Sports Capsule and Scoreboard, §.50—The Outports ** «6.00--News and Weather 6.10—Tonight’s Music 6.30—Rusiness Barometer—C 6.35—Taonights \ AN—Rack to the Bible Fatinee—CBC Caravan Outnorts ‘ er 7 20—News and Weather 7.45—Program Schedule ? 46—Tonight gs Music i B58 News Headlines and Weather bom Midweek 2atre— VSR EN gtiomant Ment: On-Pat. H é y Persone 14.30—Stariaht Sereneday. the story that placed total jstrength of the armed’ forces in |April at 107,106, the lowest since ‘1953. The story said April recruit- jing was down from the previ ous. two months and total inside and outside the armed forces.” | “The government needs no | |help,:’ Opposition Leader Dief-! | C///0 REFUSED ~ , enbaker™ interjected at this! | Un RN . 4 | oe HAS TENDRILS SHAPED LIKE A \3-TOED CLAW WITH WHICH IT CLIMBS VERTICAL BRANCHES LIKE A SAILOR CLIMBING A ROPE ha soem to the inaceu- | '*= = eee et os HAND OVER HAND- iracies,” Mr. Hellyer continued, ‘ strength ofthe forces at the lend of April wa down.361.from | “first, the armed forces are not enlisting youths with normally |- DAILY “CROSSWORD | 6-X LNJOV 1auogS j 45enTown-sndCouaty Time. cesta hearts and take a tine See loutside the government service as well as in it Available statistics seem to favor the taut money idea—the uation in the 1950s | Now, he said, there is a large | pool of funds held by investment’ funds and» trusts waiting for } | | } ~ CONTRAC T BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER | Nearth dealer. | North-South vulnerable. Love NORTH. pa 4— : | ' @AKI1065 AER | oI942 U gene ges, QI5 @K1098742 | 732 #28 ; @Q5 @872 | @AKOIOT. £6 re 40 < | ns ¥ @A63 1 904 @K10954 } 873 - f , fhe bidding? ‘North East South West. |; 11@: 1@ .°1NT Dble |; Passe Pass Pass lead queen of upening . spades Jtis-hard ta heheve that the choice of. whether or not’ to take a finesse in.a part score contract could lead to a swing more. than 2,500 points; . but ot that is what a finesse cost @- cashed the A-K of hearts,” catch- © el4rer in” this ~dynamite-pack- ed hand Vou mav not agree with the bidding: especially North's pass of one onotrump doubled, but that’s fhe way it went. West led the cueen of spades afd South decid to. take. wt with the are in th fie of ded -det each the tt turned out to be a catas - \rophie detision when. East, won ' by , ¢ the heart with the queen and |led the king of spades, West be- ing clever enough to drop the | jack on it. pera ay | As a result of this fine play, East was able to cash his spades as West discarded all his red cards to come down to. only the five club: he had started | with. Dummy was also*reduced to | ——Tfive- caries as the spades were |. run, and declarer. was ‘forced to | _ discard the ace of diamonds_in-, order to keep four clubs “ the | ace of hearts in dummy. | | East. thereupon played a. | heart to thé ace and West took the last our tricks with the A- | K-Q- 10 of ‘clubs to defeat declar- er 1,400 points. Now let's suppose that declar- er had decided to play the hand more conservatively“ istead . of -Staking his all om.the heart esse. ‘ In that case, aftet taking the ace of spades. he would have | 4 | ' | | ing the queen, and would thus have-—-made ix cheart ~ tricks When he thenaplayed the A-K of. diamonds. he wild have caught the Q.T and: also made five diamond tricks Rh a would thus have wound up | with twelve tricks instead of two ard would have scored a‘plus of | 4450—points_instead of a minus | sof. 1.400 pointS. And that ain ttt regardless of how you slice # a 44 | é One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos- trophies, the length and formation of-the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different.’ ; f A -Cryptogram Quotation 4 LQ - BVF UKFEE -QLIY, WLPR WFP EPSI VSI BS ZCLBBFK; EPSI BS OKLIQF.—IFP¥FCO ovic: cr0Q Yesterday's Cryptoquotey NO ASHE _‘THOSE_OF_ INCENSB AND FE SOONER.—LANDOR \ (© 1966, King Features Syndicate, Ine.) @'ARE LIGHTER THAN W THINGS BURN OUT , ‘OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE a ne Z¥I | VWANVUS = aJSNOW AION : a ¢ s IM GOING To THE | | BUT I CAN‘T DECIDE q LADIES’ CLUB WHETHER TO TAKE A BROOM AND GO AS COSTUME PARTY A WITCH ./ THIS AFTERNOON AUNaH ISN'T IT ROMANTIC? WINGEY PHONED ETTA,LONG |. DISTANCE” nN 9 re mean F on rout ; 4 WIONVY 3NOT 3HL vNOOTvd 30F | j i ‘walaans % s9ON nn | BANS 1 SHOULD HAVE KNOWN) | > KE CLAIMS HE MADE THB \\" At Date MISTER! NONE OF OD Was} RIVER GEFORS THEY COLD 1 Ate Lae EVEN A FRAG MAKE {| CATCH HIM! MYSELF, T MENTARY KNOWLEOSE OF fe big TF fT WAS ANYONE ELSE I'D. THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD! 60 WIT } | SAY THAT TOMATO NOSE} Is wonet EVEN ATTEMPT 10 4 ~ THe ME FROM A SQUADRON | r SRT ee eee eee) 7 [EXPLAIN WHY FIREMAN'S tig) LT [7ROveLE 1S PURELY MENTAL! | ‘ fa 3 , t oA > a £ 4 ~ Ca ai) . = ‘ v ~ vy . “ Y ) y \) 7 . ra - 3 ~ WAZ 1 Vo \ S > std TZ i. ‘ Ss x ' } t, \ eed W/L SP) ¥) = tf a i jh \' a ttt H a @ z. \ $i the ‘ as he BEA ( Fi fle was ox tf ‘ WHEN HE iy ‘ , tt MOVED IN= ¢ *) WaNSV 11 AM, indi 4 *% VY i beg 4