NOVEMIBER 4, 194d 4QAVV n‘ ‘A a _. 3 DAILY CROSSWORD ggg B DANCE AMOIO Zflpheraof 18. Nativeof ' ‘ ‘l3 . i-w-mm -=~»- arm-i rumour itrsuow acininoi- \ 19.0: the llmc gufiu 9. Dr! 4- MINI (ScotJ [35 gig 1o. rzizdmoon- nickname 2o. Ancient Buillklliléli: -|>0_N MESSER and g eel Pitli- Hebrew ' iliLl ‘ “Rom. Esoundofa measure nglggufi H's ISLAND!“ Relig.) M" _ 22.Secure " ' " thltosaoeoue c. Search 23.1mm WE} E552 910° - 12:30 herbl for 24. Act in ' “i; lill 1g‘ I12. Herb o! ‘I. Cuckoo blustering “Eu § s p“ u \ “m; , 8. Famous manner llilrdefa llliur G fgmfly French 25. Fortify I 14. Peruse chemist 26. Distigure 33. Speak . -v v c: . ‘A _v_- 15. Insect l1. gouth I5. Perlshed \ 10. Tantalum ° lP Y . arriea I8.Amrmatlve one; “Mn u (.ym_) 18. Bird of 31.Decay.u vote (The ' t _ '11. Exchanging prev fruit $9.1m into.) mission gipzrspigrlailgssalzlioyilwltiiofifi 20-03“ 15km“ 3214mm‘ ‘o-M" been called as witnesses and exon- ZI-A will! crated as innocent, and unsus- 32-5Plm- n pecting victims 0t tlie Russian za-atrflsht tactics. They said they had tried 397w!" ' to befriend the Russians as strang- Mitaltor-billed ersnaxid ‘glues in a giants: land.) all . ere no llldlCfli on t at either 27. Learning . ..__. of these oolonels knew they were mliindrance OITAWA, Nov 1 - (GP) _ the target oi insidious tactics or 29. Point ma“ w“ ‘hmwfl W611! on the that. they were codenamed. aowooda ._ methods by which Russian Embassy Moscow directed at one time that tmPontscript oificials eoiwht to develop Can- "friends-trips" with then. should be iabbr.) edian military officers as sources "strengthened," u the Canadians as. Ruler of o: information for an espionage wouldn't suspect anyihlnc o! what Tunis network gathering data for Mos- wally was behind the Rmslans’ 86. Brain cow. friendliness. coverhg It came from Igor Cioislello. Goulwko wmvhbl hi0 hul- 37.Dllcoior former lilmbassy cipher clerk and mony b01011! ti“! "ill I'll Idtlflllm- 89. Want of tone star Crown witness in the Ontario ed to Monday. 1mm“ guprgme oobiértj irlalMrrf former P ‘Lrnokeg ..qua ron a er an. S mons 42> A piece“ Nlggginrgnlel. Xcliafgedtl Wlillt givhilg ays_____°_na money con e a noma on o e RALEIGH_ N U“ N 1 _(Ap) ‘agyudegog; Soviet while he was an R.C.A F‘. __ Robert L_ Nash“ ‘yyeabold Prim"? l mmmunlcatbm “pen movie projeotioziiat, died in the I color u It revolved around the 5W1’? 01' state's gas chamber today, wear- lLSacred Jack “Pd m9" ‘m’ whnels ‘m lng a diamond ring which he said the wartime staff cf Defence Head- was given mm b the woman for DOWN quarters in Ottawa. Their cover- whose slaying h: was sentenced IPrivilegc names-but never their real names to be executed ' l / “cimfhwt l“ Prevwus wmlls- m Nash was convicted oi shooting ". __ A “ s ere any reason wiy ey bntFl-OQUOTE A ‘ryptlmmm ‘ "on should come mit?" Mr. Justice GI‘. firs; fiifiéfi gtfircafiy lgisdeyitnfr L v z l 1' s J Q z r a x r o L i.. v z i Q s s s i. “lfiiiigliinddgjlfjl; Camel Rovden as she left the office where she ... _ .. .. . . . - . ._ A .1 Q Z E X L D J Q — H A M J L M R M D J, [flushes said ‘For the defence there kizdatopggégd ‘acfiyollliluggfigf! WBL _ Saturday's Cryptoquote: WHO CAN ENJOY ALONE, OR ALL vGouzenko then identified "Jack" _' _'——_- ENJOYING. WHAT CONTENTMENT FINDY-MILTON. as a “Colonel Lia-Blane." a special e Distributed by King Features Syndicate, m. adiutant to the ‘Jr-lei of the Gen- g crai Stall. rind “Dlck" as a "Col- WINGS OF TOMORROW: The _Si'ory of Aviation No. 7: Revolution in Warfare By Josemfigi Culmflmn . WANTED: A DOUBLER "who should have doubled in this hand?" asks a correspondent: 11-2: South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. Q 5 3 9 0 7 3 g Q J 9 ‘I 4 q, K 9 5 g‘ x J a 4 g1 z i .QQ1os2 N QKJQA i QKS w E QABS 1 ’ 4.1 1o 4 S QA Q e 2 ' i A A Q 10 9 8 I Q A 5 Q 10 6 I q. 8 7 3 _ » Wt The bidding: " _ _ _ annu- West ' North’ an i BY CHARLES TRACY tion with ground forces, hauling artillery. troops, 1 ‘ pa” 1 N1- p"; Avlalion rilltnr. (Tit-inland Prriw; former Army pilot and 511PPll95- Carrier 3W9?!“ 53V¢d many “V95 ‘ p335 Pa" Pug (Written for NEA Service) (l) hicdcrn warfare was revolutionized by air power in World War ll. The performance of all types of aircraft was improved. and new methods of carrying out attacks were devised. Airborne iriiantrymcn, carried aloft in giant gliders towed three at a time by transports, were imporiant invasion components. Parachutists dropped be- hind enemy iinc-s to harass and disrupt defenses. Squadrons of troop carrier and combat cargo planes carried out special missions in co-opera- .~-i.. l»|~:v . ‘equipped with the latest radar devices. Opera- ‘tors aboard Black Widow P-lWs could direct their pilots within firing range oi enemy craft. tell them when their guns were on the toe, and enable them to send enemy planes flaming 1n he night. A foot-square magic box called "'lFF” EIdentlilcation-Friend or Foe), in reality a mall radio transmitter, was carried by all Allied planes. It was set to send a coded 5181151 Whlfih distinguished, on a radar screen, friendly from pq; phnl. l’ (4) The neccecity of supplying armies seat- tered Jroin Alaska to Burma called for an elaborate air force in itself-wan air fleet of Elan‘ by swiftly evacuating wounded soldiers from battle zones to distant hospitals. (2) Dog-fights in World War II were brief. The speed of modern fighters cut down their maneuverability. Aerial fights began and ended with n fast dive by the attacking plane on its foc. There was time for only zi short burst from .50-Cillib€l‘ machine guns or ZO-miilimctcr can- non. Aim had to be good. for the zittaclaing pilot sped past his target at 400 miles an hour and was unable to turn quickly for a second run. (3) Night fighters were developed and cargo planes. Notable among these was the old standby of the air lincs—the Douglas DC-Zi. Later came the Curtiss Commando—C-46—the C-87. converted Consolidated B-24 bomber. and the Douglas DC-é. In them young Army pilots ircked over oceans to far corners of the globe in a steady caravan, making it hard to believe that Lindbergh had become a hero by flying the Atlantic less than 20 years bcfore. They pioneered the world’: most treacherous routes, such as the nn hon: India to China over the lofty Himalayan mountains, hauling gasoline and vital materials for Allied armies. (TOMORROW: Supersonic Flying.) BUT OUR WAY 2 “We managed r-o hol: a deciarer to three irumu iricfis and the u. nww. 1 FOO)’ PRINTS IAININ’ UP H GROUND mzrvms auxeereadv » ( “Jo-r ’ %///9”’ <63 i'vE BEEN ROBBED! ONLV macs DOLLARS tear gm oi= n-urr Qou. l HAD LAST OF counsa NOT- DADDV-DONT as SILLV- IF l NEED- ED ANV MONEV_ ro AGK col: IT- LAST OF YEAR “ heart ace. This was no great feat. since the defense practically plays itself. But we were very dissatis- fied with the 400 point; we scored for setting Sozim four tricks un- doubled. We teli that somebody‘ should have rlouu-ed, raising the penalty t-o H00 points. At the very least». we thought. we should have scored the value of the game (and rubber) WE could have made so easily {it eilhcr hearts or at no- trump. r "West observed that lie couldn't find a double in uis hand If East happened to have a. triffle less. the double might backfire very badly And East maintained much the same: if his partner had less strength, South would make two spades doubled for game and rub- her. Even if West took the double out. he would be at the level of three with a‘ poor hand This would be expensive! . "Who should have doubled-or is this one or those nands that even the experts don't know hc-w to handle?" It should be admitted that even the experts some to grief on cer- tain hands. but this is not neces- sarily one of them Both East and West were qulzc right in not doubl- ing two spsdcs, and their reasons were quite logical. But East should have doubled one notrump If his rartnrr dad n‘ poor hand. he could probably find some moder- ai-:.y goz-Li cclititict at me level of two But it‘ ‘Nest had a fairly good - hand. the opponents would be sev- erely punished. The chief point is that East had to act while it. was stiir comparat- ively inexpensive. If he waited, D would have a terrible problem and mIghtP-as actually was the case- guess wrong as to whether or not to take action. Br 1- R- WILLIAMS our: BOARDING HOUSE I FA L z Asicmai-iawxer l is r5 vilav ma: nacowo With Moior Hoopla mettle» Bunotaz ALARM? ‘me as"; 5QUIRREL - aPzciausrsén Town HAVE WARNED M TO GET our or- THVB BUSINEQS AND MAYBE THEY WERE RIGHT ' ave-BUT BEFORE Ti-ir». B015 WiTl-l ‘m: WHVYE- cAPs wares» T toe AGAIN I'LL TAKE‘ THOSE THREE SINGLES ~100- ¢','~a_a-a-u-n.I¢u-gen—u v watt. SINCE rusv CAN'T ,MAK= UP TFJEIR MiNDS WHAT truer warn You TO cum, CHARLOTTE ‘ nan-Marv n», Fnnnrl Svriiiu-Isrv, | NAFOEON AND UNCLE ELBY‘ ~. VH’ $477 . ‘n,’ \- rneazmeoam "Qna- Eta-Wu Paar-Pressman! lilmw mew PETVHON 1o stew. nu. i-uolr/ — -' g ifft.:;ii.iiiiiiiiiii? i I wouto LIKE TO HEAR rscuaixowsxvs waurz iii [VESH roow Aunt-i: |=|vEs_~ _ rs~s AND TWENTIES -AND .i= vou oven voun MOU OH, THAT WILLQE I'LL TURN LOVELY, LETITP ~- TH‘ PAGES av eoLav-MAE 1.5 a" ‘ mas-r mower: - . 2's we owtv cease ALtVE WHO EVE? GUT THEQE BEFORE KILROV- , \\\\i;-__J i2 ° \ By Oeorge RAcManur i 5 ly Curl Andersel ly Edwin! ‘EIIAAPQK YCU, . ' /‘\ :3 ' I i i‘ n. I Immanuel: ‘ nnaym-nnnmpm-avi; By Clifford McBriI on, THERE wuARE I I WOULDN'T HAVE l , filth/la l WHAT COULD By Webstel