‘ ” CKCW — Moncfon . ado—Country and Western . 9: 10-Morn'ing Moods moo—News ‘ Headlines" ‘ and 7: 11:02—News . 11:30—NeWS ;12:30-——News and- Weather‘ , ‘ 212:45—Mostly Music. I 2:0Hammy Kaye Show v 4:30—The Outports ‘ 6:1_5—CBC News and Weather ‘ 6:30—Alex Barris. Page 16, The Guardian Thurs, August 14, 1958 CFCY TV CHANNEL 13 THURSBAY :30 p.m.-—Afternoon Musicale p.m.—Ross the Builder in . 5: 6: 7: 0 p.m.-—-The Lone Ranger p.m.——Western Theatre p.m.—CFCY TV News p.m.—Gazette p.m.-—CBC Wrestling p.m.—This Is Jazz p.m.—F-16 p.m.—Summertime ’58 p.m.—Playhouse U. K. p.m.——Loretta Young p.m.——Drama p.m.—Fighting Words p.m.—CBC TV News . 3 a'.m.—Local Weather Forecast 2:15 a.m.—Viewpoint 2:20 a.m.—-Sign Ofif 88 8': 8: 9} 12 1: 2: 12: 8888883888$ H CHANNEL 2 THURSDAY I . 4:55 p.m.—Sign On News, Weather, Sports 5:00 p.m.—Ross The Builder 5:15 p.m.—-Let’s Look _ 5:30 p.m.—-Lone Ranger ‘ 6:00 p.m.—Bengal Lancers 6:30 p.mL—Early Evening TV News - I 6:45 p.m.—Weather 7:00 p.m.4ummer Theatre “Next Time We Love" pun—This is Jazz p.m.—F 16 p.m.—‘Summertinie “58" , p.m.——Playhouse U. K. p.m.——Loretta Young Show p.m.—Exclusive :30 p.m.-——Fighting Words ' 12:00 a.m_-—CBC News 12:15 a.m.—Viewpoint , 12:22 a.m.—-CKCW News 12:30 a.m.—Sign Off . RADIO CFCY THURSDAY STANDARD TIME 5:58—Sign 0n 6:00—Hebrew Christian Hour 6:15—Musical‘ Moments , 6:30—News 6:35—Weather 6:40—Wes'tern Hoedown moo—News and Sports Capsule 7:10—Weather » 7:15—Country and Western Roundup. v 7:40—Ches Cooper Time 7: 56—Interlude. 8:00—News 8:11—Weather l Roundup 8 S45—Weather 8 : 50—News 9:00’-Morning Devotions 9:30—Top Tune Time 9:45—Freddy Martin Show -10:00—-—News Mics—Magazine pf the. Air , Pass ALL 42 MEMBERS ,9! OF THE CLASS OF 1923 OF HAVERFORD COLLEGE IPA. ~' ‘ WERE sTIu. LIVING WHEN f - IT HELD ITS .' asmmm ms YEAR i RIFLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT ‘. ' ’ ‘ DEALER’ WAS BUILT . / WITH waw mm so ms npsy , MEMOS MOI/LO V FEE. AT HOME Q‘W‘Ofl" 6-6 Westdealer; _ , North-South vulnerable. NORTH Q37 , 'Q-A'JIO ' QK‘J'IB . ticQ-Hz , was! EAST 992 OQJIOS '9885‘ 3 , QQIO95, .432 . ammo 4.9753 SOUTH AAK548 VKQIZ one , .ISKS ‘I'hebldding: Well: 'North Pass Pass .24 4' East 1 at. . Pm South I Dble 3 v Pass a. — Dble‘ Opening lead—nine of spades. I was playing with Sidney Silo- dorviu the Vanderbilt Cup a few months ago when this interesting hand came up. Silodor’s two spade response to the informatory double was mere- ly a strength~showing bid/to iden- I ,tify‘a‘hand close to an’opening hid When I bid three hearts, he had no choice but to raise to tour. My six bid was perhaps sporting, con- sidering Silodor’s original pass, but. it seemed to me there Was ’a good chance he. had four trumps, in which case the play tor a slam would be 'sartisfiactory. West’s _10:30—Me_lody Parade . ‘ Weather and Graceries ’ 11:17—Magic r of Music Views on ,1 HMO—Weather ' 11:45—The Magic oiMu‘si 12:00—Weather 12:05—Eddy. Arnold Show - 1:00—News Headlines and wea v ther. , '1:02—Mostly Music 2:30—Back to the Bible. ‘ 2:00—News. Headlines and Weather ‘ 2:15—Eddie Fisher Sings 2:20—Back to the Bible- 3:00—News Headlines Weather « aim—Best On Request 4:00—News and Weather 4:05—Best on Request and 5:00—News and Weather 5 : 10—Interlude 5:15—The Outports (cont) 6:00——Music For You 6:304News and Weather. 6:35—Music For You. 7:00—Music For You (Cont.) 7:30—News and Weather 7:45—Red Cross Safety Talk 8:00—Assignment 9:00—News and Weather 9:15-40ne Man’s Family. 9:30—Looking Back with John Scott 10:00—C0urt of Opinion 10:30—Shadows 11:00—-—Dominion News 11:10—Sign Off CBA THURSDAY DAYLIGHT TIME 7:15—Marine Weather-and Fill 7:30—A.M. Chronicle 8:00—CBC News and Weather 8:15—Maritime Sportscast 8:20—A. M. Chronicle. , 8:45—Morning Devotions 9:00—A.M. Chronicle 10:00—A.M. Chronicle 11:00—The Magic Swing. 11: 15—Performers Showcase. 11:30—Speakers Choice. HAS—Speaking of Speech. 12:00—Jamboree Junction, \12:15—Jamboree Junction 12:30—Maritime Farm B’cast 1:00—CBC News and Weather 1:15-Pages From Life 1:30—Music from Montreal. ‘ 1:59—D.O. Time Signal 2:00—Variation on a Theme 2:15—Summertime with Bert _ Devit. . 2:45—For the Piano 3:00—CBC News 3:03—T/C Matinee 4:00—Music by McMullln 4:30——Drawing Room Concert 5:00.4Maritime Fish. B’cast 5:30—The Don Tremains Show. 6:00—The Don Tremaine Show. 6 : 10—Maritime Sportscast 6:45—Roving Reporter 6:55—Byline 7:00—Music in the Ev‘ening 7:30—Folk Song Time 8:00—Take It From Here 8:30—Sweet N’ Sour EMS—Sweet N’ Sour 9:00—Prairie Playhouse. 9:30—Business Barometer 10:00—Its a Legend. 10:30—Vancouvrer Chamber 0r- 'Wales (Reuters) HCheenlng crowds burst police cordons . S at urd a y when the Prince of Wales.,made his first visit to the principality since the Queen announced his new title twoweehs ago. It was anunofificial visit. . While their'parents were mak mg the first royal tour of the is- land this century, the Patrice and Princess Anne were landed from the royal yacht Britannia at an- other pier. They made their own “private’ tour In a police car, accompanied by Lord and Lady Mountbatten. lit was not until otter they had lunched with the Queen and the duke alt Plas Newydd, home of I the Marquess of ‘Anglesey, that the waiting crowds had a glimpse of their new pmnIce'v . CATCH ROYAL GLIMEPSE Then the crowds lining the route to Holyhead saw all the Royal Family together. . When their car arrived at the Mackenzie pier with the two chil— dren sitting in front, the crowd ' went wild with enthusiasm. As the Royal Family walked the 25 yards from the car to the pier, where their barge was wail mg, the spectators suvnged for- ward, bursting through barriers. The police were unable to stop the rush. The Royal Family succeeded in reaching the pier, but not be- fore the Prince of Wales was pushed partly off balance by a' stray dog which bounded up to him. The dog brushed past Princess Anne. Prince Charles, recovering his 11:00—CBC National _ Roundup. 11:30—Eventide. 12:00—Here’s the weather and sign off. Add I-‘un ‘ to Family Outings with healthful, refreshing Wrigley’s Spearmint Gum. News chestra. , CONTRACT- BRIDGE By 3. JA“ BECKER double made it clear I had sized up the situation When dummy came down, pros- pects of making East had opened a psychic. West had to have the aeeofclwbsaswellasamini- mum of five trumps. IIf West also had only a singleton spade, there was no chance to make the contract. _ Atter taking the ace of spades, my flirst play was a low club to- ward dumImy. As expected, West went up with the ace. He feared my king of clubs might be dis— carded on dummy’s diamonds un- less he grabbed the-ace at once. (Actually, his play made no dif— terencein the eventual result). West returned a spade and I breathed more easily. There was now a chance the band could be made. I won‘the spade and cash- ed the king of clubs. , Dummy was then entered with a trump. East followed, West with probably five trumps. A spade was discarded on the queen of clubs. Then the A-K of diamonds were cashed. All that remained was to guess whether West had started with three clubs and three diamonds, or four clubs and two diamonds; Ineededtorufifoneoardfrom dummy with the seven of hearts, without being overrmffed. I decided ,East could hardly his/ spade bid with a four.- card suit. So I trumped a diamond. The rest was easy. A cross - :CrowdsfiEl-ucle Police, "Che-er New Prince Of Wales ruff took care of‘the last four tricks. balance, patted the dog, laughing and flushed with excitement- His father, laughing heartily, put areassuri-ng arm around his shoulders, and they waved to the crowd. Still waving, the Royal boarded their barge for the Britannia at her mooring at the harbor entrance. The royal yacht was due to leave Anglesey at midnight to continue the west coast cruise. United Y. P. U. Meets-At MT. A. Delegates from all ten provinces of Canada and Bermuda will at- tend the sessions of the National Council of the Young People’s Uni-on of the United Church of Canada at Mount. Allison Univer— sity tram August 18 to 24. Dr. Ralph C. Chalmers, Pro- fessor of Systematic Theolog- , Pine Hill Divinity College. Hall- fax, will speak during the ses- sions on the theme “A Faith to Proclaim.” The Bible Study ’on “Jesus” Answer to Life’s Pro- blems” will the an important part of the Council program. The main purpose of the National Council is ta exc-harige‘ideas for effective Y.P.U. activities, to pro- vide spiritual enrichment, and to foster an opportunity for all Con— ferences to meet together for workship, study and recreation. Among the 175 delegates at- tending the Council meetings will the Carol Thompson, Charlotte- town, P.E.I. East Presbytery, and Carl Miller, Swmmerslde, P.E.I. Central ' Presbytery. NOON CONCERTS WhNNl‘PIEG (CP) '—- City resi- dents seelcing mid-day relaxation hour concerts by the Winnipeg. Symphony Orchestra in Septem-‘ ber. Chamber music, quintets, quartets and instrumental and vocal recitals will be teatured. Costs are covered by a Canada Council grant. ' MONTH’S WALK MOSCOW (APl—‘B. A. Dzert- sinsky said he was feeling a bit would do him good. So the 68- year-old pensioner set out from Moscow for his home in Kiev. It took him a little more than 30 days to cover the 595 miles. have five diamonds, in view at ‘ Sadkyllle, NB. _ (Special) —~§, l DAILY CROSSWORD‘ 1..., ACROSS DOWN 18. Foolish 1. Betsy 1. Bottom of 19. Mul- Ross' a room. berry - handiwork 2. Not (1nd.) .———— tight 20. cand- Zeppelin 3. Donkey v22. Diluted 9. Shut 4. Exclamap turn 10. Regulations tion (slang) 23. Capital 12. House 5. Feel one’s (Cuba) . . (Scot) ‘way 24.Eazii figmmg amgfi '13. Sorcer 5,1)reciom she . * as (B.W.I3.r§ I stone 25.33am! YeltfldOY’I LING? 14. Greek 7.Ma.1t ZGConstella. 33.0bserves island beveragef tun 35.M1neral. _ l5. Enemy 8. Special 30. Not so bearing vein 5”“ mm" 31 Eli” t “$3.32.”: ~ 16. Note 0! 9.Fragment . gen . ' scale ~11.GIistenea a TBregdeBtable 3&me? 17.Antedate 15,0hurch 1. ir ham :0. Wine cask ' spire homes to. Not (pres) 21. Tennis ’ ’ .. - serve 22. Pierce, as bysbull 23. Wanting interest 27, InCite 28. For 29.Wine barrel 30. Bulging bottles 34,—Smith, “Happy Warrior” 35. Sheltered. side 38.130211 37.11”qu (dish) $9. Herb 01 carrot imin 41. Positive pole (elem) - 42.Pussin 43. Pitcher 8%; £4. Taverns DAILY ORTHOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it: - A X Y D L B A A X R _ ,IsLONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A used for the three L's, x for thp two 0's, etc. Singleletters. I apostrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. A Gryptogram Quotation JTN JTNBWOD YWEF‘ 3'! 2'8). peerenr a mess 3r Brno! Bonnzn’B—zurno. . I \ Yesterday’s Gryptoquote'.’ IF THE WORLD’SA mun- NESS, GO, BUILD HOUSES IN IT!—-—IlARCOM. \ . . (© 1958. Features'Syndicate, Ir" ‘ ETTA KETT ' Mv DAD SAYS 5 HE'LL GET HAL]3 _. PAY WHEN. HE v EETIFaEs} I,‘ W" “WV "“ ' v w 7- . , > V I WELLIJUST IN CASE ‘ .. 553 mm. youé l I 05005 TO WAIT ,,,/.I GET HEBHOMg so _ {47” 99599 ETTA ‘ ‘ Icon ' ‘ ' ‘ ‘ I i i av TWELVE! T“) ‘1 ’l ‘ - . ’ / ‘ I I“ . fl n, // ’ I . I \33 d .‘l'.’ L I 4 . ll, . ‘ e. 52/“, ‘ I III MUGGS 8: SKEETER SPRAYING mTHE BUGS ARE EATING MY GARDEN I /, UP ALL THE SPINACH !! w / 1... poor LI'L sues... _ FAT UP ALLTHEIR ' SPINACH... I 4 . ' ...AND NEVER HAVE A CHANCE TO GROW UP BIG AND STRONG! run down and decided a, walk ’ OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE ' will be able to attend free lunch- ' ~: ELLO,TW1665«-IT'5 SUEE * RELIEF TO. LOOK OVER THE FENCE AND NOT SEE - THAT sIe 8A6 OF WIND, Hooae. SNORING IN THE HAMMOCK!«~vI|-IERE I5 IIHE 2.! ALASKAJ HOPE!“ WHATS HE PAVING you _ FOR- coTTINo IIIs GRASS 2 THAT’5 acne A come- cows FOR A some: SCOTLAND YARD . ' OPERATNE!» M155 T HE SEVEN-“(EAR l‘I'CI-I.’ «as BY THE WAV, DID You HAVE 5665 FOR BREAKFAST TI-IIs Mommapa IS THAT #551529sz SHIRT RE- WEARING z OLD SCOTLAND zflimumsm‘unnnm‘uu an :sscRET AGENT X-9 ..—_ THE LONE RANGER I not PALooKA LI'I. ABNER 1.13 / ’/ / GOT A SCORE '_ ' nor/II 7H5 LONE RANGER/ BECAUSE F HIM, BI TOM AND CUTTER CLAPK APE IN JAIL AwA/TIN' HANG/N’_/ . ,y w. TO SETTLE ‘r '- -,.—a',‘/,/ m/vw/x’ was! you DEAL mm me; no”; W552 IN a}; . r. 1963. The ban: Kenn . rlbuted by Kin: Feature- Syndmu ; Stewart MacKay I , ‘NEw 'fSUPER-CHAMBION" * We Sell and Service FIRESTONE TIRES} for cars, trucksand tractors. We trade any size tire. This summer why not’Ic'all and get our prices on a complete set of Firestone t1res.. “LOWEST .V PRICES IN TOWN”. ‘ FIIR‘ESTONE HOME 8. AUTo co. LTD. _ 187 GREAT GEORGE ST. s DIAL 5547’~ . ‘v . ‘IOUR BREAKFAST (GERMAN! I HOPE THAT r van eo'T A econ mom‘s m9. comment. you HAVE Momma To FEAR! ‘IOII Imus: nmu,wnhmen. AFTER vou HAVE semen ‘OIII WHPOfiE: .1435. AT a TIME LIKE nus! onm—enoueoi fiEl-IEARSAL‘E! mom l5 mom AT 1H5 omnmee 33mm BANKE'TouIeIIT WE'lL HAVE 'me connIeAN DAME WRITE ANOTHER NOTE 10 THE FBI - Hen NOTE unit an TIIAT one scene RELEASED AT OYSTER (WEI-THE IU'EE qu. paw-ms sauce AND THE :91 ~ M mom me «some; BANK Ana _ AT THE EXACT men: our. name A 00an car use see you WITHOUT THE meme... a, ad'Mm-oumusas, : s m um: ,, v one a a IIIs SERVICES In SOCH A ' ' “Jenn? case: no as A GREAT ‘I'LL NEVER BE ABLE To ; THANK vou suma...vou've ' MADE ME ABSOLUTELY FOR THAT UNUSUAL GIFT To TAKE BACK I-Io'MEw YOUR GIFT HEADQUARTERS WHILE IN CHARLOTTETO'WN “ on, mist. code I HAVEN'T SEEN PATS‘I AROUND...I KINDA MISS , my IN, PLEASE .' ND HAND‘ICRAFT" .L e ISLA IT HAIN‘T TWITCHED IN A COUPLE 0' HOURS II- MIGHT'S WELLT KE SHoas,Now A “5 hm; . . t _r»_...._... . SUMPTHIN'S I GIVIN'!!- a»: o .2: 3 s / 5‘ ‘9") "‘ (f. is $7 ///\ w, w» - nun. “//