_________._.. WEEKEND TV 1ur;sDAY ercuurtams crcvnw 330 p_m.—Afterhoon Musicale 4.00 p,m,—-swlnpalong Jubilee ‘3| p,.-n,-—VecatIon Time 530 p.m.-Cartoon Party 6.00 pm.-l Married loan 630 p.m.—Brltlsh Calendar 6.45 p.m.—CFCV ‘V N‘WI 700 p.m.-Gesette 7.30 p,m.—Cu-rams 13-7 Three Blind Mice 900 p,m.—TOlIHl Scouts woo p.m.—CornedY Pl-vhom ‘O30 pm.-The young Affair 1130 p.m.-'ROClfll ' 12 oo p.m.—CBC News 12.13 a.m.—l.ocal Weather Forecast ".14 a.m.-Viewpoint B! ROY ESSOYAN HONG KONG (AP) — You go broke in Hong Kong buying -all tthebthlngs you can’t afford not u . That's what every tourist- yes, every single one—tells you gaily as he staggers out of town, suitcases bulging. All you can do is smile wanly. TV. CALLS NITE or DAY Day (-3537 Nlte O-ell!-1-702 VAIUS RADIO & TV 204 Kent st. clftewe CKCWJIV 355 p.m.—Station Sign On News. Weather. Shorts A00 p.m.—Swing Along 431 p.m.-—Vacation Time 5.30 p.m.—-Cartoon Party 600 p.r’n.-—Under The Sun 6.15 p.m.—Televlslon News ¢30 p.m.—$can 635 p.m.—Telavislcn Weather 6.40 p.m.—Haza 5:5 p.m.—Teievlsion Sports 70o pm.-Highway Patrol 7-an p.m.~—Zane Grey theatre in 00 p.rn.—Ccmedy Spot to-so p.m.—Summar Playdste H30 p.m.——Recital moo p.r-n.—CBC TV News 1245 a.m.—Viewpoint r2§25 ..m.—-sign off crnrnrt rurno and TV can 4-3246 176 Kent St. (opp. Eaten’s) Open 8:30 am. -9 |).m. CFCY RADIO TUESDAY 6.28—Sign On 630—News & Weather ' 635—Country I: Western Roundup 655-News In Weather 700—Hebrew Christian Hour 7 i5—-Country 8. Western Roundup 7 30—News 8. Weather 735—-CFCY Farm News 7 41-Country a. Western Roundup 8 00-News 8 ll—Weather I R i6—CountrY I Western Roundup 8:.15—Weather 8-50—News <7 no—Morning Devotions 910-Morning Moods 9 25—Matlnee wnrr Willis 9 30-Morning Moods ie00—News & Weather lOO5—Notes L Music l0-i5—Win 57 it‘ 20—Notes & Music in 30—Bride Program i0.‘.5—Notes It Music i1»o0—News Headlines In Weather ll 02—Notes & Music 1130-Montague Entsrtelns ll -10-Notes 8- Music 1i-45-Bulletin Board ll-50—Nores 8 Music ll.55—At|entic News Roundup l2-00—Weather 12-O5—Mosrly Music '7 30—News a Weather 12 45—Mostly Music i.00—News Headlines I Weathd l:-15-Mostly Music 2:00—Naws & Weather 2.05—Music for a Summer Afternoon 3-00-News In Weather Japanese transistor radios here I tractions for the visitor -year average, the Dominio -ikédiation Because tourists have been say- ing this and acting on this pre- mise so long it's no longer com- pletely true. You c a u still buy Swiss watches. German cameras and cheaper than they sell at home but "the gap is rapidly narrow- in . 8 But Hong Kong still has at- Its harbor is one of the pret- tiest in the world, at night a fairyland of sparkling-jewels. And for those seeking vicar- ious excitcrment, Hong Kong is still a glamorous neon-lit city of sin, smugglers and spies. ILLICIT -atraacrrons If you venture into some of the darker alley you can still opium in the air. although it was outlawed in 1945. Professional ladies of easy virtue are also officially out- lawed but gaily painted women still beckon passersby from floating sampans that snuggle embarrassingly close to th staid Royal Hong Kong Yacht ub. Some of the biggest money here is still made smuggling id ‘~ go . And for the cloak and dagger trade, this British colony on the coast of Communist China has spies galore. Communist. anti- Communist and some who dou- ble as both. But perhaps the most tempt- ing attraction in Hong Kong is the food, probably the most de- licious and most varied in the world. occasionally catch the whiff of o If you tried a different dish every evening you'd have.to,_live Show Increase CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA — The number of deaths recorded in Prince Ed- ward Island in July was con- to 80 to taste them all—the Chi- nese menu spanned B0.000 dishes at last count. And they're all good. as long a you like such exotic items as baby eels sim- mering in oil and garli chicken wrapped in lotus leaves and baked in mud. roast new- born sparrow. snake soup, sea slugs or shark's fins. CITY BOOMING Hong Kong is currently en- joying the biggest boom in its 120-year history. The boom may be headed for a bust but no one here seems particularly wor- ed The skyline is jagged with the trelliswork of factories, offices and apartment buildings soaring skyward. Towering resettlement blocks for refugees from China dot the landscape. Despite its modern dress Hong Kong is still essentially a Chinese city of Chinese sights, smells and noises. The streets teem with life. The shops spill onto the side- walks. Babies play in the gut- ter. wrinkled old men sit on doorsteps puffing meditatively u long bamboo pipes. And everywhere you look, slender Chinese girls click by provocat- ively in tight-fitting “cheong- sam" dresses and high heels. PACKED WITI-‘l REFUGEES Hong Kong is a city of para- e doxes and the biggest paradox of all is what the refugees have done to it. They started pouring over the border when the Communists swept across the Chinese main- land 13 years ago. They pre- sented Hong Kong with a stag- gering housing, feeding, nursing and education problem. But they also provided an indirect'_ answer to that problem. They gave birth to new indus- , tries and 70 per cent of Hong Kong's wealth today lies in these new industries, financed by refugee capital and operated "1110 Gil-rdian. Chedottotovvn. Tues. Ann 28. 1902.11 tr; aided the on are “nuk- Bargain Prices Seen Higher In Hong Kong a detailed study to deter- mine possible effects." Also participating in this sci- entific study is the ‘National Aeronautics and Space Admin- istration, which handles the space -~ flight program. The radiation belt, largely consisting of high energy elec- trons, was 'produccd by the high-altitude nuclear device the United states exploded above the mid - Pacific July 9. These atomic particles. and the x-rays produced by them, could be a menace to any spaceman fly- through them. unless were suitably shielded. However, the official state- ment said the “new radiation lies primarily above the path of current manned flights." HEIGHT VARIE8 The belt varies in height above the earth, from perhaps 200' miles high at some points these altitudes are greater than the altitudes of the manned space flights of the United e roughly the geographic equator. to. 500 miles at others. Both in States and Russia. The U.B. as- tronauts‘ orbits ranged from about 100 to 167 miles above the earth, while the range of the viet cosmonauts was 100 to 145 miles. approximately. NAS said it is proceeding as before with its plans to launch Walter Schirra into a six-orbit flight during late September or early October. ' The new belt. according to preliminary studies, is about 400 miles deep and 4.000 miles wide. ’It stretches around the gin above the geomagnetic equ or. This equator follows The official statement issued here disclosed that the radia- tion was so powerful immedi- ately after the July 9 nuclear blast that it damaged solar cells on three high-flying experimen-H tal satellites. It added: “The data so far available in- dicates that as a whole the belt is decaying by a factor of two a peri t o to three weeks. (This means the radia- tion loses half its strength in that period). ms ms rmr ‘mine 1» sscwvp to as oavsmcrao , mm areas: A SIWER TEA SIRANER II the Delaware Historical Society Museum by refugee enterprise using cheap refugee labor. July Deaths In Province Over 1961 period. marriages total 276 this year. a 5.3 per cent increase over 1961 but a 2.1 per cent drop from the three year aver- age of 282. =l‘r2SsrHAsrLves %Ol.I.AR sxrfiio } ' svsaumer FRPNKLIN - ll|!PLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT . .-O‘ q.’enI-unease--—-I‘ siderably higher th s n last year and higher than the three- Bureau of Statistics reports. Deaths numbered 87 this Ju compared to 61 in July 1961 and to the three year average of 63. So far this year, PEI deaths total 612 compared to 535 for the first seven months of 1961 and to the three year average of 559. The increase for the year to-date is,14.4 per cent over 1961 and 9.5 per cent over the last three year average. {589 compared to 1,606 in the However. number of births in PEI in July rose to 284 com- pared to 262 in July 1981 and to 215, the three year median. For the year to-date, births total 1.- corresponding period year and to 1,553. the three year average. Marriages remain about th e same. 66 recorded in the island this July compared to 85 last July and to 85, the three year median. For the seven month Dangers Pondered WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States, having created a new radiation belt around the earth, now is seeking to deter- 5' mine whether it will delay or otherwise impair the U.S. Mer- cury astronaut program. A statemornt issued here by the defence department and the Ato ic Energy Commis- sion indicated it will not but Q 14. Important as taxee occurrence 8. Hail! DAILY CROSSWORD A03-088 8. Beaded I. Unpresaed. as 1. Spanish .0. Sort nobleman 11. Ablue 5. Affirmative 12. Misdsaipfl ly wharf 6. Ride of 13. Ruby 7 obetructioln E!-JEE EIJEEEE 3 05—Muslc for a Summer “‘. ..... A:00—Naws In Weather A 05-—Muslc for a Summer Afternoon 4 Cl0—The Outports 5:O0—Nawa 8- Weather 6 0&—The Outports O 525-Marine weather 5 2'8-—The Out 6 30-Tonight's Music 7fi0—Bac|( To ‘the Bible 7 30——Naws s Weather 7 45-Lone Guide Talk 10-00—News. inland and Marine Weather l0;l0—Matin_ee With wnna V0-l5—-Starlight Serenade rizoo-—cac National News. l l :30—Transltlon ' r2§ro-—srgn orr ‘ CIA IAIIO TIIIIIAY 7:o0—News. Icons I Weelltfl Iris-—-Breakfast Music C:00—-NOW! Weathi 3-i5——Mar Icons _ v a:2l—The Gerry rum. lhow ‘:100—A. M. Chffinltb '=00- -News and Weetfid I I-‘5-The Tommy Homer ltfi ' i:ao—Whet’a New " 245—Em.pgag uh NOW! 9 3303c-‘LC. 4:00- ‘=°3-Now and Theo 4:30-‘Mun. ‘Q. "I “ ‘. . *°5-irrlenrel 5"“ Mm Fish U'¢'aeQ CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER South dealer. East-West vulnerable. NORTH across games 9 . own on ea-I101 genus so In Q7 eaxorss guru 4:5 fiseblddlng: .. Iouth West North East 19 Pass am Pass 49 Opening lead — queen of spades. - This hand is a test of tech- nique in dummy play. Let's say lv.o1.I’ro in four hearts and West ads the queen of spades.- which you duck. You then ruff the spade continuation. How would you now pin the hand? A club loser is inescapable, ' Or 6-29-Music A e:so—.m incomparable Guitar 4!-Ifletre I Dinner Music mo-um and Inland Weather mo-On hrilemenr Hill 7xl5--byline 7r20—Marine Weather and ‘ Musical interlude nd 9_.®$Veneower Chembt 07$. io.co-vumwov theatre - Neva M280-.-Refined I2-lo--Music in the Niel‘! ..'u......'.;.......r so the problem is to avoid los- ing two diamond tricks. One diamond has to be lost in any case. so the whole question is finding the line ‘of pi a y that has the best chance of avoid- lag the other. Several facts stand out. It the trumps are divided 2-2, you can make the hand by drawing them and playing the A-K and another diamond. The fourth m Likewise, the hand is make- ble if the diamonds are divided 3-3. whether trumps are drawn early or not. _ so you therefore proceed on the basis that both suits will - break badly —otherwise. there; is no problem-— and do what you can to guard against the worst division. Note that you cannot afford to test the trump sltuaion by firs drawing two rounds. If you did his and then played the A-K and another diamond. you would be defeated by a trump return. . The best way to guard against all possibilities is to cash one high trump at trick three and then lead a low dia- mond. This gives you the maximum amount of protec- tion against bad breaks. Assume the diamond is taken and a spade is returned. Y on ruff and now cash a seco round of trumps. hoping the suit is divided evenly. But when West shows out, you lea A-K of diamonds. hoping that the suit is 3-3. ~ It isn't. but -you get a inch break when it turns out that Eas is the one wih the dia- mond lengh. 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NIIHIIN IT'S ALMOST UN BEIJEVABLE .’ .Ll.3)| VLI3 WHEN YOU'RE NOT iN THE OFFICE, Ve'5,DAD.’ I DID..’’ HERE'S THE LIST I HAD IT FIXED TO TAKE ALL MY HOME CALLS -rwr~r<'s A't.wA~/5 MAKIN’ wrssc2Aa<s ABOUT MY BOAT.’ 1‘LL SHOW H22,‘ - ’ J muumaemrnonzasa A rczsnsrrsrzssrrn-nisneosasoes - ‘ " ‘.1 --AND AFTER - . I IUUND GNP, MY OUIXS PlBIII'DA£' OF aansv 'rr.1 v)roo1va sor- — l—’_.‘ — — FAR ENOUGI-I APART ‘TO HOLD 1 THIS rrAMMoci<... v sur rn.r. "o'hII3.i°“%a~.z r-i-He’; sous.