WELL, I GUESS ITS COMBINATION OF AND BAKING / OF A f MISS-ETTA KETT ?— POSIES! WOW.’ TO WEAR TOTHE CLASS HOP TONIGHT’ MOM “COME LOOK# <P, —~)., MUCH 2 =~ I'LL BET THEY'RE EROM ‘F> ~\ WINGEY 7 ETTAY DON'T } HAVE LET: HIM SPEND S or 12.45—Town and Country Time’ 1.00—News and Weather . 1.05—Town and Country Time ~ 1.15—Tommy Hunter Show—CBC 1.45—Town and Country Time *2.00—News and Weather 2.05—Mostly Music .3.00—News Headlines and Weather '3.03Trans-Canada Matinee—-CBC '3.30—Tops In Pops” 4.00—News Headlines and Weather -4.03—Canadian Roundup—CBC '4.10—Tops In Pops © *5.00—News and Weather :5.05—The Outports +5.25—Marine Weather +5.28—The Outports *6.00—News and Weather {615=On Parliament Hil—CBC 16.20—Todays Editorial—CBC '6 25—Sports Parade '6.30—Business Barometer—CBC ,6.35—Tonight’s Music .7 00—Back to the Bible *7 30—News and Weather 7 45—Program Schedule fs «7-46—Tonight’s Music alt. Nation's i Business—CBC bere: }7-55—Interlude - *8.20—Tonight’s Music - =8.30—Radio International Part I— ee <a 9.00—Radio International Part 2— 2, You-are declarer with the West hand at Three Notrump, | the cards. 2. Win, the spade with the ace, North leads the king of spades. ; hadi mr How would you play the hand? le*d the queen of clubs and fin @Al4 wn) 28? esse. If the finesse loses, ten GATE lwp] 9 532 tricks become certain. 'If the fin-| @KQ73 g | AIS esse wins, repeat it. This method! 4A 109 4QJ862 (of play guatantees the contract| even though a defender shows certain of making the slam re-|out on the first or second club less of how the adverse lead. : | cards are divided (unless the| If you were to duck the king of opening lead is ruffed by|spades — 28 play quite often South). The key card in this! made in similar circumstances— problem, composed by Paul|you would be courting disaster) Lukacs, is the six of spades. and might well go down. | Win the diamond with the| For example, North | king, extract the missing|then shifted to the jack = trumps, cash the ace of dia- monds and then lead the jack of spades. _ |then be in If, North plays low and the jack loses to the king, you make| and the contract whatever South re-|tract turns. South must return either had a spade or a heart, ending the hand immediately, or else return a diamond, which gives you a ruff and a discard. If North covers tHe jack of spades with the king, win it 1. Played correctly, you are ing lead. This relatively simple | sible distribution of the North-; ; ig : ~ eee 7s a sotace-aptcactive Be cg Bg tM ERLE ETE Ne aa E ie oy fe \ < play guards against every pos-| : . : 8 Di f's fF + Sh The Guasdian, Charlottetown, Fri. Oct. 1/1965. 1. e nrourage oOo aken : | eral Blectric Co. forced the : 9g sore ino ‘bénkrupicy with a Regrouping Seen, e for 000. j ° : °. interpdl, the international po | For Small Firms | urlous Campaign i Stereo . |tion in Paris» has been tracing]; MONTREAL (OP) -- Gerard | ‘ é‘ |the travels of a man for the | Leveoges.. Gupbes minister of | By STEWART MacLEOD at 6 a.m. , Sept. last two years through Britain, |imdustry sammerce, says | OTTAWA (CP) — Conserva-|ie wee in Monizeal Ie a6 a.m, quarters for n't me since | Se the Bahemes and Fieq-| small snd * sine tub tive Leader Diefenbaker has|press conference, in Halifax two|the book came out two years ide. {messes tamet M they-do| smpianes the eS mee ee sv re- | ago, and the first greetings were | [eee wank te eee deter: paign e-day | ception, artmouth hours | exchanged. } ‘ grnd through the Maritimes|after that for another reception,| “Hello,” said Mr. Diefen- Hea t FING) “These businesses can no nd Quebec—and hi series of meetings aan " it alone,” h col cous leave ae aa and = his wor = Scten — noe e ner aS wish to ee | tourege in a state of physical |went on until 10:50 p.m. Slow Loading enlarging their markets, thers | "Tier deaths witli ps ot a" | ere Oe ew | cmc, nan, rind moe 7 . ers } until p . . a . out more than stamina. But|1 a.m. é Evans about the chair. Heavy storms have slowed the| small and medium-sized busi- many of those who followed him} Mr. Diefenbaker was said to|_ Mr. Diefenbaker left Halifax |loading of grain at this Hudson | nesses have not taken adeeet | were too tired to notice be at work before 7 a.m. Satur. |im his private railway car ai|Bay port, 600 miles north © | age of new techniques ‘and not. | Whether the 70-year-old cam-j|day, and he held another press |7:15 p.m. Sunday and he was | Winnipeg. iso-new techniques used by large | paigner can keep up the gruel-|conference two hours later. He |Sreeting some 200 people in| Seven ships were anchored |), <inesses» Mr. Levesque said | ling grind for more than five|left for St. John’s, Nfld., a: |Truro two hours later. outside Churchill Harbor Tues. | | weeks remains to be seen. He|noon, shook hands with abou'| At 7 a.m. Monday: when the |day, white two had Just docked |™ & speech Wednesday to the says he can. “‘I never felt better |300 people at the airport there, |first gorggy reporter raised his |to await loadings. i conference of Le Centre | in my life." got into his hotel in time fo. | Blind, he saw Mr. Diefenbaker,| Storms hit the Churchill area |de |'Organisation Scientifique de | Se Mr. Diefenbaker's main‘dinner. wearing an engineer's cap, |last Friday and heavy seas pre- | Enterprise (Centre for the| aciedule for the first five days| Another series of local meet. | Striding along the platform at vented vessels from entering |* ~ ieadion of Busi | included three major speaking|ings- and the Conservative |Campbeliton, N.B., to meet the |Churctill River where the grain | Scientific Organization si- | engagements. at Halifax, St. leader was ready to speak. train crew. —~——--| awaited them. ness). vem yee prowseiers. Gus again. He finished at 10:30 and lr ae oy oa ie lor nm &| went immediately to a rec ay, he was jum) ® i hot Haliax “audioriam where |thon unl midnight at sation ‘platforms to meet RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT 7% Seemecdihantien heard bien oo WATERFRONT ple. ‘Be oom | Ro wai ont ij A . go on for 50 minutes in even, BY ®§ a.m. Sunday, with bis |600 by the time he reached worse heat in St. John's. At er ore gene Montreal where another 100 or ut Br : 70 . aited. ny | Ottawa, ite Dieteabener freq eiskty to the St. Joba's water |midaignt “a '® bed be to pull on a heavy sweater be. |front to see the Portuguese sail-| At 6:15 a.m. Tuesday the he fore beginning a 40-minute talk |°°S Cleasing their masted ves tel switchboard operators began jn a 45-degree arena. sels. Then he was off to a fire | phoning reporters with the mes- > ' hall where he was treated to a! sage that Mr. Diefenbaker was SET TORTUOUS SCHEDULE = |demonstration of pole-sliding {leaving half an hour ahead of os But it was between the speak-| TimeMor church. Mr. Diefen-|schedule, and they were to. Jng engagements that the old|baker-read the lesson in the my board their bus by 7:30. campaigner set himself the tor-|Baptist church at St. John’s, - aaa] tuous schedule. , and raced immediately to the | VISITED CLASSROOM ; airport, Within minutes of take-|. This started the most exhaust- \off for Halifax he left the first-|ing day of the campaign. Driv- ie ; ON THE AIR ini iret erases Pls Esurentan’ mountain seas Me % jand ta © reporters who/|Laurentian mountain area, Mr. |were in the economy section | Diefenbaber addressed a morn- of fig crurch | He also visited the plane's /ing gathering at St. Adolphe. Miraflores de w FRIDAY PROGRAMS {cockpit because the co-pilo!,| visited school classrooms there, Sierra, Spain, Doug Evans of Toronto, was the |and then. went 35 miles to Har- o CFCY-TV son .of a woman who. had lent |rington for the same thing over og o * ' Mr. Diefenbaker a chair once | again. 2 * 250 Pesca jused by Sir John A. Macdonald,| Another 45. miles took him to my ; So a chee has | By coincidence, Peter C. New-|a roadside restaurant to greet ho ee man, author of The Renegade another welcoming committee. > Aan tas eaceenice in Power, was visiting the cock- |He stayed long enough ta grab, Q £9 pom —furaiogSemenwr pita the same time. The au-|a sandwich before viiing two | £ 20 p.m.—Go To Greece ee and oe on 6.00 p.m.—Flintstones cBc rae eee P : GOAT | 25 p.m.—Robin Hood Flour Jack 10.00=CBC National News, On Par. | Was followed by: another recep- im Turkey : * Ae | Hill and Speaking Personnally ee at 5:6 he yp >< a —CBC n: finally, :45 p.m. tol $00 Ja coer 8 News |11.00—News and Regional Weather |Went into a motel room for half 45° INCHES S| 315 con-Purity Flour Jeckpot _| !1-05—Starlight Serenade an_hour. beeen 720 bm United Fund Program | 10-30—Court Of Opinion—CBC.. After this break, he went to a , 7 a 4 aad teal |11.30-News and Maritime Weather |Legion reception in: Lachute,| . ©@ete= sete te mu tai ate emt om pai gh rhe ay “cece lee Serenade and then four miles to the | ae : rt—CBC Brownsburg arena, where his | a Be seca Womer Show _ | 12-1S—CBC. News and Music—CBC | speech ended at 10:30 p.m. DAILY &LKUs2WORD 10:00 p.m.—Friday Theatre CBA FADIO : } ACROSS 44. River 11. Social i WAI IME] = Seng of Scheherzede ; . | 1. Visible flowing group = (BIUIRIRIOMBTIH[! [R/O} 1290 @.m.—CBC TV News FRIDAY MAIDENS START __. junctures into North 12. Severe [OCI MMSITIUOI {o} | Aa eg een On 00—The Mer Pert i: EW soc ETY | 9. Maple 45. Type 6. Feta S : | 6: ning Show. Part | . n ; . Ac- CKCW-TV | 7.00—The ‘Morning Show, Part 1 | N ! : 10. Excla- measures count. ee | 8:00—CBC News and Inlaid * | mation 46.Angler’s 19. Drop- 2m.—Sign O i | SHEFFIELD, England a as a en ae Schools eas te dae, seoeemeet -| (Reuters)—June Heaton, a 20- of i Pari ped ' . .21— iorning Show, Part 2 | ‘ con 20. Good 11 30 a.m.—Sign Off 8:35 Max’ Férgiion ' \. year-old. Sheffield university tempt 1. African Queen 2.40 p.m.—Sign On—News, Weath. - 9.00—CBC News | student, has started a society [ 31 Coolness : desert pe er and Sports | WA de Cohupantan called Maidens Anonymous for of . 2. Egress 22. Wan 2 . reer 2 | 9.16—A.M. Chronicle pe ghohgg are against pre-mar- - manner 3. Trouble 24. Cheese ! 2. p.m.—Gale 10. . } . 3°G z . Pi - ; 230 p.m.—Take Thirty Laie eke pee mos | The society, which so far . len . a, vag Said ae ee a ee ee |11,05—Joan Marshall Be gelpe tie nciigpoinat craig cone OR La chem. State 38: French $:00. pm.—lvennoe isa |11:15—For Consumers j= es uden newspaper, SAYS: |— 14. Neglected 6.Arabian . 27. Caresses __ Tiver 5:30 p.m.—Spain in September ts ono ord Album aes | ‘All men are; lecherous, ego- school garments lightly 40. Old Dutch Oe eee ther and [180—The Archers “|. tistical swine: and the - blond- subject 7. Male *, 28. Pen- wietare | £0 ew ind Photo Quiz |11:45—Music On The Heather ped, 'Miue-syed Agente whe abbr. sheep dant 42. Regret 10 mot pag ee |12:00-—Jamboree Junction gazes into your eyes is not | 15. Branches 8. Polish- of ict 44. Ed Sullivan 7.20 Pe Saint cS | 12.15—Boy Meets Girl ig in your beauty . . of el French 30. Core or Ted ae 8.30 Santaaeen Place—Il_ |12:30—Maritime Farm B’Cast oe oe me vey “ie think |, learning joe 31. Lean-ts Mack, for Bi $00 pam catet: Geter! 1;00—CBC News and Weather =| De is.” pn 17. Greek pianist 34. Anxious instance = 0.40 p.m.—T ont tier Show 1:15—Maurice Pearson Show oo oo invites mem- 18 letter ; . 10.00 p.m.—Friday Night et the! 1:45—The Open Road Show | bere ind theqpeves im Ven —<s Movies 1:59—D.0 Time Signal danger of being seduced to me : Part 1—Kiss Before Dying| 2.00—The Open Road Show telephone one of several num- - Liberate Part 11—Sound Off | 2:45--Stories by Mordecia bers—secret except to mem- . Offer : 12.00 p.m —CBC TV News | 3:00—CBC News bers — to contact afellow 21. Back of 12:15 a.m.—LTV News Highlights 3:30—Trans-Canada_ Matinee member “‘who will attempt to neck . 12:17 a.m.—fridey Night at-t-he. -4:00-—=CBC News give moral support.” oa ware oe Movies | 4:03—Canadian Roundup - oP ania Part 11 Continued | 4:10—Music' In The Air \ 29. Questions 2-00 a.m.—itation Sign Off 5:00—Mar. Fish B'Cast Fraud Charges 32. Tennis CFCY RADIO 6:00-CBC News | Laid In Toronto \. 33. Xrticte ‘ ; 6:15—On Parliament Hill 35, Exclamae ; : FRIDAY + 6:20—Today’s Editorial | TORONTO (CP)—Barnet Al- "tion 21 re | 6:25—Inland Weather and Sports | wercer 49, arrested Tuesday| 36. Brazilian °o panne td iy Suing Scores ‘ |night at Toronto International palm za ot wad We eid .Mare Tenip< || Osos conriees-Borometer, - Airport as he stepped off a/|~37. Handle; m : ieee i 4} °6:35—Music In The Evening . mt baer. Paes | 7:30—Business and Labor Review ergy lbhgge Bs thepe pre Auge 0 N d Weather (7G : : 7 o0-Hebee ‘Chretien Hou- * | 74S~As You Wate ty counts of fraud involving $117.-| 38. Metallic > 7.15—Moring Roundup 8:20—Question Box . deli, pa 7.30—News and Weather $b Radis Srnarhetional Pot 2 Police said « that ee re Panaiie @ I 7.35—Ferm, Report | 10:00—CBC Nefinal News, On Pan |7OSES 860 8 EMR Opened my Oe ene: 7.41tMorning Roundup tiement Hill and Speaking hardware and appliance store . i ape: buf a We ae er: Temp-o_ biisaaly rt stocked it = mer- | s : 1 oo 7 se—gpors Capnule and Scoraboerd | 10:30—CBC Summer stage chandise oblained on credit: | DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it: | | is :30—Dixiela Ww * } 8.00—News “ ; greatly reduced prices. AXYDLBAAXR 8.11—Weather : Eo cisis Sees Intend. end The owner was reported migs- | oe fs LONGFELLOW | 8.16—Morning Roundup |. Marine Weather ing one day and a couple: of | One letter simply: stands for another. In this sample A is used j 8.45—Weether /12:15—Music In The Night _ jweeks later the Canadian Gen-| ‘for the three I's, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apos- . 8.50: -Atlentic Rowe hone ot s='. trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. | ° 8.58—Thought For Today — 7 i 9.00—CBC National ee ne CO NT RACT B RI DG = Each day the.code letters are different, “ 9.11—Preview Commentary—' “<A Oryptogram ° 9.16—Notes and Music ‘ Quotation > 10.00—News and Weather | By B. JAY BECKER RQ SKGCPKI ATDEYIJI% G raQow, O 10.05—N id Musi : PS < 10.25—Sunligh Eye" | od | WUWK @ DGA VGQ IpECcK ¢ 6 10.30—Notes and Music TEST YOUR PLAY ie KGAPEK.—RYDOW . = th 39 — 1; onsen oe oa: ,}1. You are declarer with. the;with the’ ace, return te ont : > 11.30—Montague. Entertains . West hand at Six Clubs. North) hand with a trump, and - Yesterday's Cryptequote: HISTORY IS BUT THE DE- 11.40—Notes and Music leads the queen of diaménds.| another spade. If West produces Soa AND REVELATION OF PROVIDENCE.— 11.45—Bulletin Board How would you play’ the: hand? /the four or five, or shows out, “ 11.50—Notes and Music 532 @AQggoe you play % six, thus. endplay- (© 1965, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) : 11.55—Atlentic News Roundup @86 @AQ ing South, agg oe as produc- ae 2.00—Weather WeE es the seven or ,-you cover 2 A6 K9 ' ; 2.05—Tewn and Country: Time ¢ 8 , |with the nine,~again 12.30—News and Weather ee a aie siu|the defense whatever the He of| WOLLON'T BE WORRIED LINLESS HIS WAS VALUABLE! WHAT BETTER WAY © WORTH THAN BY OFFERING TO SELL F WILIANS B SOONW WINSV 1.1 we KIGMYLAND, AUSTRALIA’ V1 NG € ~ Pe tlhe bee cat athe natgce atten tte Etat ibe PC ts Le sive tira AEB: LL AD abt # The pitiful, kick-starved little creatures are getting along,the best they can, without & HUMAN a any 8 etch as 5 a sci Seong ection — ee : : Senge wi iK Ps Sli stl ili oie ee, e ee Te : e4 as ’ a i vy e they ryvvayy ait hee yoy y +h Be