red: to. The Guardian Saturda y. Dec. 22. 1956 DISA RMAMENT TALKS l'NlTi-ll) NATIONS. N.Y. tAP) I" United States moved Thurs- : for a iesumption of five- .r private disarmament talk: -.t March. U.S. delegate Henry ."':;ul Lodge .lr.. told the l2-na- tiiin UN disarmament commission the 15.5. will propose a meeting of the disarmament aub-commit- tee at the end of the present ses- sion of the General Assembly Canada is a member of both the commission and the sub-commit-. LI'L Aimait"' CHANNEL 13 Sponsored by WWW c i ll ' , - - p -s Le "its.-;.w."...2:i:.a:?:;V - AMo- awe we a mm irgtzwzcgits” SPILLED MUSTAIZD 3 l The Rose Burner it - i a Electric Ltd. . l' an - onus: on Ranau - Cabinet or J Span oil iiaatarl - xunaa oil aurnuip will burn ooal. viood and Jlrbeja. Power (xua typo) rurnaeo lunar! naraniud. Llninadlat-a dalnory and iuuiiaunu. cum! 'l”wrIaa or Ioutanltahinaat Credit and D, V. A. 141 Windnnr St. Illllfll. N. I. II It. Patafl load Qarlottardowa P. E. l. Dial DI). Ivoatau. Dill MIT SATURDAY I:ll-Tut Patter-a Iztil-Ila OI l 4:0)-Mon Without Law ' . 5:00-Count of Monte Crlsto ' I:3tL-Wild Bill Hlckox azoo-oh Susanna 8:30-Newa E Weather 0:46-CZBC News 7:15-Natlt-in'a Business 1:!)-Holiday Ranch - . til!-Perry Como Show t I 0:111-Lolly Too Dum i 9:30-Texas Rasitlin 10:!)-Barri: Beat 11:00-News & Weather H210-allllleltk ll :30-Movienitem "Count of Monte Cristo" -4ia--- l sunniv ll:.'l0-Test Pattern l2:t4-Sign tin t2:iLl.'. N. Review l2:30- This is The Life lzfltlvlicrc A: There l'.'l0 (iiiuiitry (ialenrlar 2:00 ..lunirir Magazine tllfl -('i'i7cn's Forum :'l'l -Walter Wint-hr-ll - it)-4You Are There ".iL.l.n.x:ie no- Fighting Words Rt)-Perspective 00-Burns A: Allen .10-Father Knows Rest ofpneccmber Bride 30-Bill of Tliwircentcnt tMnvienitel 00-All Star Theatre :.'Il-CGF. Showtime :00-CBC TV Theatre .t'lfl-News A: Weather ilrtls-P!” Convention 11:35-Faith For Today NEW TV SPECIAL Delicious Tender Oven-Baked island Chicken--Me Also llg leefburger -- Topped with Cheese and French Fries! Only we THE WINDMILL Talia-Our Service DIAL 7131 -.-36?! fllslg-3V-'.-2-Aauu CKCW - Moncfon Television Programme Schedule Channel 2 SATURDAY p.m.-RM. Pop: p.m.-Western Theatre 0 p.m.-Count of Monte Cristo pm.--Wild Bill Hickock . pm.-Oh Susannah p.m.-Early Evening TV News pm.-Weather 833 833 33S : p.m.-hilly Too Dum :. p.m-Holiday Ranch pm.-Perry Como Show p.m.-The Southerner pm.-Wayne A Shuster p.m.-CBC TV News p.m.-CKCW TV News and Weather lt:5-Juliette Show .--Tomorrow the World SIIIAV .m.---Tent Pattern m.-News Magarlne tn.-This la The Life m.-Hero and There .m.-Country Calendar .m.-Junior Magnlao .m.-Citizen: Forum Lin 3 Sausages. . 33333 g... ...... .. s!vvvwv-- 3.? CONTRACT BRIDGE By-B. JAY nncaaa is well worth the cost, since the R". 6.”. lthreo notrump contract would ETC ;F'"uE lhalvo been atopped.w H Xfl l n examining est”; pruicm QKJA at trick two, it must be remem- QK Q -7 I bered that he does not have the QKJ109 benefit of seeing the East and Q0 3 lSouth hands, He knows the jack WK! IAST got clubn play by East. his high- lest club. marks the queen in de- iclarer's hand. The question to be idecided is vthether East has an- jother club to play. i Like most defensive prohlcms, thia one in susceptible to a solu- tion. West must realize that if partner has K-J of clubs alone, the hand is lost unless the jack is overtaken. Smith is bound to have AQ of spades and A-0 of ;diamonds to have a proper two notrump bid. enough to make lnine tricks if East cannot contin- ue clubs. The other possibility---that East has thfe clubs is than cxani- Openlng lead - four of clubs? East won the first trick with the king of clubs and returned the jack which was ducked by both South and West. East shift- ed to a spade, which was taken 'in dummy and declarer forced out the are of hearts. West then cash- ed the are of clubs, his sideis fourth trick. and declarer made three notriimp. it is easy to see now that West could have defeated the contract by overtaking the lack of clubs and returning the ten to establish the suit. The direct effect of the play would have been to give South a club trick he could not otherwise get. but the investment BEDTIME STORlES Happy he who on h(a way, Manages a little play. -Little Joe Otter. p Little Joe Otter has a happy disposition. Of .all the folks who iwear fur. there in none with a happier disposition than that of Little Joe Otter. It is because he ls wise enough not to let things play every day. Many others play when they are little. but forget how to play when they grow older. it isn't that way with Little Joe. He and his small cousin. Billy Mink. had met on the bank of Laughing Brook over in the Green Forest. They didn't know that Peter Rabbit was hiding close by. but he was. He was listening to Winter Means Fun keep him from having a littlel lned to see whether overtaking the club can cost the hand. Analy- sis revcals that this is most tin- likely South cannot vcry wcll have A-Q-x-x of spades because he would have rv-spondcd one spade. in the same vein, he can- not havc five diamonds, because he would have hid two diamonds. Thereforc, even if dcclarcr ac- quires an unearned club trick. he cnmes to only eight trii-ks- three spades, four diamonds and a club. So the conclusion is rcachod tlialy South is defeated, ll'llPlllf'l" F..'lVll has two cliitis or thrtv. if thc; jack of clubs is overtaken. l (down the slippcry-slide the ninrc lfun it is. I know of ii steep hank Vover on the Big lliicr whcrc I'm going to make a slippery-slidc. i don't see why you don't have a .allppery slide. It is A lot of fun." '. Billy Mink shook his lteatl, --i get my fun in other ways." said he. "l get my fun hunting and fishing." ”Huniin and fishing are fun," agreed Little Joe. "That's onei reason I like winter. I like to. hunt in the snow." - ”Gt-fling around isn't wry easy lwhen the snow is soft and dc:-p,'” ysaid Billy Mink. l "l don't mind." said Little Joct their gossip. Of course that wasn't H . . p . a nice thing to do. It never is a1(::";i'”l"l':”:nlt::)k'n"ln:'o'; nice thing to do'to listen to otherstiml whgn I .m "Men"! I 'lmVe ::':.". .l'fi..l:".f...l:”3”.. 1:: .T.'.'.";hrur;t-,v;r',;,';,'r! my winter was fun. He wanted to hop ' i right out and contradict Little Joe But he wash wisedeiilguglh '0 df: water mm-it." um aiiiv Mink nothing of t e in . eer wasn .. . V. . . m-din: an inn Winter l"0".'" .i...' 9? .2fI"'.'i'-'.'3i'....T.'.". i&'.'.'.'.f. hard times and he didn't like it bma m hm0k.. s "E '9" mm cv"-vbody T.hm."d " "Aren't you afraid to go so far 3' "9 "mi bl" l" V" ""d'" M" from water”' asked Billy Mink. "It" I '0' 0' Wt?" i"d'” "" '""'l "Not me:" replied Little Joe. "Nobody wants to bother me." "How about Yowler the Bob- eat?" asked Billy Mink. l "He would have to be awfiillv hungary to dare to try to touch me." said Little Joe. , Little Joe. iniddenly slipped into; the water. A mnmcnt later he came out again with it fish in hint mouth. He ate it. all but the tail: "Who says these are hard times?” aald Little Joe. Ontario Town Says "No" To Refugees i.l1'l'LF. CURRENT, Ont. tCPi Towa council announced Monday it has decided not to sponsor any Hungarian refugeea if and when they arrive in thin Northern On- tario community. The decision followed a letter from Mayor Merle Dickerson of North Bay, chairman of the North- ern Ontario Hungarian Relief or- tloa. asking what help the town could air! in the letter doesn't affect us at v ii Don Farquhar ' dd! hve to bother E , CI of ti” Amomowtlaterheeawiaowt agalawttlallalllhh-coil. "I nuppooc you have a slippery- ide somewhere." said Billy Mink. Little Joe Otter chuckled. " course I have I alwlitvhave I -otide If tun: any place "i dont get very far from the; -East crisis. supplemented by Can- 9" DAILY CROSSWORD acnoss 4. Rubber tree 2!. Band 1. Waste piece (Mun) around t Pounding ) 5. Compua waiat 6. Clone int 22. Compela io. Sounda. tabbr.l 23. An lndi- E' as belt: 5. Man. anlan 1 it. Meat paste 7. Suspend 24. Baae 2 i2. am -. 3. Spoke 25. run of ill writer 9. Seeiiawa "to he” I 13. Italian poet l2. Own: 11. Spanlala N. Slotha 13. A buzzing hero I5. Fail to tnuct. 29. Lair Iootardara Auwoo remember 15. Nouriahed 30. Governa 31. Hebrew I0 Candle I1. Liberate 31. Golf mound letter trapper ll. Divine 33. Largelt 38. Topaz hum. to. Mullc note law continent mingbird I0. Rumanian (Rom) 34. Fruit 00. Music note city It. Malt . E. beverage I3. Conceal: E I5. Movea.aa III a stream 2 M. S-ahaped 90 molding IT. Young cow & II. Ahead 29. Interpret 3 falsely 32. Cleanaeit CD 35, Regret : 36. Norwegian writer 2 37. Twin cryatal 39. Charter Lamb to. River rm- bankment E. It, Set upright -' 12. Accumulate - nows O 1. Country .- tEur.) 2. Coax "I 3. Rodent .1- DAILY CIHITUQUOTE - Here's how to work It: ). A X Y D L I A A X R ..I la 1. o N o r I: I. L o w :1 One letter simply atanda for another. in this sample A ll uud "U- for the three L'n. X for the two 0'a. etc. Single lettera, apos- troplieii. the length and formation of the word: are all hinta. Each day the code letter: an different. A Cryptogran Quotation u il.C W KQIH LI GHMGWXQLMG CWXPHC XPWM XPLFVPXG!-ZHWXG Yesterdays Cryptnquolet BUT AS FOR ME. GIVE MI E LIBERTY. OR GIVE Ma: DEATH-PATRICK HENRY. X if ' Id W R l' d E .S. 0 ma cm as e ieve I, ' R C d At Canada 5 ecent on ucl By (ll-ZORGE KITCHEN haggling over whether Canada Canadian Press Staff Writer lshould be permitted to dredge R WASIIINGTON iCPi e (ianada.27-foot i-hanncl north of Cornwall won the admiration of the Unitedilaland in the first move lookingl Stnlcs early in November with herl l3'..".'?L'S"lt.f?.'..l33Iiic2'?3llZ"..?'u.2 mm or-rr-Nm MW”? may i ('o-operation on continental civil This action. coming in the midst f"'l""f'9 3",” -lmm d"'9""' lll"""i M mum, I-V dam", W" mmtng. including construction of the, Anglo - Frcnrh militarv interven- D"'w 'D'5”"" E3”-V w”"'"1' ""1 Wm in EEVDL WM ".E'm.d.d heretdar line in the Arctic wastes of as wmhom, M Cmmian independ, Canada. advanced without serious 'ence and objectivity and servedjh”f'l'"t , lto highlight Canadian - American ('””d" Pm'”f"d 'E?""" ""5, trphmonshlps in 1955 way thc Americans dispose o The Canadian role in the Middle "'1'" "W" -'"'P'""'9 "" Wild lwheat markets but to no avail- lThe United States protested. alsol withoiii success. against a Cana-i dian tax on the gross advertising! revenues of Canadian editions of, U5. magazines containing Cana-' dian advertising. But, sometimes. the protests paid off. The Canadians beefed about a Maryland State law to prevent it Canadian-owned brew- ery from setting up shop there, The law was vetoed. American brewers howled that high Cana- dian tariffs prevented the Can- dlana from sampling their brew. The tariff was lowered. toward an all-Canadian aeaway. adaia diplomatic overtiirea here to resolve the estrangement between the United States and the United Kingdom. was received by offi- cial Washington with. as one sen- ior official put it, "the greatest de gree of relief and satisfaction." ACTING ROLF. "The Canadians." he went on. "have been in a very enviable and active and intelligent role in this situation." The year was marked once again by a repetition of the minor irrita- lions which officials on both ride! of the border have come to expect The" '9" am" "u. M '""" """"'b"" "'."""' ” ””""" agreement. The two countries ent and a .'l.fI)0-mile frontier but .m.”d' .8 . hrpmdud 0' the :':''G W"t;I""'"-' :t':9'13l:i:"l:::'.” White sulphur Springs conference. rclatlgtnimipsyofbil-we:: tire tw: 00 rm" . 1'” Arentahmmml countries. ' There was one big continental family get - together during the lyear. President Eisenhower. Prime Minister St. Laurent and Mexico: President Ruiz Canines met last March at White Sulphur Swings, W.Va.. for a threeday conference called by Eisenhower to continental relationship: and dia- cusa problems of mutual interest. (Then in December President. lla- -eabower and the Prime Millie! met briefly again in . bh had been vaeatioatu I in D . Joint chain-American out &It& of the R. Lawrence 1 had once. despite j laiwii. rowan ruins The aim is to iron out differ- River. the great waterway wh in British Columbia and RUDOLPH ( 2 O 2 1 K :9 III In D O 2 h- is 12 4 I2 neizoEsAReM;.pE.,.,o”,O,z,. .,:'-T:':;'-',::v;-awn I I l I LOOKA ( a. JO SECRET AGENT X-9 ...wm-t no MANY SNOW- .ALLs N M 51' CAN'T UNDEHWTAND I Tl-llll INOWIALL5 AT ME 1! runs one Cl-lAlf?, WHWPLE - mien ClArhl you Do Qwaisqn-an...-it-.wtno..4.-..4 SHE'S REAL GONE!- 'MooNi.i6iir W SHOULD SEE H52 SONATA' ts HEP FAVORITE TUNE .' Gwrws SUPE CQUSHYOVEQ t-tee NEW DATE- an 193- M WIII tom MDOII MAN! K WPKEMI INDIILT WAMN olhliutulll stam- VIMI! N 'KLlDlNT' (Oil-9 If mmro- A1"IEE'lIMY aroma ugvoitg an saunas I AM no ANGEL! vein! 1 web A norm. 1 Iwiun tfluouoe To not MY Finis? DUIIJNO cPPoucN1'.... ...wiiru in am-no an anion. x 'Iaueto' wir' o'rlIoi.I'I mun! wititl on nnitvl he want. tnwe' MAKE nmau-ml uni ioiotovlm min uwvio note! it won. 'x (I77? lk at Va 301 ff'.-tint .. av; - xi-all ll? . - mp. &. 3,