- Moving Of NATO Counceil ts" nett . ‘Ludwig Erhard and British |the new site of the Supreme Aj. !2/k8 must take place before . _—tmgs—are——published free of sicy1.30 p.m.—Friendly Giant { " * @.30—-News and Weather. — » Gcermeny ard Britain have political organ of: the 15-nation _-the~ stations concerned. _..12:13_p.m.—Local Weather end _ . 12:50 p.m.—Thursday Playbill— 12:30 a.m.—Station Sign off *. 6.46—Morning Roundup --°¥0:05—Notes and Musie “10.30—Preview Commentary + 12.00—Weather . , 1.45=Town and Country Time “—"2:00=News: and Weather _ Fem Paris Seen Likely ““LONBON (Reuters) — West p~ 70d it probably will be nec- essory for the NATO> council to leeve Paris at some stage, Brit- ish officials here said. : .*, This agreementiwas reached at the final -sessions of two-day talks on the NATO crisis be- | tween: West German Chancellor | Prime Minister Wilson: ¢ - The NATO council is the top alliance and its headquarte now are in Paris. . cela * The crisis . was ignited by}. France’s decision.to withdraw from NATO's integrated de- fence system. ON THE AIR The tollowing program list- ‘charge as a public service and appear as presented. to us by THURSDAY PROGRAMS CFCY-TV 1:30 p.m.—Musicale. - _ 2:00 p.m.—Film bestivd _.2:30 p.m.—Today At Home . a 3.00 p.m.—To Tell The Truth $25 p.m—Take 30 E 4:00 p.m.—World In Contrast < 4.31 p.r. -—Razzle Dazzle } 5.00 p:m.—Wild Bill Hickok §-30-pim:—Musie-Hop . nye 6:00 p.m.—Seven Leegue Boots 6:25 p.m.—Pollitical Telecast 6.30 p.m.—Garzette 7.c0 p.m.+CFCY TV News ‘7:15 p.m.—Political Telecast 7-25-pygn.—TBA - 7.90 p.m.—Pleage Don’t et The Daisies 8:00 p.m.—Assigament Underwater —8:30--p.m.—The_Third_Man— 9:00 p.m.—Seeway : 10:00 p.m.—! Dream of Jeannie ~ 10:30 p.m.—Telescope 44:00 p.m.—Naked: City : 42:00 p.m.—CBC TV News Y Sport Scores 12:15 a:m.—Sign Off Q 9.57 a.m.—Station Sign On’ — 10:00 _p.m.—Canadian Schools 10:30 -a.m.—Nova Scotia Schools 11.45, a.m.-—Chez Helene 12.00 p.m.—Butternut Square - 12.20 pm.—Across Canada “ % 3 Men in_A Boat |discuss where the NATO~coun- keeping 51.000 British troops in} \tegrated. military organization. | . 300th reary..of | zt _&. France “should not__have \Great_Fite_of London a being_-THE PARASOL. ASOL ga “cltributions. --} 7.00—Back To The Bible + pushing ‘France further: .out of \NATO-than-de-Gaulle -if-doing | | himself. Ru aa ne ~+--Wilson, flanked by a “strong The officials’ ‘sald’ the West eam ‘of cabinet ministers, put| zerman and British foreign © Erhard Tuesday night the | oo iministers, Gerhard Schroeder. British case for Bonn paying the and Michael Stewart. did not (ull foreign exchange costs of! cil should be located. ~~ est Germany. This now Informed British. sources said 2™0unts to £90,000.000 ($270,- it-now seems highly likely. the 90.000): annually, of which council might move to Brussels, West Germany pays two-thirds. Belgium, which also might be British officials said further | lied Commander in Europe. and #"Y @greement can be reached. his headquarters. Diplomatic observers said it -—-Fhe—soramander,—¥.6.--Gen-( "as evident fran the twa — Lyman Lemnjtzer. now has his &t8’ extremely cautious attitude headquarters dutside Paris. ‘Tuesday night that major: diffi- The West German and’ British culties still lay ahead. . ministers also reached ‘Agree-|- * 4 ment Tuésday on the position CONSCRIPT KILLED they hope to see adopted by the}; CANBERRA (Reuters) — The other NATO Allies at a key/first Australian conscript - has NATO conference in Brussels|been killed in action in South June .7-8, when they meet Viet Nam, the army announced France ‘{n the’ 15-nation minis-|Wednesday. He was identified terial council. ye as Pte. Errol Wayne Noack, 21. | They also agreed on wh;. was |Conscripts were sent to South: desirable for the reorganization|Viet_ Nam for the first time and streamlining of NATO in|APril 20 as part of a 4,500-man the wake of de Gaulle's moves, orce,, Noack’s death | brought FOUR POINTS REACHED the Australian casualty .toll in This we one of the four fun- | 4: i damental principles they agreed moseaes Oa one hurtag oe on .Monday for handling thet fous wi : NATO crisis. The -others were? — 1, The need. for a- strong. in- FIRE BURNS AFLOAT special privileges in NATO with- celebrated this summer with a ut making the necessary ¢on-/two-hour pageant onthe River | ; Thames. -~ - : 11:45—Musle On The Heether 2.58—Thought For: Today 11:55—Assignment = 3.00-—News--Headlines: - end 12:00—That: McKinnon” Girt Weather 12:15—That MacKinnon Girl _ 3.30—Pop Caraven: 12:30—Maritime. Farm Broadcast 4.00—News Headlines and Weather| 1:00—CBC News and Weather 4.03—Cansdian ‘Roundup—CBC —_|_-‘(1:18—Gordie Tapp Show 4.40—Pop Caravan : wits 1:45—Time Out For Melody 5.00—News and Weather 1:59—D.0.— Time Signal 5.05—The Outports —- 2:00—Time Out For Melody = $.25.20—Marine Weather 2:15—Atlantic School B’cast "5.28—The Outperts 5 “Old. Favorites’ 5.452-Sports- Capsule and Scoreboard | 2:30—Atlentic School Beast 5.50—The Outports ‘ -“Adventures In Song”. 6.00—Newis and Weather 2.45—John Drainie Tells A Story 6.10—Tonight’s Music eee 3:00—CBC News 6:35—Tonight’s Musie, - 3:03—Trans-Canada Matinee, 6.30—Business, Barometer 3:30—Trans-Canada Matinee 4. *2.35—Mestly Music |. —4:00- 4:03—Canadien Roundup 4:10—Music In The Air 4:15—Music In The Air 4:30—Assignment- , 7:30—News and Weather 8.00—Choris In Concert—CBC | 8.30—Music Diary—CBC Corea reneeiee 4:35—Music: In. The :Alr . Nat,” News, on Par, H. 5:00—-Mar. Fish Broadcast: -- and. Speaking Personally — 5.20--Notebook af cece 10.18—Today’s Editorial and enn ca. Speaking Personally ‘ome 10,30—Starlight Sereriade ©: s GASB Parllarient Hitt 11.00—News and Weather & 6:20—Today’s Editorial 11.35—Starlight Serenade 12.15—6:30—News and Music—CBC - a “ spot 2.30 p.m.—At- Home With — Helen } Crocker 3,09 p.m.—To lell The Truth 3.20 p.m.—Take Thirty ‘ 4:00 p.m.—World In Contrast 4:30 p.m.—Razzle Dazzle =" 5.00 p.m.—Atom Ant 5.30 p.m.—Musie Hop: | — 6.00 p.m:—supper Club . 6.15 p.m.—TV News ~~ 6.25 p.m.—TV Weather 6.30. p.m.—TV Sports _ 6:35 p.m.—Supper Club 7:00 p.m.—Thursday Nite At~ The. » -Moevies Day Of The Outlew - 9:00 p.m.—Seawey ~ 10.00-p.m.—I Dream of Jeannie 10.30 p.m.—Telescope* :- ar 11:00 -p.m.—Peyton .Place—! -34:30-p,m.—The Third Man ‘< 6:00—The Morning. Show = 6.30—Children’s Stories ° 6:30—Business Barometer ;50—Rod and Charles 205=Music In The Evening . 7-30=Soundings , e 8:00—CBC Talent Festival 8.08—Chamber Music 8:30—Music Diary ; 9.00—Summer Concert—CBC Strings 10:00—CBC National News 2 ~~ €BA RADIO ‘THURSDAY 7:00—The Morning Show, Part 1 ~8:15—Maritime Sportscast : 8.21—The Morning. Show, Part ¥ 8:35—Max Ferguson Show é 11:05—Joan Marshall 11:15—For Consumers. 11.20—Hinfs To The Homemakers 11:30—The Archers’ ~ nS 12:00—CBC News ~” 12:03—Sports: Scores, Inland and A Marine. Weather 12:15—Musice In The Night 12.00-a.m.—CBC National. News 12:15 a.m.—Viewpoint 12:20 -a.m.=LTV News 6.35—Morning Roundup 6.45—Island wr. and Mar. Temp. 6.55—News and Weather 7.00—Hebrew Christian Hour 7.15—Morning Roundup 7.30—News and Weather OQI752 - @K8 are divided $2. Once. you see 7.35—Farm Report > Ig 9K963 ©7542 that they are, you are sure of 7.35—Farm Report ‘108 Obra. making the contract. 7.41—Morning. Roundup bJ6° “hKQ93 You now cash the ace of 7.45—Island Wr. and Mar. Temp. SOUTH hearts and then lead the’ jack 7.46—Morning Roundup : —@A10 of diamonds,_being careful to 7.56—Sports:Gapsule and Scoreboard CAO =|: overtake it with the ace. Next 8.00—News- = : @KQis you_play a heart to force out: Se ‘ hA108542 “\the king. - yaar oundup. The bidding: _.. .\» | The effect of this line of play | 39. Belong- : is that you:-make- three heart’ ing 9.10—Notes and Musie® 9:15—Assignment 10.00—News end Weather 10.35—Notes and Music 11.00—News and Weather 11.05—News and Views on ‘Groceries : 11.20—Noten and Musie 11.30—Notes and Music — 11.45—Bulletin Board 11.50—Notes and Musle 11.55—Agriculture ‘66 | 12 05—Town and Country Time 12.30—News and Weather 12.43—P.E.1. Road Report 12:45—Town and ‘Country Time 1.00—News and Weather 1.15—Gordie Tapp Show—CBC :/ace and try to establish the jelubs by leading the ace and a .|you. Would surely go down. -CONTRACT. BRIDGE west * wage — |Whether or not the diamonds - {tricks and thus assure three no- . |trump. The three of diamonds |4s an entry to the @ix 80 that you can cash dummy’s hearts. after you have established them. It Is of course possible for the Opening lead—five of spades. How should you play thZ; | win the king of spades withthe which case the method of play suggested could not succeed. | However, you would find this out | as,S0on.as you cashed .the K-Q| of diamonds and would still ave’ time to try to develop the clubs instead. - low club, hoping for a 3-3 hreak, you are likely to go* down in most hands In the actual hand, “ISouth Viet Nam to 36 dead, 171\veterans institutions for some! Nien %)00—CBC News 10:15—Today’s: Editorial 9:10—Commentary Persanistty ——— . 9:15—Assignment tat] O30—Arts—and-tetters- 9:21—A.M. Chronicle 11,.00—CBC News 10:45—Playroom * : 11.10—Reith. Lecturals 11:00—CBC News 11.30—Concert Albiim _ By B. JAY BECKER. a South dnniee: : vantage of dummy’ : i i y's hearts, Both -Sides_vulnerable, ~>yeven-though there are ent? y|~ ae : problems’ h seem insuper-|: NORTH able. / seco ng } oes ; What*‘you do is win the spa?> eos 208 lead with the ace.and cash the: > 2 K- Q of diamonds to learn hand at three notrump? If you |diamonds to be divided: 41, in|: _jother_spade,.and- the hana would +play—properly, you-are—a—strong West would win the club with’ the jack, play the -Q-J and an- later collapse after East shows up with four clubs. a However,. if you attack the favorite to make the contract. 2.05—Mostly Musie 2.30—Assignment ‘ A 3-2 diamond break (a 68 pet | cent chance) is far more. probab- le than a 3-3 club break (36 per cent), and diamonds is obvious- start. All you have to do is be The aim-should be.to take ad- Only A Liberal Government “ 4 VOTE LIBERAL! e to treat the diamond gent. Baca te | #. ly the right suit’ to play. at the): we $ ten % ene * 3 ae ! Veterans Minister To Retain Operation Of Institutions — OTTAWA~(CP) — Veterans ‘ans affairs. Minister Ttillet said Wis depart-| Plans already have been™ {nln ment may retain respossibility |tiated for modernization of sev. | for operation of most veteran's eral hospitals and a ‘joint pro. institutions- “for some con- ject with. the defence depart! siderable time.’’ jinent’ was being considered for These did not include Sunny-‘ithe hospital at Victoria. While \brook and Ste. Foy, he said, ‘both departments - would’ share jand negotiations for transfer of | costs *f a 60-bed “extension, the |- thesehospitals to University of veterans affairs department Toronto’ and’ Layal,, University |would continue to administer ao _Drogressing en oe hospital. = ; Bid Amronvest with j New |pension furvey commission, Brunswick for operatio " formed ‘last year, already had of Ridgewood health. and occu-jheld 29 days of public hearings —Lancaster./and is expected to- submit its N.B.,. was working ‘out Ere report by the middle of August. nel ee Oe ener aee : Observance of national Veter- bet shee sg on i Sree ieee k during the centennial jyear will start with Memorial ince of Alberta, should be r ady Sunday ‘on. June 11, he»seid. The: for occupancy by the end’of the second Sunday in June had been selected: for the observance r, “With the above exceptions,| cet the best possible weather |” it now appears that we May pinpoint any single evént in any The Guardian, Charlottetown, Thur., May 26, 1966. 21 He also ,annownced™that the} VNGNVUS > AUNJH retain responsibility for, the op- a war. eration of most of. our other 2 The world's deadliest natural considerable time,’ he told the {poison is found in the: kokoa Commons committee on veter:|frog of ‘Colombia. ; RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT | MOR wrves: a ~ eT MAC-INT = Ee : of Colonial Heights, a., Tim nas ne WAS BORN ON “ OCTOBER 6, 1896, _ e TER Tyo ING DAUGHTER ; ON HISTORY - MURDERED SO HE HUSBAND COULD * SUCCEED HIM-7HEN CALLOUSLY * OCTOBER 6. /92/ RODE HER CHARIOT OVER HIS.BODY som THE SCENE OF HER BRUTAL ACT WAS CALLED “VICUS SCELERATUS” (STREET OF wc hccstntn te ots tet ate ent «= THE DEPRAVED ) FOR 2,000 YEARS Pet ad DAUGHTER_OF ROMAN KING’ > SERVIUS TULLIUS, HAD HER: FATHER. = » eT HE AMINE A . o 5 a : = DAILY CROSSWORD. ee CROSS DOWN 3. Tok SHO et 1: Houtinative 1. Something 5. Sag POMC REN . or objective foraspe- 18.:Pieces &. Do. the Junker out butterfly 2. Speaker's - 19. Reap- 9. More ra- tales ing tional 3..India’ weight 20.Often — “10: Rabbits- — 4. Convers cuffed, — 12. Across ‘~ gational or 13. Stoic . sound turned philosopher . Gloss up 14. Dry 6. Scepter 21.Fees < Yesterdsy’s Aniwer 15. Bound 7. Anger 22, Mast... ~ 16. Mongol ° 8. Garage 24. Quit - 32. Birds 17. Vouch- employee 26. Persian 33. Marry safe i ova <a _ 835.Low - . Argon, oe arges —- 86. Beagle for 11. Baloney 30. Cachet 38; Exist ‘one : 7 24. Twig. ; 25. Views . 4 26. Posture 27. Printers’ measures 28. Task - 29. Norse god 30. Kind of opera - $1. Bleak 34. Entangle 36. Plunge 37. Summer --ermine =. _ ~ $8. Like some chicken toa, sun god 40. Ova DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it: cae AXYDLBAAXR. s is LONGFELLOW « . One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A {s used i the three L’s, X i the two O's, ete. Singlé letters, apos- rophies, the length and formation of the words are alf hints, : - Each day the code letters are different, = eal . A Cryptogram Quotation TFXDBXMBKJK ZXLP XJ FPXKS JZP YPMBJ WN TMPKPMLXIBWU.— Sees Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ALL, PHILOSOPHY LIES IN TWO: WORDS, SUSTAIN AND ABSTAIN.—EPICTETUS (© 1966, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) + fs CULIN. .{ SKILLS / WHY THIS Will provide FREE SHCOOL BOOKS to pupils in Grades | 2 T to 11. Students in grades elever-and twelve will be able to rent their books ot very low cost. 4 8 ‘WaLaaIS 2 SOONW Tay WL i zy 3 HERE'S YouR ALLOWANCES 6-X. LINJDV 1aNDaS 3SNOW ASIN WIONVE NOT 3HL 2 r ef ( t wNOOTvd 40r T | MANGV. 1.7 “USP-POCK ae ie ee AVENUE?-POMM Bei TZITIZENSIL B XD \ ee fy Cd ca o o) Ch ae At) BACK ACROSS THE 3-MILE LIMIT, THEYRE ALIENS _. f “