+ sere nag padsope teeters The Guardian, Oharlottetown, Tues. Oct. 26, 1965. 18 | Copper Prices Said Strangling | Brazil Industry LONDON (AP) — A leading |Brazilian industrialis' has complained that rising world copper prices were strangling Brazil's expanding industry. The industrialist, Dr. . nando Lee, president of the Bra- zilian Copper Association, -also said Brazilian industry must get a direct share of the copper pro- \ducer-consumer contract quote to avoid paying nearly double | small mining ¢ ‘the price for this commodity on | has said that if the companies |t¢ World's metal exchanges. do not come up with $25,000 ial see Se ee aioe liquid assets within a year they Brazil, has completed a done in so nufactur- will be delisted. pamaat pe roe Blgoe Hy o se a. The TSE has been sharply |Per oroducts manutseturers and 126 Pro : criticized in two government the British Development reports for not doing a good milar lenough job of policing liself ana\*mee ee. nae talks in Canada and the United companies listed on its boards. |ctates and was to leave Thurs Distillers Corp. - Seagrams/day for Brussels for talks with Lid. reached an exclusive|in. pion Miniere. He said in plateau, recording sales of $1,- Gas Industry Exceeding Fast Growth Reputation any non-war period, or perhaps even higher.” “Chilean prices are us to look for other mar- kets. is why we have come. to London to see what possibil:- | open to us. ' “Also we cannot go on paying | metal exchange prices — £553) a ton—which is ruinous | § ficially quarters in the $47,000,000 Place Victoria skyscraper, while the exchange continued its crackdown on companies it feels do not meet certain financial requirements. The TSE suspended nine ompanies and producer-consumer | contracts and we must have a/ “If we cannot find a solution, is no other way out. We have to ‘replace copper other metals as is already. 3SNOW AZOIN tes 5,000,000,000 cubic feet to |000,000 compared with 203,000;000,000 — close to t he |000, the magazine maximum allowable under ex. expenditures to . isting export licences. compared with $865,800,000. Sales revenues for the first; Petroleum consumption was. six months were a record $214,- |1,055,000 barrels daily in 00.000—up $26,000,000 from the |first half of this year compared af i its prices by two US. cents a pound. - American Copper biggest Zambia H sie F Noranda Sales an interview: Anaconda, Kenne- comparable number of customers rose 69,- 000 to a total of 1,517,000. The sales gain this year is the sharpest since 1962 when sales rose 29,000,000,000 cubie feet. The 13,5-per-cent increase over 1964 compares with a 9.1-per- cent rise recorded a WEST BOOMS So far this year the biggest University of Toronto Press,|peal against court approval growth has come in western 1964 period. The) with 982,000 barrels in the simi- Se ata ~ ~~ | Mie’ wi se another |50,000 barrels by the end of the year, Oilweek says. Sows on the business \Scene, Canada: An Appraisal of jits Needs and , @ Dew tential, was published by the |Prepared by three economists |—George W. 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Fish B’Cast ~~ 5:20—Tempo _ CBC Note Book 6:00—CBC News 6:15—On Parliament Hill | 6:20—Today'’s Editorial 6:25—Inland Weather and Sports Scores 6.30—Business Burometer 6:35—Music In The Evening 7.30—Christian Frontiers 8.00—Assignment 8:30—Continentat Holiday 9.00—Remembers This | 10.00—CBC National News. \ Par | liament Hill end Speaking Personally f 10:30—The Johnny Holmes Show 11:30--Presenting Michele Legrand 12: CBC News Marine Weather 12.03—Sports Scores, Inland and | 12:15—Mosie In The Night Nortk dealer. vulnerable. »> 38> R°>>w a"50 ~ <cf E an Opening lead—six of diamonds. In many hands declarer must shape his play so as to prevent one particular. defender from taking the lead. This avoidance, of the danger hand is especially common in notrump contraets. The present deal is typical of the problem involved. West leads a diamond and de- clarer allows the king to win. South also plays low on the dia- mond continuation, but is then forced to take the next one with the ace. The of holding up the ace is to exhaust East of diamonds, so that he will not have one to return if he obtains the lead later. Canadian economy | that the Canadian economy will | rate | Bq JOHN BARBOUR ime Weather| CONTRACT BRIDGE . By B. JAY BECKER 005,000,000 in the fiscal year ended July 31 compared with |$897,000,000 the previous year. | Net vwofit was $4',000,000 com- pared with $37,000,000. Subordinated noteholders of | Atlantic Acceptance Corp., with! lelaims totalling $29,000,000} year ago. book on Canada’s economic po- against the insolvent finance jcompany, filed a notice of ap- | |given the bid of General Ac-| ceptance Corp. to take over part | of Atlantic’s operations. | The bid had been approved by jsenior noteholders, with claims of $106,000,000° against Atlantic. |The subordinated noteholders fear there will be no Atlantie assets left to meet their claims after the senior noteholders thave been . satisfied. | | ! ‘Mans Heart ‘Kept Beating | After Death | BAL HARBOUR, Fla. (AP)—| {Two Dutch surgeons have re- moved the heart from a dead man, revived it and kept it alive and beating outside the body for more than six hours— the only recorded case where a man was outlived by his heart. Kt could be an important new technique to study first-hand the) complex electrical and mechah-' ical pump which keeps us alive, | the surgeons reported. be It ha at about 2 a.m./| nternational Nickel of did also. | price increases are a “The recent prices increases in Chilean copper. are wicked and unjustified. Exorbi- e tant prices are being forced |hard blow to Brazil which is not down our throat and this is!a/ copper producer, Lee said. RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT woe te it ee Shimoda, HONC A COW T < FP yg SAA WAS BUILT IN 1856 TO HONOR THE MEMORY OF THE FIRST COW SLAUGHTERED IN JAPAN THE COW WAS KILLED To PROVIDE BEEF FOR TOWNSEND HARRIS, FIRST: U.S. CONSUL GENERAL IN JAPAN ~AND REPRESENTED THE FIRST JAPANESE VIOLATION OF THE BUDDHIST TENET PROHIBITING THe EATING OF MEAT - one day last January at the Uni- | versity of Amsterdam in Hol- land. A 70-year-old man had been struck dead by a severe heart attack. Doctors already had done ev- erything they could to revive their patient, but it was hope- less, explained .Drs. Dirk Dur- rer and Frits L. Meijler. Death | had come shortly after mid- night. A relative gave permis- sion for the unusual operation. | ; They had to work quickly while! the heart could still be revived. | + “We were all. emotionally up-| set,” Meijler said, “but we! guessed it took about an hour and a half to remove the heart and set it up in the apparatus,” | The technique for keeping such organs alive — perfusing them with blood or other nu- treent fluids — was first de scribed---in-- the mid-1800s. - The Dutch team has been keeping dogs’ hearts alive and beating for hours after their removal | from the canines. They did their first dog operation about! two years ago. The Dutch surgeons described the human operation and showed a colored movie of an operation on a dog’s heart at a meeting of the American Heart Association. In the h im operation, 4 per cent the dead. man's: heart had been scarred and da- maged by the attack. It could no longer operate as an effi-| cient pump. But it could go jthrough the contractions. And the electrical signals that co-or- 'dinate the complex beat of the |heart> were still there to study. Sometime after dawn, the doctors were too exhausted to continue the experiment — but the heart was still going strong. They terminated the operation. South takes stock. He can count seven sure winners, but needs nine. The most promis- ing source for additional tricks lies in his long suit, clubs. However, it is dangerous to! attack clubs. Thus, if he plays a club to the king and another one back to the jack, he may) lose the finesse to West, the dan- | ger hand. If this were to happen and thus defeat the contract. Rather than adopt this course, | declarer-looks for other means | of garnering the two tricks he| needs- One possibly is that the| spades are divided 3-3, in which case dummy’s fourth spade wou case dummy’s fourth spade wou | a trick. Another possibility lies in a) heart finesse which is bound to) produce a second heart trick, win or lose. Furthermore, even if the finesse loses, there is a chance that the ten of hearts will fall when the suit is cashed. This would give South the ninth trick he is looking for. * Accordingly, declarer leads | the jack of hearts. When West, plays low, South takes a finesse | losing the trick to East, the| non-danger hand. As the cards | happen to lie, the ten of hearts | does fall and South kes his) nine tricks. The spades fail to | ' | Declarer-avoids. West-by-stay- ing away from clubs, his longest ' | break 3-3, but that*doesn't mat- | ter. suit. That does matter i West would cash two diamonds! | JOHANN TENNHART “oz (S10 tar “1s"— (1661-1720) of Is, Germany, Gg \ ROCK WITH THE WAS A HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL | Sd WORD “IS” WRITTEN WIGMAKER AND A PREACHER mi] ON IT BY NATURE “AND HIS SERMONS ALWAYS : Submitted by DENOUNCED THE WEARING SS eles ' @ King Feateres Syndiente, ine. 1905. Werld night renervall ACROSS DOWN 18. Borders 1. Soviet 1. Coronet 6 news 2. Foreign down. agency 3. Yellow 20. Kind ao pigment - El OMind CWMalrle ae er 23. ends Ag PMRACLIAN 10. Wheeler 5. German 24. Apples 12. Greet admiral 25. Single 13. Tenant 6. Central unit 15. oye & , republic herb Yesterday's Answer Than: Ger, 28: Wade : 16. 3.937 inches: § Heckled ing 36. Licks e oe ad 9. Smart bird 39. Negative grotcl ara 11. Cure * se 40. pe 13. Measut k maker at ween : no 33.Examinae 42. Size of 22 Raa Ceca “a 15. Wharf tion shot 23. Earthen- ‘ware 26. Gusty 27. Moon - 28. Fabulous bird 29. River: ia Czech. « *) 30. Historical. mountain NS 34. Author's work: abbr. ' 35..Dismounted 37. Metal- : —Y) bearing rock : WW 38. Province 1 ; in India and Pakistan Y 40. Insects 41. Tankard 42. Stupefy with drink 43. promsps stops: abbr. 44. Vegetable : 16 LA DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR fo LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos- trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are differen, ’ A Oryptogram Quotation JYNG ILI TIIT BGYW GJ NYS- SKJIT KL GKT GIYSW.—RIIWGI Yesterday's Cryptoquote: LEGALITY I8 NOT THE SAME AS MORALITY.—ADLAI STEVENSON a (© 1965, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE | HE MAY BE BLOWIN’ ) ) WHATEVER THE FOAM OFF HAPPENED, H\i6 BEER, BUT YOU HANE /\WE'RE IN FOR | TO GIVE HIM CREDIT! SAKE // IT NOW! EVEN JUST SLIPPED FOR A A WIN AT TIcK- SECOND AND THE MAJOR) TACK-TOE PEELED HIM LIKE AN KEEPS HIM EAR OF CORN / YAKKING FOR) - A MONTH! OUR JAKE AND TRIES TO PASS HIMSELE OFF AS A MASTER HEAD -SHRINKER! off waNgV_ 1.1 ° UIJONVY JNOT HL UaLa3NS 8 SOONW -_ 6X INJOV 13¥OaS AYN3H LLaN VLU or- KINDA LIKE ATV RATING POLL J SAYUE CANT k1SK NOT RING CLAY CHALMERS TO IDE Z 4 HERD ON THE TRAIL CREWS/ " dtd oe 46TS VOTE! ALL INFAYORP / ie i | : THAT STLEID HAMMOCK 4! — T MBAN...YOURE EITHER IN” 44 wo "He ws “or ‘our* wre V7) * THE OUTS ° =e vuootvd 20f