iii.\l)A\ i‘IttiIthMb CH'Y-l‘v g. our—Musical. or. DJIIK’CITCZ Hulene l*~ ,).m.—'NUTSETY School fit: tum—Sing Ring Around p.m.-—Friend|y Giant 1w; “Jo—Loretta Young Show 3,0 .3.m.-Take Thirty loo n.m.—Scar|ett Hill no cam—Best of the Post 5fm p.m.—Rezzle Dazzle 530 p.m.—-This living World (.m p.m.*‘MilllOn Pound Seat b.3i p.m.——Gazette 7m p.m.——CFCY TV News 1'5 p.m.—Sports Weekly 730 p‘m.-Roy Rogers . .—-Don Messer's Jubiiee s "GT. TRAI. ‘ . RAIIIO and T V 1 Call 4-8246 ‘ r Open 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. . 176 Kent St. CKCW-TV .00 pom—Monday Playbill Spoilers of the North 1'45 p.m.——Friendly Giant ‘30 p.m.—Sing Ring Around ..00 p.m.—At Home With Helen Crocker 3.30 p.rn.—-Take Thirty 4.00 p.m.—Scarlet Hill .130 p.m.—-Rornper Room 5.01 p.m.—-Raule Dazzle 5.30 p.m.-—This tiving World c 35 p.m.——Television Weather 6 40 p.m.—$upper Club 6 50 p.m.——Te|evision Sports 7.00 p.m.—Fether Knows Best 7 10 p.m.-77 Sunset Strip p.m,—Don Messer p.rn_-—Dannv Thomas p.m.—-Garry Moore p.m.—Festival Venus Observed F .70 9 00 9 .70 IO 30 1700 HM 7.20 225 a.m.——CKCW TV News a.rn.—Sign Oil EMQOOOMOOOQO I TV. CALLS ‘ .- NITE or DAY . ‘Day 4.3537 Nite 4-4508—4-7462 VAIL’S RADIO & TV. . 204 Kent St. Ch‘town .>_§.:m©so©sooeooee§ CFCY RADIO MONDAY 6 28—Sign On (JO—News A Weather (HS-Country a. Western Roundup 6 55—News 8. Weather 7.00 —Hebrew Christian Hour 7.15—Country & Western Roundup 730—News 8. Weather . 735—Farm Report 7-4I—Country L Western Roundup R-OO—News fl I'i—Weather Rik—Country ‘- Western Roundup 8 AS—Weather BSD—Atlantic News Fl 57—Thought For Today 9.00 CBC News A Voice Reports 9.]0—Previsw Commentary CBC VHS—Morning Moods 9:25—Matinee With Willis 9.35—Morning Moods 4 9.55—Kitchen Klatter Contest lO-OO—News & Weather 10:05—Notes & Music l0:lS—-Win 57 lino—Notes & Music l0.55-Jimmie Rogers Show ll:00~News Headlines I. Weather usic il:55—Atlantlc News Roundup WOO—Weather l2:05—Moetly Music l2:30—Naws A Weather 12:45—Mostly Music l:00--News Headlines I. Weather 1:02—Mostly Music 1.15—Tommy Hunter Show 3 (TO—News I. a h - 3.03—Trane-Canade Matinee CBC lilo—Hits L Encores “JO—News In W ether 4.03—Canadian Roundup CBC LIO—Hits ‘- Encores 4:30—The Outports 'OO—News In Weather 6=00- ews I Weather 6div-On Parliament Hill (BC 6.2 r s Ito—Tonight's Music (HS-Jimmie Rodgers Too—Beck To The Bible 7 aft—News . Weather 7.45—Byllne ISO—Program Schedule 7.5i—tonigtm Music 9.00-Netionel Farm Forum l0,30-—Univ6nity or The Air cac 'll-OO—Naws l- Regional Weathd "OS-Starlight Serenade N e w e Headlines In Maritime ‘Neether_ il.35-Sterlight Serenade IZOD-News, Weather It Sports Score nos—Sign oir CIA MONDAY coo—the Gerry roger” 9°"! too—News Ii .lnland Weather sis—Maritime Sport's-It 9.l6—A.M. Chrmlcle tow—Playroom WOO—Now I Ain' You “SS—Matinee With Willis n.00—cec um ’_____'_______.—_——. W‘NWWO- (ODP- Ellflfl'll.i1000.000 bushels the total 145 p.m.—NOWI. Weather. SportsICaana cannot expect a re; By ARCH MacKENZIE I OTTAWA iCPI — Canadian wheat exports in the current crop year may range from .about 305.000.000 bushels as high as 360,000,000. This appraisal by informants here takes account of various uncertainties that bear on the world market. Canada probably could sell more wheat on credit than she now is doing but is unwilling to match the lavish creditterms that France has employed to rid. itself of a 200.000.000-bushel surplus. Salcs were made to Poland and China on terms superior to those Canada gijints to custom- crs. _ If all possibilities were real- ized, sa es could touch about 360.0000 bushels for the year lending next July 31, it is be- ilievcd. 1 However, most expert opinionlcurtain countries. Customers In 32 anticipates sales of some 000,000 bushels compared withi ’358000000 in 1961-62. - .R Sales to China will be downl .:;about 22.000.000 bushels. Theillme to “ma- [most recent deal was for 34,000.-l '000 bushels which brings to 145,- con-I ‘signed so for under the Zia-year} agreement expiring next De- cem er. It is taken for granted that? Inewal on comparable amounts. For one thing, the agricultural situation in China has Im-' Iproved. EThe Guardian. Charlottetown. Mon. Jan. 7, 1963. Outlook For Wheat Sales is Described As Optimistic 9i I Another reason is that Chinese hopes of boosting sales to Can-I ads have faltcrcd. Substantial! pressure was imposed to have} Canada accept textiles and‘ other commodities. ’ Better credit terms also werel ,sought as the life of the agree- ‘ment became extended and a extra three months—to a full Iyear—~was granted in the lasti .contract. However. negotiations :on this contract twice broke down and were concluded only! ;with difficulty. I The Canadian Wheat Board ‘would be well satisfied in fu- iture if sales to China continued at some 10,000,000 to 15,000,000. bushels annually. l ILOOK TO OTHER. SALES On the optimistic side, pe- jriodic sales are anticipated — :perhaps under longer - term agreements—with various iron i I I l i the past have included Poland,‘ Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia. omania. East Germany and Hungary show interest from A new three-year trade agree- ment is being prepared with Russia. Wheat has been one of the largest components in these agreements although the last: sales to Russia were in 1961. Sales to Britain. still Canada's largest customer. continue de- spite the cloud of uncertainty cast by her continuing efforts to join the European Common Ontario Woman Complains Husband ls Given Raw Deal TORONTO (CPI—The woman ‘ emerged from the Ontario work- men‘s compensation b o a r d building here and sobbed: “It's u r . . . unfair. I miss him and we need him . . . he isn‘t insane." Mrs. Lena Peterson. reduced to hopelessness after a brief and discouraging session with officials of the board, left Tor- onto Thursday with three of her six children for their home in Kirkland Lake. The other three Ichildren had remained at home. 1 came here because she iwanted a medical examination 1for her husband. victim of a [mine explosion three years ago. Iand who she says was admitted ‘to a mental hospital in North Bay without her knowledge. Three years ago, Marshall Pe- lterson. then 29, was working 'undcrground at the Sylvanite gold mine near Kirkland Lake when some sticks of dynamite exploded hurling him against the wall of a tunnel. should have been given an ex- amination or taken to a doctor limmediately.“\ 1 She said no doctor treated her {husband until the next day and no x-rays were taken. Now he was partially deaf. had frequent depressions and is incapable of holding a job. But. she added. “my husband is not insane. He was in such a state that I guess he hitch-hiked to North Bay because he was dcte‘i’mincd to get medical care which Kirkland Lake doctors neglected to give him." that A. C. Nielsen Company of Chicago. C-E-I-R of Washing- ton. D.C.. and The Pulse of New York reached agreement on the consent orders with FTC lawyers. “The agreements are for set- tlement purposes only and do not. constitute admissions by the Irespondents that they have Vio« lated the law." the commission said. Each company was charged With claiming its ratings were accurate and achieved by tech- .niques barring error. Actually, FTC charged. such ratings are estimates. Among other things the commission said Nielsen and C-E-I-R failed to disclose the her or percentage in an audience sampling that refuses or is unwilling to co-operate. Among other allcgcd short- comings. Pulse was said to use reports containing the general preference of a person inter- viewed as against what he act- 5 B ‘ually heard or vieWed. The accused would be liable to maximum fines of $5,000 a day if they refused to consent and were found guilty in court. . Iif‘ THWor A nqu is HUNG ON THE ISLAND OF SOKOTRA. n the Indian ocean, .AS A WARN/N6 TO OTHERS RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT _. GREEN REGRETS ; IMANY WEEPERSI i VANCOUVER (CP) — Ex- ternal Affairs Minister How- ard .Green says Canadians are becoming a nation of weepers and wailers who threaten to ruin the reputa- tion of their own country. speech to his Van- couver - Quadra constituents Thursday night. the veteran parliamentarian said: “Can- ada seems to be a nation continually weeping and wall- ing about her terrible condi- tion and how guilty we are of everything." It has got to stop, said Mr. Green. adding: “Canada is a leading mid- dle-class power with an im- portant role to play In world affairs. But before she can play her role to the full and grow. Canadians must take a more sensible and optimistic iew. “We need a return to our old pioneering spirit. or Oley Valley, Pa, N A PERIOD or 47 YEARS ' ERFORMED Z729 BAPT/SMS. 3.437 CONFIRMATIONS AND 2829 M RR AND DELIVERED ORE TH N 5,000 SEEM/V3 ear—huuuna mun-u. .' H Compensation board officials listened to her' story Thursday but said later the woman would have trouble proving her hus- band's condition is attributabl ’to the accident. “This poor woman doesn’t know what is going on." said J. F. MacDonald of the claims I department. DAILY CROSSWORD l iFirms Accused e compensation board sub-II scqucntly granted him $925 “in u payment for permanent disability." iOUT OF WORK I Marshall has been out. of work iSll’ICP. except for brief unsuc- ‘ccssful attempts to hold a job. i in a letter to the board. Mrs. :Petcrson sai : _ '. “Right after the accident. my .husband was allowed to walk home. a distance of two miles. 1 with his cars bleeding. while he {Of lnaccurocy gin TV Ratings WASHINGTON (AP) -— The Federal Trade Commission has accused three firms measuring television and radio audiences of mis-rcprescntiog their accuracy land using techniques leading to bias or error. It said each has ;agreed to stop such practices. l The commission announced CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER North dealer. Neither side vulnerable. NORTH A109“: 9A9! .52 A WEST EAST A63 .1036“ our? eoiosu 4.” 4.9862 SOUTH QKQ'IB 00.178 9x1 4x104 Thebidding: North East. South West Pass Pass 1N’1‘. Pm 2. Pass 2. Pass 4a i Opening lead—four of hearts. This was the opening deal in the match between France and the United States. played in Buenoa Aires in 1901. The American South opened third hand with e notrump. North responded two diamonds. a game-forcing artificial bid FAMOUS HANDS asking South to name a four- card major suit if he had one. When South bid two spades. North jumped to four. The French West led a heart. Deciarcr played low from dum- my and lost to the singleton king. Back came a low diamond and South was faced with a difficult guess. He couldn't tell whether East had led away from the queen or ace. After much thought he played the kid: and lost to the ace. West returned a diamond to the queen and declarer later lost a spade to the ace to go down one. Actually, West could have de- feated the contract another trick if he had led a heart at trick throe instead of a diamond. en e hand was played at the second table. the French South also opened with one no- trump. North responded three spades at this table and South raised to four. East was on lead and opened the king of hearts. He was hop- ing to obtain a heart ruff later. North won with the ace and played a trump. East took the ace immediately and led back a H.05—Joen Marshall this-For Consumers li.20—-Record Album "JO—The Archers iiJS—The Maurice Pearson Show l2.00-Jemboree Junction l2. IS—Crosley'a Quartet 12.30-Maritime Ferrn D'Cast LOO—CSC News I. Inland Weather t.i§—The Tommy Hunter 1.45—1ime Out For Melody l.59—Dominion Observatory Time igne 2. Time Out For Melody ITS-Atlantic School I'Cast ' lme For Tales” 2.30—Atlantic School B’Cast ’French Conversation 2.45—~John Drainie Tells A Story 3.oo—csc News 3.03-1-C. Matinee 3.30-T.C. Marine Loo—ca: News Lott—Canadian Roundup LID-Johnny's Spot Lao-Cw n 4.45-Music In The Air 5.00—Meritime Fish I'Cest 5.20—me 6.00—CBC News l- inlend Weather AIS—On Parlieigent iiiil 6.20400 6.25-Meritime Sports-e c.30—Muelc In The Evening 6.40—Mualc In The Evening 1.1Hvline' club. Declarer won, rew trumps. guessed the diamond situation correctly. and wound up making five for a score of 450 points. So France made a not gain on the deal of 500 pa nts. ,_ East might have beaten the contract it he had led a law an. mood at trick three instead of a club. Declarer would have bid to play the jack from to make the . The American team eventual- ly won the l -boarr_i match against France despite the bad start, though they lagged be- hind for most. of the match. They proved to be stronger in the stretch. ACROSS 4. Indulgee 25. Beam 1. Iron-headed. 5. Nation 28 Wood!- golf club 8 Ever: poet. man's 7. Spoken. 7. Princess shoe I 11. Refer Ozma's 29. Sho- [mag indirectly country shonean mum [.151 (to) Continues, 30. One B EEEEE 12. Cipher as a. strok EC‘EEE Ema ‘ annular-a DEB 13. Hole- subscription gags Egan tapering 9- Ascend PM“ BMEEE—i EBBEB tools 10. Moves with golf H 15. —— long etridee 31.01111 Saturday's Ari-rm tuck 4. Thus 2. To rev! 16 Samoa. 18. Nocturtl (2 wds.) 38. Perform warrior mammal 33. -— 39. Dwell. 17. Fat 19. Open: and needles 42. Fold. 19. Throu poet (anxious) over '21. Fills with 20. Hollywood’s 34. Follow 43: Past reverence -——Johnson 35. Offspring 44. J apaneee 22. Foreign 23. (mum of male oin travelera' 24. “The -—-— horse on 46. Merchant’s needs and the female p: 26. Half an em Myca " donkey ebbr. 27. Milkfleh 28. Early coin: Chin. 30. Male cud‘ che 34. Stylish 36. Formerly 37. Employed 39. Cut on, as tops 40. Conjunction u. “'I'weltth Night." countess: pose. 45. Small cut. QBXX.—WHKETR DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work It: A x Y D L B A A it It L 0 N G F E L L 0 W One letter simply stands for mother. In‘thie sample A is used for the three L‘s, X for the two 0's, etc. Single letters, apos- trophies. the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. A Oryptogrem Quotation MK B'w KFN vnexnn our aw KF'N VDBXNE FZ MBW FOR 2088 Saturday's Cryptoquotio: THAT WHICH IS EVERYBODY. BUSINESS IS NOBODY'S BUsmESS.—WALTON\ (o 1988, Kin: Foeturee Syndicate. Inc.) iDENTICALLY As'r. DID WHEN T. WAS A LAD OF TWENTY! 7.20-—Merine Weather In Musical Interlude filo—Assignment BOO—Radio international EGO—Songs Of My Pdoeie ROD—National Farm Fawn 9.30—Distinguished Artists lO-OO—COC Net. News In South. p ereone 10.30—Unlversity or The Air "DO—Theatre Of The Air 11,30—Concert Album i2.00-Here's The Weather (Inland a Marine‘ OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE nor ON 0/ kuocK- me 5 He‘s KITING ‘ 3 VERAL / Er’s OFFICIALL IN AUGUST5 V)IOO'IV¢I 30f MINEH NiflflnN .LISX V113 6'X LNHOV 138335 BSIIOW AEXOIW VWONVIO HONVI 3NO1 5H]. RAN DMA, I I’LLMJUNIOIZ.” AN'ALL Mv RECIPES IN w TERRIBLE HANDWRITINL A BAD MEMOEY, ... NO TWO BATCHES O’ COOKIES EVER COME OUT TH ' €AME/ a) 11m Welt Diaper Fir-lee“.- Wurlil Righl- Remand SHIPMENT HA5 WATS l£l5 55E WHAT LITA AND CHIZZAR VE UNEARIIED FDR xr MUSEUM/ONE bCONTAlN, ‘ LDI 1‘ WINGEY HAS A VACATION I JOD.’ HE’S A TREE SURGEON- THAT’S Aoour As cross To BEING A oocroe I AS HELL even 657- ‘ FEEDS THE HE PRUNES TREES M , TAKeé DAD SAYS To ‘ COME ow OVER! HE HAS WORK x i -' do, in: mi! visas .Im. rams. “aw, TEENS ’8 $990" IBNIV 1I.'l at. 3 c . ‘ i—7 y .w ‘4 u. HE'S TA MIAM JERRY GOT IN A CAB JUST TWO MINUTES AGO 0N HIS'WAY l ."r . e J’.’ “L i MPING R HE'LL 5m AS LONG AS His I WILL SIMPLY J PHAT! DOU H HOLDS our: THAT H VE TO AND I CAME ALL THE suouwu'r 8E MOKE'N MIAMI... AND WAY FROM CALIFORNIA! A MONTH! TO )3. fl“ WELL YA WON'T HAVE No TROUBLE FiNDiN' JERRY lF YA H A - ST A GHT F - (Alwyn/was FA ‘ TH NTING TAKES ANon-I -EVEN lF lT' ER IR IN LOVE MAE.” “1K3! r. V“. i h»: x,-