Page 10 The Guardian Monday. Mar. 18. 1957 (Setting up lllgltts 1 eat t. he fu . . ' "f...'i5.'ftie Patnruet iu3sIncu-. mac 4 ; passages. no use or energy due to King .2-ecu troubles. in IJYITIX. ale!- -nipleta satiatacunn or money back. Over 300 million CYB'I'Ig tallete used peeve tatety. success. Don t aulfer another Cu -tinnut. Iaklnl -our dranlsl far - it usly. dlangurha hteistaha Pin lsIsIaa.ItchiI .lcal lkln.'EIorlalatl.aa Acne. Athlete's not. the-at or Ilotchaa embarrass you. to ODIN! toot ht. Works while you sleep. I. Curbs it-ch a. burning. amarttag in 'l lllllll"-ll 1. many germs. often the real cause I . l of skin disorders. I. Help: heal the skin. : i softer. smoother. ter. Ask your drug- gtst ter NIXOD money back. And to clean your skin today. satisfaction or anti- t aepuaally use NIXODHIM lledlcaud loav- Ger quick results and soothing comfort Iron diatring Huaorrhoida by uing either of the special More-a Pile Rama- dtu-sasde by the nak-a of the well- knnva Menu Ointrsuat. 1, Taro ldede-Numb: 1. pronasliag pflee-aold in 'ube ; Iith perinretnd pipe for internal annlincinn. Number 2. for external pllo-mid In tar. fer TM ECCA' 5.51 PILE REMEDIES i. OIL FOR GOODS 1 ' MOSCOW (Reuters) will deliver 500.000 tons Russia ofoil to Egypt in exchange for Egyptian goods under an agreement signed in Cairo Thursday. the Soviet News agency Tasa announced Fri- day. CFCY-TV CHANNEL 13 sponsored by The Rose Burner & Electric Ltd. on and Electric Ranges-Oil or Coal Ian. rs ttelrtgerators - Vacuum Cleaners - laaantng Machines - Floor Oil Furnaces television - lansetlas - Radios - Presto-U Heat Iuruers for lutshes last ei. Quaker on Kansas A Cabinet or strata Ull Heaters - Kernae Oil Burners will burn coal. wood and urban. Power (gun type) Furnace Burners guaranteed. Immediate delivery and installation. Cash. Terms or neeatabltsbinent credit and D. V. A. ldl Windsor 8!. Halifax. N. I. If It. Peter's load Chsrlotlettowa P. E. I. Dial (III. lvaalaas. Dill N17 MOIIIAY p.m.--Afternoon : p.m.-Sign On p.rn.-liowdy Doody p.mPln The Story Book : p.m.-Peppermint Prince : p.m.-Circus Boy : pan.-Open House V p.nL-CFCY Television News p.m.-Weather p.m.-CBC News : p.rn.-VIe'wer'a Guide : p.m.-Meet Corliss Archer : p.m.-News Magazine p.In.-The Millionaire p.m.-TBA p.m.-I Love Lucy p.rn.-Denny Vaughan pm.-Studio One p.n1.-CFCY Television News A Weather p.m.-Boxing a.m.-Sign on -a-4,”-- - Tg. as-I A G! goounoag 3335335 uqdogo 882268 388 ...4 w:toIH 33 838 use: ba- ing with Harri- By B. JAY Ieutl dealer Ioth aides vulnerabil. Noarsl . axis . on geese 1 win . its? use - .Al0jI3 Q1074 Qxtoll 3 s g l SOUTH O0 QAQJOIS A O 5 A K Q 10 I . The biddin : l gout. west North East 2; Pass 1 5 Pass 1 Q Paas- 3 NT Pass Pass 54. Pass Opening leati- two of diamonds. Sam Fry. Jr. tSoutht was play- Fishbein in the 1954 Summer National Champion- ships in Washington. They were. using weak two bids, reserving thei two club bid as a forcing bid. Fishbeinis two diamond bid was a negative response, but the leap had some scattered valuesu through not enough for an initial affirmative response. Fry. natur- ally enough. went on to the slam. The six contract is easy enough to beat with 52 cards exposed. but Fry wound up making the hand by pulling one of the greatest swin- dles on record. CONTRACT BRIDGE , BIXJIEI west had a dilficult choice of opening leads and came out with the diamond lead which gave Fry a chance to operate. it was at once apparent the slam depended on the heart finesse. since there was a spade loser to start with. The problem was to try to make the hand even if the heart finesse lost. The situation was sized up quickly by dz-ciarer when he play-K ed the queen of diamonds from dummy faster than you can say Sam Fry. East played the king and South, the ace. A club was led to dummy jack and the heart finesse was talc, on and lost. West triumphantly led the lack of diamonds, after duly congratulating himself on the brilliance lead-but Fry trumped it. Two more trumps were drawn, the heart suit was run, dummy's three spades were discarded. and the queen of spades was finally ruffed in dummy to produce twelve tricks. t Our sympathies go to West, who found it difficult to conceive that Fry would waste the queen of dia- monds on the opening lead, hold- to three notrump announced heting the singleton ace. West could not know his partner had the .spade ace and it probably did not occur to him to lead any card but the jack of diamonds when he .was in. l Fry had taken the precaution of playing only one trump. so -that East had no opportunity to give a nice juicy spade signal. IEDTIME STORIES An empty home: an empty heart; An empty life the losers part. -Old Mother Nature. It had seemed to I-ionty the Owl and to Mrs. liooty, but especially to Hooty, that their two children never would learn to fly. They were called Little Boot and Little Toot. but they were no longer lit- tle. They were almost as big as their father and mother. and they are the biggest members of the Owl family in the Green Forest. There was a very good reason why the two young Owls In the big nest in the top of a tall tree in the most lonesome part of the Green Forest had not learned to fly. It was because they never had tried. . A4,; ' . - fl-L: l U E V m... ' 45 Exml Jz. "Where are they'." he cried. Now all growing children need plenty of good food. ()f course. The faster they grow the more food they need. All feathered babies grow fast. Young Hunt and his sin- ter. young Toot had grown so fast that it had kept father and mo- ther hunting most of the time night after night. and sometimes a good part of the day when Owls are supposed to sleep. Being eaters of only meat all they ate had to be hunted for and caught. While the Afte E lief” utlffefreehing, delicmll WrigIey's Spearmint Gum. aide digestion. A TV TREATS GOLDEN FRIED OYITEIS OR SCALLOPS snu'rn!:ltN FRIED CHICKEN HOT l FISH O EDI M dbar tally food sugges- Cei some today. The Empty Nest young Owls were small hunting hadn't been tiresome. It was very different now that they had grown 'so big. It seemed as if they were always crying for food. Hooty and Mrs. Iiooty were getting very, vey tired. They were not ggi. ting rest enough and often the food they'should have eaten themselv- es went to those always hungry children. The wings of the two Young Owls were fully grown. Iiuoty felt that there was no reason at all uhy they shouldnlt use them. When they had learned to use their vitngs they could he taught how to hunt and catch their own food. They did a lot of flapping of those big wings but that was all. The truth is they were afraid to try them in flight. They were afraid to leave the nest. it was a long way down to the ground. ”They should he pushed nut." declared Hooty, hut mother would not listen to that. This day both father and moth- er were gone from the nest a long ltime. They were having no luck hunting. Finally mother caught a lMouse and flew back to the nest. ;As soon as she came in sight of tit she knew something was wrong iAs she drew a little nearer she ysaw what it was. That nest was jempty! Yes sir. that next as em. Ipty! She had been flying rather slowly for she was tired, httt now she hurried. She forgot she was tired. She forgot everything but her love for the missing darlings. Just as she reached the nest liooty came from another direc- tion. At sight of the empty nest llooty forgot all his impatience because the young Owls were so long in learning to fly. "Where are thcy?" he cried. "How should I know?" rclnrled Mrs. Hooty. She was frantically tlurning her head around this wayl and that way to look In all direc- tions. "Something has happened to them”. Somebody has taken ithem. They couldn't fly. so some- ,one must have taken them." i No emptiness is like the cmpti- ness of an empty home. That nest lhad been so filled with life and '-now there was none. There was too welcoming screaming fromi igreedy throats. Instead there was is silence that added to the fear, the dread, caused'by the empti- lness of that big deserted nest. What had become of those prec- ious children who had been such a care for so long? I "Do you suppose they have flown?" said Hooty suddenly. ..s.jj........:. DAILY CROSS OH IECK ..i!Ti"'.;L. 11?: go&au t&byI.) IO. Bunbodie gn- N Duvets. god ltlhada 1. Diary 0 Diecourage it Benefactor 11. Hnrden I1 Arabsas country is &rnt. 15 Place it better (Heb ) 11. Public IMJCQ It Toward ll. liephanra luek Dull-oytsj secure (eoiioq.l 83. inside pen. . 27. Hosts. Zola star as If Kroup 21. as Brilliant 23. WOR5 zsttgwlttit-itzi E 20. Strange ,. 30. Bird 31. Kicks A &I 33. llauat 34. These 80. Nonsense R 31. River tPd.i 39. lincloae IL Help 43. Greek pbloeopher Wading In! Wheel 744 7 DAILY QYPTOQUUPE - Ian's ban in ark R: AXYDLIAAXI I LONGFILLOW oneletlerlersptyetntforanolhw. ht:hh:rqtsAh:e for the nine L's. X for the two 0's. etc. ssngk iettera. spar trophee. the length and formation of Each day use code letters are different. the Inch are all hints. Aaypeege-:QIeh&e zvcanas ir-r tree JPGAB npatvcsrato rs-autwwacai Kent N 'ri-tsac. rnnrcr a.r.l real rcu ANCSO-WAC. Selau'sIny's C-rypmoqlohet IT IS FATAL TO ENTER ANY WAR WITHOUT THE WILL TO WIN 11'-KACARTHUR. HENRY MICKEY MOUSE EGAD Boys! SPRING Acr- uAu.V-srmz-rs MARCH 20 -4 LAR IDEA -rum MARCH zi is ALWAYS -rue cuzsr DAVOF sptzsuelu I-IEH-HEI-ll You sMArz'r .OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE ( LAST YEAR Dior-i"r tau OBSERVE PADL EVERY YEN- TILLY THE TOILER MUGGS 8: SKEETER wei.i..1bM, i'i.L HAVE 1o as com? rrs aces: NICE HAVlN' A "TALK --so E W I-E WENT TTE PAPER AND ETTA KETT JOE PALOOKA - LfZY3t'? Eta:-r.::”t.d BdI:uk:"C.:ddill'l'l;l'l YT; p E H - g I g & pcuEoAlIzMADE-Mo'r .........,.- THE WINDMILL u"'i'Jm"'.7'..i.. .'i.'.';if?f”... DIAL 7131 IW3 ...'..'."-.f.'&” '.;1'.'.”".;'' 'l'Al(E-OUT-SERVICE ;:. A gm "":;"."'”'.....& I i 1 citcw .. Moneton ” uouaj ,. -I'' d 1. Channel 2 ”I l .' W 1 A4 . i , Television Programme ll I in y eee Yr 1!; Xx A ; Schedule ' ' -. '3 1' y 72 I In." . '-It .? IV , s an ;;a,:;;-:;::;-:1,-.W'" W 5 to TOP PAY 1083 for you it :::::::g3g;.3:.mi"":t'- -u--- v in mtg-rv-mcrnamcs: f. A ' 0-H v-m--gm; M M 1'" 1 I east eel dost nun. Study Courses :51: gm.-People and Places : . I l.C.C.'iedeyl : T .. ;;g g: mtaaialdurgy eaounsuagses. -:- "...'.."'.'.- .:'r:'.:z"..:r.:1:""..-:'.c.cc.'a , p :&eoarauavala&.&j,Qj 3; uaarArins:asu:snmunusa- vet! ....n-0.... . -7.. Qspyvhi.wn:InLnlc.Oud4p:Id F9E'5&aGDllDRK l-E5-TD BETTER IREF HERON OUR HF. PEWLATIONS CAN I HAVE A cause ACCOUNT on MY vatzv own 9 SI-IE ALREADY HAS HER OWN CAR AND HER ONN PRIVATE irs FREE! GE!,DAD..'. rt-us ooeswr cosr sou EVEN ONE LITTLE PENNY! GIVE ME 6,700, PLEASE! ' a: wow: ISNT oeoovs DAD A DOLL 5 GUESS wHAr HE GAVI HEI2! 3 ma Lotta assess sscasr seem x-9 rarmtrasmuato nu nvontrs-rostntav Mani Aum:aow,AdIr,co m