2 SOP ANPPCOnel & SMM CFCY ot CHANNEL 13° WEOAESDAY i { E B88 BSGRSBSS & S¥EKE ove “ BB Lt < a Le 790 p.m.—Music Hall : p.m.—Bat Masterson . p.m.—Have Gun Will Travel p.m.—Close Up a.m.—CBC News a.m.—Viewpoint CKCW — Moncton CHANNEL 2 WEDNESDAY 1:00 p.m, ae Playbill News, Weather, i Sports Movie—Crime Against Joe 2:30 p.m.—At Home with Helen Crocker 2:45 p.m.—Nursery School Time 3:00 p.m.—Dear Phoebe 3:30 p.m.—At dome With Helen Crocker m RSs 3 8s 8 3 s & a 10 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed., Jan. 28, 1959 RIPLEY'S BELIEVE iT OR NOT ‘CONTRACT BRIDGE © By B. JAY BECKER 4:00 aaa Around The Bae et vaineenita, un ORI 4:15 p.m.—Children’s Int. News @iT4 4:30 p.m.—Open House @Aas2 5:00 p.m.—P. M. Party @Aastes 5:30 ar one ound mast 6:00 p.m.—Supper Club a SAKQ9\ 6:15 p.m.—News @ekKQsse3 es 6:30 p.m.—Supper Clab @21082 @K94 6:35 goon . @J93 &QwWtT2 6:40 p.m.—Supper Ciu 6:50 p.m.—Sports @ 108632 7:00 p.m.—Rescue ‘8’ @ 10T4 7:30 p.n.—Disneyland ee akk 8:30 p.m.—Bunkhouse Boys & ee Marry A The bidding: lionaire South West orth Bast $:30 p.m.—One of a Kind - t Dole ie e ry 10:00 p.m.—Music Hall : 10:30 r.m.—Bt Masterson }~-Opéning lead—king of hearts. 11:00 p.m.—Have Gun—Will This hand arose in the second Travel half of a team of four match. 11:30 p.m.—Close Up South decided to open the bidding a a m.—CBC. News with a psychic spade bid. His ~<A —_ team had fallen way behind dur- 12:20 a.m.—Sign Off RADIO C.F .C.Y. WEDNESDAY STANDART TIME 6.58—Sign On 7.00—Hebrew Christian Hour 7.15—Country and Western Roundup 7.30—News and Weather 7.35—Country and Western Roundup 7.49 Farm Reporter 7. 55—Interlude 8.00—News 8.11—Weather 8:16—Country and Western Roundup 8.45—Weather §.50—News 9.00—Morning Devotions 9.10—Morning’ Moods *: F 9.30—Top T e Time 9.45— Whd-A I 10.00—News _ 10.05—Magazine of the Air 10.30 Melody Parade 10.35—Melody Parade 11.00.—News Headlines and Wea- er , 10.45—Swift Money Man .11.02—The Magie o° Musie 11.00'_-Weather 12.05—Rhythm Roundup 12.30—News and Weather _. (2.45—Mostly Music = 1.00—News Headlines and Wea- ther 1:02—Mostly Musie. 1.17—Mostly Musie 1.45 Mostly Musie 2.00—School Bdcst 2.15—Mostly Musi¢e 2.30—Back to the Bible 3.00—News Headlines and Wea- ther 3.02—Best on Request 4.00—News and Weather 4.05—Best on Request 4.30—The Outports 5.00—News Healines and Wea- ther 5.20—The Outports 6.00—News 6.10—Interlude 6.15—Musie for You 7.00—Sports Roundup 7.05—Musie For You 7.32—News and Weathe 7.45—Don Messer’s Islanders .8.00—Tonight’s Musie 8.30—Outdoor Forum 9.00—Assignment 10.90—News and Weatt.er 10.1! arlight Serenade 10.45—Mémo From the U.N. 11.00—Dominion Bandstand 12.00—Dominion News 12.10—Sign Off CBA WEDNESDAY ‘STANDARD TIME 7:15—Marine Weather and Fill 7:30—News. : 7:30—A. M. Chronicle 8:00—CBC News and Weather 8:15—Maritime Sportscast ~ 8:20—A.M. Chronicle 8:45—Morning Devotions | There was a time, a few years 9:00—A. M. Chronicle. 10:00—Atlantic School Broadcast 10:15—A. M. Chronicle. 10:45—Joan Marshall. 10:55—For Consumers. 11:00—News 11:03—Showcase 11:15—Kindergarten of the Air 11:30—Fighting Words. 12:00—Jamboree Junction “12:30—Maritime Farm B’cast 1:00—CBC News and Weather 1:15—The Archers. 1:30—Appointment with Agostini 1:59—D.0. Time Signal 2:00-—-Allantic School -Broadcast! 2:15—The Happy Gang 2:45—Woman In My House. 3:00—CBC News and TC Mat- inee 4:00—Art Morrow Big _ Band) Show 4:30--Concer _pmend. East bid a spade and ing the first half of the match, and South thought he might cre- ate a swing in favor of his team by opening with a bluff bid. West overcalled with two hearts and North, unsuspecting, jumped to three spades. East had serious doubts that this contract eould be made, and doubled. Every- body passed. At the other table, we m ght) | add, the bidding followed a dif- ferent course. There, after two passes, North opened with a dia- Backstretch (Continued from page ?) His horse holdings were sold 1.55%, that he left sufficient funds for so that he would have a lovely home, plenty of pasturage, and when. he. Passed away, would be interred in a beautiful s pot sur- rounded by metal fexcing wiiere| a plaque would show his harness} racing history, and’ he would be! ever afterwards cared for. with the exception of Greyhound | SYNDICATE PURCHASE Edith Shaw, writing from De! Mar, California, to “The Harness] Horse,” states that a syndicate has purchased. Wattage by Bill Gallon, dam Evelyn Watt. He is a three-quarter brother to Steno- grapher. Members of the syndicate are: | Bill Lachenmair, Jim Camp, Joe O’Brien, Bill Jeffries and two others. Wattage will be trained in the 8. A. Camp stable, and on the Camp farm half-mile track where Joe O’Brien and assistant trainer, Tommy Carter, are working a number of two-year- olds, most of which are home bred at the beautiful Camp ranch at Springville, which is not far Yrom Shafter, where Maynard Shetler and Gene Matucci are training a group of two-year-olds over the ranch half-mile track. The list of two-year-olds in training numbers twenty, most of them home bred, but four are purchases from the Harrisburg sale. Racing has already. started in Califorma, where Bay Meadows opened its first race meeting at San Mateo on January 17; the fastest mile was in the ‘‘A’’ Pace, purse $1,300. won by Oakland Hills (Hall) ip 2.02 4-5. The Camp Stable will not likely be racing at this meeting, unless at the latter end of it. But they will, no doubt, take part in the later meeting at Santa Anita. Califor- nia. At the Bay Meadows meeting, there are races for runners also, and these are mostly at a mile |and'a quarter, single dashes. | ag0, when the runners dominat- 5:01—Maritime Fish B’cast. 5:30—The Don Tremaine Show. 6:00—News and Weather 6.15—Regional Commentary 6:20—Maritime Sportscast, 6:30—Rawhide 6:45—Roving Reporter 6:55—Byline 7:00—Music in the Evening 7:30—Monitor Stars 7:45—Supper Magazine ence” 8:30—Introduction to Wednesday Night : - “Sci- 10:00—International artists. 11:00—CBC National News Round- up. 11:30—Burns aad the Ballad 12:00—Here's the Weather Sign OFF and newsprint production last Decem- 8:40—Music. ‘ : r Last ber 476.232 tons of | newsprint we produced, com- West two hearts. East's two spade bid then bought the .con- tract, West retiring regretfully ‘from the auction. The result was that East went down three tricks vulnerable—300 points—for a bad score. But let’s go back to the first table where the contract was/~ three spades doubled. West led the king of hearts and South saw he had his hands full. He took the CIM E DOWN Ae. 1. Seaman CTRIE MS IN) EZ IE! 36. Stand up a bell L, - J, YA Z id 1 + [aa Zr TlrH GZ Y 42. River (Fr.) GZ 43. Perches 4, French . father -28 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR ® 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- trophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. each day the code letters are different. A Cryptogram Quotation BFYAZLTL EB PEH £C HYR PEL, IT GEH KT GMFTL YW TATF®@ ace of hearts. To salvage what he could. he! embarked on a crossruff. He! cashed the ace of diamonds and | trumped a diamond. Then he led, a club to the king, another club’ back, and ruffed a club in dum-| Now he led another diamond from dummy and trumped. When he played the fourth round of clubs, West showed out, a nd| South was able to ruff the cluh' low in dummy with —— safety. By this time eight tricks had| been played and declarer had! won them all. The lead was in dummy. East had come down to! a flush in spades—the A-K-Q-9-5-.| Declarer led a diamond from | dummy and East had had it. Re-| gardiess of what he did he could’ not prevent South from making| a trump trick—and the contract. So the North-South pair scor- ed 530 pbints, which more than overcame their teammates’ loss of 300 points at a spade contract! in the opposite direction ed the California tracks, and for quite a while it was dif- ficult to make progress with trot- ters and pacers. But: vhen, Cali- fornia permitted pari-mutuel rac- ing, it changed the picture, and) now it ig the trotters and pacers’ that are the favorites. We owe it to California that the harness horse industry is what, it is today. It was there that; Leland Stanford, a man who had made a fortune in the gold-min- ing days, brought in trotting sir- ! es and established the biggest breeding farm in the world, et Charles Marven, harness hor trainer, became a noted Shoei ity on training, shoeing and bal- ancing trotters. It was to his farm that the late W. A. Bren- nan, proprietor of the Summer-! side Journal and / griculturist, | went in the early '90's and bought | the stallions, ‘‘Parkside”’ and! “‘Baliston."’ Parkside proved a foundation sire, and his blood flows freely through hundreds of trotters and pacers bred in the Garden of the Gulf and elsewhere. | CAC President Wonders Why Farmers Grumble CALGARY (OCP)\— Isabe! At- kinson of Ottawa, president of} the Canadian Association of Con-| sumers, said Thursday she can not understand ‘why some farm- ers claim they are not being helped by federal and provincia! governments. Miss Atkinson told the annual meeting of the Dairy Farmers of Canada that the combined budg- ets of federal and provincial agri- culture departments exceeds $150,000,000 a year. “This is more than is spent to assist any other economic group and yet there are farmers who appear to think the government does nothing for agriculture."’ She asked whether increases in farm production do not in some measure offset either the drop in price of farm products or the increase in cost of what the farmer has .to buy. “Surely the fact that farm le bor has, perhaps, doubled in price in a certain period, is offset in some degree if the physical output for each man hour is 75 per cent greater. Dec. Newsprint Output Is Given MONTREAL (CP) — Canadian ber was higher thah in December 1957, but the 1958's. total produc- tion was lower than in 1957,’ the Newsprint Association of Canada announced Thursday. pared to 435,269\tons in December 1957. However in 1958. 6,095,553 tons were produced, against 6.- 306.501 ia 10" |: WYDDQ KMR AEHZRQ—FYMCCTEM, Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: IN EVERY VOLUME OF POEMS SOMETHING GOOD MAY BE FOUND—JOHNSON, , (© 1959, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) AITIVIAI R) SOM Hp icimRielr ETTA KETT & = na A” CHECK” Wows ( UHJUHS T's ALL THAT PAYS FOR MY MUSTNT | YOuRsS = CAR” GIMME! GiMME®) SNATCH~ ON ONE ~ ws BAD CONDITION = WO MANNERS” a? inn — Jang ey KA I MIGHT HAVE KNOWN THERE’ /% 1 WAS A CATCH 4 COME ON.” HAVE I GOT A SURPRISE.” You WIN ! SNAP THE TRAP.! i'M HOOKED.’ WHAT DO I HAVE TO" HENRY Stewart MacKay TILLY THE TOILER GRANDMA MICKEY: MOUSE meer ’ OF COURSE WE WILL TRADE NOW! WHILE THE WHITE HUNTER HAS THIS DEAL ON . HE’LL GIVE YOU THE HIGHEST TRADE-IN IN TOWN On a 1959 Admiral TV Free 1 Yr. Warrenty on Picture Tube Clearest Picture Ever FIRESTONE HOME & AUTO HOME AND AUTO CO. LTD. 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