Page 12 The Guardian T hursclav, Jan. CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. JAV BECKER West dealer. North-Soutli vulnerabll NORTH 4.85 oJio7 QJ82 .y.AK852 WEST EAST 41093 VQ953 O #- vs42 ¢KQ109765 d.Q107 SOUTH oAKQJ7s42 QAK6 ’ 9.43 *_..—. Thebidding: West North East Pass Pass 39 4 J9643 South 6 4 Opening lead — four of dia- monds. Box-is Koytchou, who was born in Russia and spent, his early childhood in Turkey, lived most of his years in France but is now _____________j TO ASTHMA sufferers may now escape from severe coughing, wheezing, sneezing and dim- cult breathing during Asthma. Bronchi- s and Hay Fever attacks by taking Scientifically compounded MENDACO. Quickly heips relax bronchial tubes and remove choking phlegm. Thus aids freer breathing and sounder sleep. Get MENDACO at druggists. Feel fit again. too (All our,» HOW When kidneys Isilxo Remove excess acid! and wastes. back- Iohe. ured feel».uS- disturbed rest often . lieu Dodd 3 Kidney Pills sI.iinu- ‘ to kidneys to ’-Y, Ionnal duty. You “VT; Ioel better-slew 4 better, work better. .t Dodd‘I at any "rm. store. You on ‘i on d’I. For common ordinary sore throat Av . CFCY-TV CHANNEL 13 Sponsored by fhe Ross Burner & Electric Ltd. Oil and Electric Ranges—0il or Coal Rang. es — Refrigerators — Vacuum Cleaners - A __\Vyashing Machines -— Floor Oil Furnace: vo""' / xx . ggmululcn 8: 8: 9: 10 1 10 11 11 11 —'7 Television — Rangettes — \Radios -_- Presto-0 Heat Burners for Kitchen Rang- es — Quaker Oil Ranges — Cabinet or Space 011 Heaters —- Keinac Oil Burners will burn coal, wood and garbage. Power (gun type) Furnace Burners guaranteed. Immediate delivery and installation. Cash, Terms or Reestablishment Credit and D. V. A. 141 Windsor St. Halifax: N. S. 58 St. Peter’s Road Charlottettown P. E. I. Dial 4833. Evening. Dial 3417 THURSDAY 3:45--Test Pattern _4:284ign On 4:30——Howdy Doody .¢Maggie Muggins E :15—0ld Testament Tales 5:30—Lone Ranger ‘ J—Open House 30-News & Weather :45-—CBC News ’ r.55—viewei~-‘s Guide 3200-Sports Weekly " 230-1 Search For Adventure :00—Jane Wyman Fireside Theatre 8:30—Climax - 9:30—Jackie Rae 10:00—Movietime nade” ‘11:30—News and Weather 11:40-——T.B.A. “Footlite Sere- . NEW rv SPECIAL I: Delicious Tender Oven-Baked l Island Chicken-—85c Also ig Beefburger — Topped Wm!’ Cheese and French Fries! Only 50c THE WINDMILL Toke-Our Service _’ DIAL 7131 CKCW — Moncton Television T Programme 'Schedule Channel 2 THURSDAY 1;30 p_m.—F.M. Concert Hall 2:25 p.m.—Afternoon TV New! 1:30 p.m.——Coffee Chatter 3;oo p_m.——At Home with Helen Crocker .4100 p.m.—Uncle Jack At The Piano 4:15 p.m.—-People and Places 4:30 p.m.—Howdy Doody ;00 p.m.——Maggie Muggins . :15 p.m.——0ld Testament Tales :30 p.m.—-Lone Ranger :00 p.m.—Barbie’s Scrapbook .. ;30 p.m.——Early Evening TV News 45 p.m.—Weather 00 p.m.—Little Red Schoolhouse 30 p.m.—I Search for Adven- ture p.m.—Jane Wyman The:-iti"e 6: ' 6:50 p.m.—Sports 7: 7: 0 O 30 p.m.——Climax 30 p.m.—Jackie Rae Show 00 p.m.—Alfred Hitchcock Pre- sents 0 p.m.—$64.000 Question p.m.-—CBC TV News p.m.—CKCW TV News and Weather . p.rn.—-Fathér Takes The Air 03 $00 :l0 20 _at the Card School in New York, “difficulties in explaining why it . up a trump trick which at first ,~.e blush looks like a silly thing to do. I the proof of the pudding is in f succeeds like success. , something you want very much an American citizen. The United States has gained a great bridge player who, for years, was recog- nized as France’s number one player- Koytchou is a member of the American team which is this week battling in New York to win the world championship -against the European representa- tive, Italy. Years ago, while playing in a French championship, he was confronted with the South hand, the East player having opened with a nuisance bid of three dia- monds. Koytchou’s leap to six spades, though hardly scientific, was perhaps the best practical bid under the circumstances. There was no feasibly way to test for seven, and he could not very well bid less, than six. ‘ With the ‘diamond lead which was a marked singleton, Koyt- chou could count to thirteen tricks,.his own eleven and dum- my’s A-K of clubs. The catch; though, was that there was no way to get to dummy to cash the clubs. Undaunted by this complica- tion, Koytchou proceeded to make the hand. The prospect of drop- ping the singleton or doubleton queen of hearts by leading the A-K ,was quickly abandoned in favor of a different line of pl-ay. After winning the ace of dia- monds and drawing two rounds of trump, Koytchou led a low trump which West had to win. That unfortunate soul was com- pelled to return a heart or a club, either of which provided the entry to dummy necessary to make the slam. - When Koytchou uses this hand where he does a great deal of teaching, he sometimes runs into is desirable to deliberately give The answer, of course, is that ‘the eating. Losing a particular trick unnecessarily is good busi- ness when two tricks are bound I0 Sprout in its place. Nothing r ST. ALBANS, Nfld. (CP)—Pre- mier Smallwood’s world 'quest for more paper mills ‘for Newfound- land has focused attention on Baie D’Espoir, a broad, deep, twisting inlet half way along the province’s southern coast. Premier Smallwood says that syndicates representing much of Euro,.e’s industrial wealth are in- terested in the possibilities of that region. A new era for the south coast may be in the offing, with hydro—electric development, man- ufacturing, shipping, highway and rail connections. , A -nearby hydro-electric poten- tial of 500,000 horsepower, ice- free anchorage for ocean vessels, a milder climate than the rest of the island and impressive scenery are listed as Baie D’Espoir’s chief natural assets. SMALL COMMUNITY _ The present population of the area is less than 3,000, and 1,000 of those live in St. Albans on a beautiful cove on the west side of the bay. Across the bay is Mill- town, the next largest community and a loggingcentre for Bowa- ter’s Paper Mill at Corner Brook. Only industry there at present is logging, although timber stands are not large. There is some sup- plementary fishing and farming. The river valleys near the coast are well wooded, but the table land reaching from heights above the bay toward the headwaters of Great Rattling Brook and the up- per branches of the Gander River near the geographical centre of the province is virtually barren. Across the barrens roam the biggest herds of woodland caribou- in North America. There are some areas of good soil and the milder climate has 1 to speculation that agricul- tral development is possible. HYDRO POTENTIAL Rivers emptying into Baie D’Es- poir drain much of the central Newfoundland plateau and fall rapidly into the sea. Engineers have estimated that with the right combination of dams _and canals 500,000 horsepower could be devel- oped. ‘ _ The area has telegraph connec- tions, :1 local telephone service, BEDTIME STORIES -If self-control you want to teach, Put something wanted out of reach. —0ld Mother Nature. Reddy Fox was being tantalized. Th-at is a very big word for small folk, but you can roll it under your tongues and the meaning is very simple. It means, having right where you can almost take it, but not quite. Reddy Fox wanted very much indeed a breakfast that he could almost touch, but couldn’t quite. He was standing on the clear ice that cov- ered Smiling Pool and seeing‘ Jer- ry Muskrat swimming under the ice. All there was between Jer- ry Muskrat and Reddy’s blaclr paws and his teeth, was’ that clear ice, and that wasn’t very thick.‘ \ Jerry went down to the bottom and disappeared. Reddy was having a hard time to get enough to eat. In fact, he never really did get enough. These were hard times indeed. In times when there was plenty of food, Reddy wouldn’t have tried to catch Jerry Muskrat- There were others he would rather catch for a dinner, others that were much easier to catch. But now it was different. Jerry Muskrat’s house is out in the water in the Smiling Pool. The entrance to it is down at the botton of the Smiling Pool. To get into his house Jerry must dive and go through a tunnel or hallway still under water. Then he comes up through an opening in the floor in his living-room, which is above the water. There he and Mrs. ‘Jerry sleep and eat and live in perfect comfort all win- tar. They- have nothing to worry about. The walls of their house above wat-er are thick and keep Reddy Fox Is Tantalizecl I be. There‘ are little air-holes up through the roof ‘to give them the fresh air that is so much needed by everybody. ' » Reddy had seen Jerry go into his house. That is-,«he had seen him disappear in the wamr at the botton of the Smiling Pool. You see Reddy was standing cl'ose'to the house. He waited to see if Jerry would come out. At last Jerry did come out. He swam over toward the upper end of the Smiling Pool. Reddy followed him a little way, but lost sight of him when he reached the place where the bulrushes grow- The tops of the rushes were above the ice. They were brown and broken ov- er. Reddy knew that somewhere down among -the rushes Jerry Muskrat probably was digging out a root. V ~ Reddy waited at the edge of the rushes. Presently he saw the brown form of Jerry swimming out from the rushes. In his mouth Jerry had a piece of root. It is a » kind of rdot which he is fond. He swam straight for home.__Reddy walked along the ice right above him. Could anything be more tan- talizing? I’m sure nothing could. There was Jerry and just a few inches under him and carrying home a good breakfast and ‘er than Jerry possibly could be, because Jerry had all along had all the food he" wanted and Red- dy hadn’t. Jerry himself would have made a wonderful break- fast for Reddy, and yet there he was so close, but where Reddy couldn't touch him Jerry went down to' -the bottom and disappeared. He had gone in- side his house. Reddy was just about to turn away when another brown form appeared down be- low. It was Mrs. Jerry- She was going out to get her breakfast. Reddy just couldn’t tear himself away. He walked above Mrs. Jer- ry over to the rushes. When she returned home with a piece of root, Reddy walked back on, the ice above her and watched her disappear. . CORDON OFF CASHBAH . ALGIERS (AP) — French au- thorities Tuesday threw a cordon of heavily armed troops and police around the casbah in an all-out effort to rid the congested hideout area of Algerian nationalists. Sev- eral hundred suspects were ar- rested, including some long- wanted Moslems charged with them as warm as they need to murder and terrorism. there was Reddy, -himself hungri- ' _19;L"§7.lNewiound|ancI’s South Coast May Hold A‘BrigI1t Future‘ and freight and passenger serv- ices by CNR coastal boats. Since the Second World War pulpwood has-been cut there by the Bowaters Company and ship- ped around the coast by boat on the 320-mile haul to Corner Brook. The barrier of isolation that kept technological progress away from the people of Baie D’Espoir may at last he crumbling. First Employee Of TCA Still Tests AII Pilots ‘WIN'NIPEG (CP)——The first em- ployee of Trans-Canada Air Lines is still working the publicly - owned service after an initial stint at a desk and more than 15,000 hours in_ the air. Capt. Rene M. Giguere started as a private secretary in 1937. be- came a pilot in 1938 and now checks other pilots. His teacher in the flying end of the business was the late W. S. (Wop) May, who was a chief in- structor for British Overseas Air- ways Corporation. Capt. Giguere checked out in every plane avail- able and looked for more. He recalls his meeting in China with Les Rodda, a mechanic who later became the first mechanic hired by TCA. Rodda had “tied together” a 10-passenger Lockheed Electra, then the biggest plane Capt. Giguere had ever seen. He went along a sco-pilot. “I knew nothing about it and Rodda didn't know much more, but we got her up, away and down without even,” he said- “When I climbed into the cockpit, Rodda told me to watch the pressure lights and the fuel pump and to hang onto that fuel pump.” Capt. Giguere became :1 TCA instructor in 1941 and a check pi- lot in 1945. He tests the flying ability of all pilots out of Winnipeg to the East. HALIFAX (CP) —- While Can- ada’s textile industry generally is struggling in the ‘face of foreign competition, Nova Scotia’s knit- ting mills and clothing manufac- turers report they are maintaining production and marketing _quotas despite the restricting influence of high freight rates. Some larger manufacturers here but smaller plants feel rising rail shipping costs have closed the door on the many western markets. The smaller manufacturers are concentrating on the four Atlantic provinces. For Nova Sootia‘s textile indus- try 1956 was a year of progress and expansion. Col. -U. G. Daw- son, manager and director of Cos- mos Imperial Mills, Ltd., at Yar- mouth, N.S., says. Nova Scotia plants managed to keep breathing while other textile areas were choking because “the industry in Nova Scotia is geared to the econ- omy of the nation, not to the econ- omy of the textile picture.”_ Cosmos Mills which employ 375 men and women regularly and 500 during busy periods, has doubled its production per worker in the last decade. An employee training program and installation of more than $1,000,000 worth of new ma- chinery helped boost its output. ADDED NEW MACHINERY . Frank Stanfield of Stanfield’s are reluctantly paying the shot, N..S. Textile Industry Had A Year OI Progress, Expansion Ltd., Truro, says his plant has to add new machinery each year to keep pace with competition. He said production has increased through the last five years. The firm employes 700 workers in its factory and has warehouse distributing centres in Toronto Winnipeg Edmonton and Van- couver. A tyfical small plant is that of J. F. Craser Co. Ltd. of Lal-lave. Oilskin clothing for fishermen was once the chief product at this plant‘ but the war brought production of overalls workpants and shirts. Vice - president James Creaser says new machinery is being ad- ded this year to meet increasing demand in the Maritimes Quebec, and Ontario. In addition the com- pany has been developing a “solid market” in Newfoundland. Mr. Creaser said that during the war the company was unable to secure sufficient help in LaHave and opened ‘a small branch plant in Bridfiwater. L “It was a wartime measure but we have been so busy we had to change our minds about closing down the Bridgewater plant” he added. The two plants employ 55 full-time workers. DAILY ACROSS 1. Variety of coffee 3. European 9. Oldest Dravidisn language 10. Hints 12. Aromatic herb 18. Girl’: I nickname 14. Horn: 4. Malt beverage 5. Rub hard in washing 6. Interviewed secretly ‘I. Eject 8. Linden (Eur.) 9. Edible rootstock 11. Observo 15. Shade (colloq.) of t 15. Jostle rudely t‘-010!‘ ;g_ «The _ 17. Question ‘ wrung 9f 19. snake __'- 20. Performs 4?. French river 18. Degrade 21. Tuunt .25. Gown ‘ 26. Annoy 27. Oriental mine '28. Card gamr *29. Chilled 31.‘Behold! 83. Behind 5 vessel 36. Strike 38. Depart 39. sharp (0. Conical tent (1. Warning ' signal 42. Writing table- :3. Garden tools DOWN 1. Turkish‘ soldier 2. Among 8. Work. holding device DPGBX. CROSSWOR GREAT DITCH A total of 240,000,000 cubic yards of earth was removed in constructing the Panama Canal. Ldlfililli EJHIIE» L-Jlilfdlal 22. Conflict 23. Places apart 24.Tellu1'- ium (sym.) 25. Music note 26.Man'a nick- name 28,Wx-ite Yesterday’: Answer, 30. small 34. Plant ovulg stream 35. Ticker 32. Not 36. College clogged (Ohio) 33. High 37. 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HIM HOME.’ ‘LL FIX HIM UP DANDY! -«nu 9 2 % - E E _-f» um‘, // In .,:;,, -‘wélnhxna-—r. OUT OUR WAY BY J. R. WILLIAMS LI$TEN. VOL! GU‘/5 THINK \Dl.J GOTA HORRIBLE LIFE WHEN so»: your O.K.,!'LL zoos? RIC-:H'I' essgoe YQJ AN‘ SEE IF I GIT my BETTER SERVICE THAN ~/ou DO--AN‘ I'M , DOIN’ 50METHIN' FOR 'EM,'roo--Now rr'u_ THE NUIEANCE SQUAD J7Q.WILL|AM§ ,.,° JOE IPALOOKA HENRY MICKEY MOUSE GRANDMA ETTA KETT TlI.LY THE TOILER MUGGS & SKE-ETER L|'L ABNER THE LONE RANGER SECRET AGENT x-9 o1ns7=tA&~ro. oe.r.N.=.u.n.I-u.oIL .5,-W’ . ’ I'LL I-l1I'ZE‘IOUK ‘iv"o'=ie"nai’m-"'°'5x-3“-4"‘ FRIEND Fora-ri-us JOB IF HE'S NOT GUE55 I PUT -foo EwENTK|c[ ~saAsoNiNe IN -ri-us MEXICAN X? DINNER‘. 8 0 ...AN'.GOLLV SH *5 IN TH‘ I XEISL-I13 I-it-I? MOST GENEROU MOOD BEST FUDGE . GSANDMA even I, Mional I WHO’5 \/OUK FIZIEND? 0 row. hm. Fenian Symflnll. hr. World rld"" """°‘- ___. ...~ A _.- .....m..' ....... ...*»;..-..g in some TO PLAV n- SMART me EEsroI= SURE IS SLIPPERV TODAV.’ , I'VE. 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ITIIIS CALL‘5 ...All'VA eorm YOU, mosey DEAREST, new ME ourm TRAPPED... em as A MISTER LEEM‘l~ . , nus MESS, JERRY- LEAVE or ‘l"LEEMY... NOW DON'T TALK we eorm TALK in. we CARE OF Too LDNG.’.' FAST...$I-IE'5 mm POI55IN.'.' A , cowweacn - NOW. _ - 9" ; ( énf. Q I _ _* ,, ,\ __.° //_‘. .’I *4’ ‘xi’ / “a/‘ ,5, ,' If ‘, :2 V//. . _ " — I [1 I Meanwhile Iguana continueé his rnurnmus pottm : .\\ \\ \ \ I \ cAwwxeAN. ‘Tl-IE ‘two MEN WI-I0 CAME UP new “ TO STEAL D’COBALT BOMB NOTE5 WUH SENT av ‘ My WIFE AN’ MY GENWUL MANAGER! I KNEW Non-nne ABOUT IT! DEY won an CONTACT wrr’ FAWEIGN Assure! »:‘.‘:‘ TI-IA‘I''6 ’ ‘ -— Ami! you 'fZwD£Rs MeANwmLE.'roNm RACE -ro ROCK cn-v HARRY “mm MARRY sumo’:-'ooi!,r yo’ HAlN‘T NOTI-IIN' BUT A WIDDER -AN’ oANGERousLv CLOSE TO EIGI-ITEEN,AT ‘I'I-IAT!.' OH -s°B.'.'-AI-I'LL LEAVE. IT TO MAMMY ‘IOKUM .'.’ T SHELLS!-IOW ME THE’-: wAv ourr!!- -