Opening lead-five of spades. There are so many confllng rules you hear about which are supposed to guide declares to the proper play of a hand that It is no wonder so many contracts are misplayed. I One school says U181 "I I10- trump you alviays develop your lonest Still, another says you go after your strongest suil; a third school tells you to count your winners. anolhcr your 103811: someone else sugllesls 30” fl"'3539 this way, still another says the other way, and so on. All this advice though issued In good faith. is only of a general nature. and should be cast aside whenever following the usual rule appears to be harmful in dealing with an actual situation. The ,first aim to make the contract. whenever ; contract. whatever it is. and this rule takes precedence over all Nfld. Mcin T Appear For Fraud GLOVERTOWN. Nfld. (CPl - Capt. George Glover of Hare Bay was commited Saturday to appear before a Supreme Court grand jury in St. John's on charges of forgery and fraud following an in- uqiry in this east coast Newfound- land town. . Capt. Glover is charged with ”- mlsappropriaiing about 311,000 in government funds. The money was intend d to help residents oi Bragg: island and Deer island move from their isolated homes to large and more central com- munities. The government pays ' up to 5400 a family when a whole community makes up its mind to MOVE. It is not known whether the families were actually moved by Capt. Glover, master of coaster Sid and Earn. , '. Capt. Glover was required to; enter no plea at the 'inquiry- Such inquiries are held to determine whether there is sufficient evi- dence to warrant passing a case on to the Supreme Court. V V The grand Jury is not expected l - to sit before October in the fall session of the Supreme Court. If it returns a tru bill against Capt. Glover he will make his defence before a Supreme Court petit jury. New Many Wear FALSE TEETH With More Comfort PAa'rn'rl, 1...”, than-Icldl powiiori holds gnu: '05 llflnly. To out and talk in more ,HW'l-l0l't. luat aprlnklo a little PAB- y valwyouf PlIt:I.lNo gummy, nun odor” Us 13- Cheeks AITTFI M80! or (denture breath). 11 IE II, CHK QIIICI. KIDH ET ACIDS Rob your Rest. . Muypoeyloneuraoontogotapogl wllill Theyhirnandhoo-hlunnt mtnuvoa'-wlionitnayhotbftklheya. sitlhepeioona and neon: '.2t"t..”""" tliotlood. lithoy iiiiua dent victims of uninsured driver! .' By a. an nnclsnn P H FAMOUS HANDS . f with ad" lenq-glitiec. We want to avoid , ' the tuna where it can be said ' .. E""'w"' MWPNP the mration was a success but V H9313 the contract died. We want ta V 6104 make the contract regardless of :3 .31 : . . how many Reneral principles are - viol ted l the way. :3 PK.'' The dig; hand shown, for in- -. - "'3" 1351' stance. East": ions of spades u Q&0llI 6353 won with the ace. is it now pro- '., .5 .7T' per to go after the diamond suit .. . T 1 .KP5 or the hearts? many players in- .1 .Q . P ' T It-lnctively tackle diamonds. the . .AQ., long unit. If they do. down they .KJm. go. East gets in with the king.t .Qw. Wed.'s spades an establistiedu gA1o5 and he cashes them as soon as hearts are led. 7'” '”dd"'35 Hearts should be attacked first. louth West North But Not because they're strong but INT Peas INT Pu: because leading hearts assures three notrump. The danger in this hand is that West has a long spade suit and if he can get in to cash the spades nine tricks theres a good chonce we'll be beaten. The only sure entry have for his spades is West can the are of hearts. West takes the are and out immediately. So we DIZY hearts. West takes the are and leads the jack of spades. We re- fuse it and win the next spade. Now the diamond finesse is taken. It loses. but we make four notrumo. : Fire Fighting A I Pick Up Water I . SUDBURY. Ont. tCPl - Bush- fire - fighting planes in Ontario, may soon be equipped with wateri tanks that can be filled while the aircraft skims over a lake. says district forester William Cleav-. erly. i Low - flying taiik planes could? control and even extinguish small bush fires in isolated areas. One department of lands and forestsi plane, on Otter stationed at Snult' Ste. Marie. 0nt.. has been equip-: ped with the tanks. one to each pontoon. i it can take on 130 gallons of water in just 18 seconds-without stopping. It skims along the sur-1 face of a lake. dragging a reiilll pipe through the water. Over the fire, the pilot flips a. switch and the tanks revolve and, open to release their cargo. Bsf-l 119 Plates prevent the water from sloshing. l before we take : Page 12 The Guardian Tuesday. June 11.1957.l U3. of mg”. CONTRACT BRIDGE I Hand Restored LETHBRIDGE. ARI. CPl 3'50 Cillftul of Lotbridge once would never again he yhave the use of his right hand llelt crippled by a cliudliood P 4 He was one of the first studellill e lwurkshop was opened last year. learolled for classes when The classes have given him and several hundred other: the oppor- tunity to learn that they are able yin work in spite of their handi- from the Alberta govern year and support from public l ment, lspirited citizens and from the Al- berta Association for the Handl- i tapped. DEATH SENTENCE! BUDAPEST four others drew prison term Saturday for the killing minor Communist official fall's revolution. The Buds municipal court nf murdering the head of the vil- lage councl at Kakucs, abut 13 vmiles southeast of Budapest. ircraft Will On The Wing planes have been from the air with water ptimps and four gallon pa- per ”bombs" filled with water. But now, said Mr. Cleaverley, "a plane. flying in the neighbor- hood ot 100 feet. can concentrate a I00-gallon drenching and really saturate the area.” Pumps and water bombs are llineifectual compared to the new tanks." "The tank is still in the early stages," he said. ”There are bugs not yet overcome." One difficulty was ironed out when the tanks. first planned to fit on to the body of the plane, were moved to the pontoons- With tanks on its fuselage, a plane would have to stop to reload. The tanks will be lYd9SlRl'IEd to fit the smaller Beaver aircraft, Mr. Cleaverley said. The depart- ment hss five Otter and 32 Beaver planes in the province. Department fighting fires Hess. But I weaving loom at the iltehabilitation Workshop for the l tlllualxlrdlc-oped here has claimed all aps. The Lethbridge centre. and .others in Edmonton. Calgary and Medicine lint. were set up with the aid of a 10.000 grant last -C:-? (AP)-Three Hun-i garians drew death sentences andi of a' in lasti pestl convicted them: ggprime STORIES when you hear a happ song, lVery little can be vroog., -rotor Kalil. It was very early in use nun. ins. Indeed. it was almat before morning. It was still dark in the Green Forest. Peter Rabbit was over there. He had spent the nlju there and he was just Instill ready to scamper home to the an; Old Briar-Patch so as to get there before daylight. In fact he had reached the edge of the Green Far. est and was just about to hop om to cross the Green Meadows when to stop short and sit up the bgttgp to listen. Now usually in mg spring the first song at daylight is that of Welcome Robin. But it wasn't daylight yet and someone was singing. S l "Thai is Redeye the Vlreo;” ex- claimed Peter happily. "That is Redeye the Vireo!" ex claimed Peter happily. "I didn't know he was back yet from the Summy South. My, but I'm glad to Protect Sources SAARBRUECKEN. West Ger- many Iiteutersl - The executive committee of the International Federation of Journalists said Friday the liberty of reporters not he heard a sound that caused him wmmx Peter Hunts A Voice but llll voice! I must find him and tell him so." 80 Peter didn't start borne a- erme the Green Meadows. Instead he turned and stoned to look for the little singer who WIS 50"” where in the Green Forest, but not too tar iii. Really. Peterw-S -lunli In for a voice because it was sill too dark there in the Green For- est among the trees for him to see anyone as small as the little sing er somewhere anions 1119 19""- lie listened for I monellly 50 '5 to plug just where that voice was from. then avray he -W1- -lipperty-llP- I 3. 1-... only ii little way until he gtgpped to listen again. This time the voice seemed to Com- ing from a different direction. So off he went iipperty-lliwerty-lw In 'a new direction. He could still hear um sweet little song as he ran- Pregendy it seemed to him he was running away from it instead of toward it. He stopped abruptly to listen again. "1 wish Redeye would stay in one place. How does no expect me to find him if he keeps movtni around." said Peter talking to him sl like Peter. Be for- ye didn't know that it over in iheiGreen e looking for him as another thing ed lipperty self. That was ill got that Rede Peter was eve Forest.. let alon Then. too. there vu N that Peter didn't ihlpk of. Tuis was. that voices are sometimes very difficult to place. They seem to come from different directions and different distances when actually the singer. or one who is calling. has stayed right in one place. Soon Peter found that he was back where he had started from. He had run around in a circle and he hadn't found Redeye. Now the Black Shadows were beginning to leave the Green Forest. Daylight was driving them out. Peter wise- ly sat down to wait awhile. He would wait until it was light e- nough for him to hunt for Redeye and not just for a voice. Redeye continued to sing. He sang as if he had nothing else i-n the world to to divulge their sources of infor- matinn is an essential prercquistei of feedom of the press. i The committee. meeting here,l said two reporters have recently been sentenced. one in Switzer- land and one in Luxembourg, for refusing to give away such n fessional secrets. The committee condemned this. PIONEER STATION The first wireless station was " on the Isle of Wight. Eng- Maximum Payments Of Ont. TORONTO fCPl-Ontario's Un- satisfied Judgment Fund, de- signed to protect victims of un- insured drivers. will have been in operation 10 years on July 1. it will have paid out more than 9,. 000.000 in claims. Assistant deputy attorney-gem eral Eric H. Silk says he believes the fund and its machinery are as near perfect as can be devised "We have found that those who are inclined to criticize the legal aspects of the fund are people who do not have a proper working knowledge of it." he said. Under present legislation. accl- csn recover up to 5.000 for per- sonal injury and 1,000 for pro- perty damage from the fund, after a court judgment has been ob- tained. They have to prove that neither owner nor driver can pay. The maximum paid out in any one action is 10.000. Drivers now pay 8! into the fund when they buy their annual licences. BOOST PAYMENTS Maxim amounts recoverable will be doubled. beginning in l958. At the some time, uninsured own- ers will have to pay 35 a year into the fund. "Since about 20 per cent of Ontario's car owners are uninsured. this may double the fund's income." says Allan G. MacNab registrar of motor ve- hicleo A driver who has had debts paid by the fund is not allowed to drive again until he has paid back the amount. or had made in , t topayltonlm lments. Toronto lawyer Charles A. Thompson. QC. says he feels that victims sometimes settle for less than they should, when a set-le- ment is possible. P of the difficulty of proving that the other party cannot pay. "The fund's discretion should be ex- tended," he says. The fund protects out-of-prom ince victims injured in Ontario only if their province or state has similar protection for visitors from Ontario. All Canadian prov- c long had ' PORT IINFREW. l.C. tCPl' young Caaadlaa physician with saving the hue of 1'5 ll: i.-lliti .1 ii i the? Judgment Fund Will Double iiind. in 1397. four years before 0. ”I wonder if he'll stop big e- nough to get his breakfast. I Iiope he wont stop until I find him. Tiy- ing to find him with my ears alone is useless. but with my eyes nnd ears working together I ought to be able to find hlm." said Peter to himself. So Peter continued to hunt. He looked and listened and listened and looked. but still he couldn't find the little singer. He could still hear him. In fact, when Peter ii- nally sat down to rest Redeye the Vireo was singing right over Pet- er's head and still Peter didn't trans-Atlantic wireless. see him. D ;l.'l DAILY CROSSWORD .,...,,-.... Acitoss Ltlgnlgmtilt :1” y as. per. H cl compulsory insiirance. sold with !'.Pll' "' F ep 0"" the licence. vihile private insur- . ulllxl anoe is available for additiona ' l r:.':.-.. '-:':W.....,.." ... tr... Eds” H"""st QC' T”'”"w- 10 Burden l.Pocuia 21:Gov. says he thinks the Smkatchewan 1,: mwwu. g,3.c.,i" ..-My scheme "is pretty socialistlc. but um ea,-kuugg gmgu. it. works well there." However, he noun mm. (pin) .1-wk. doubted whether it would work as M sputd 11. can”. gm.” well in Ontario. 3,... point tabla.) Itsootao I-IIOlw'I III-It Another Toronto lawyer. An- 1l.Aocuniuloto ll.Cuahtu urea. drew Brewin. QC. said however 13. ngvgud 13.!-ARC like I.Knoek that the Ontario fund system is train 19. Stunted part ll-Plrt-of "most unsatisfactory.” He feels l1.qylvan deity 10.World NQ 88.lang the Cy! that Saskatchewan's insurance is 1I.Club tabbr.) walltn Ilwieked cheaper and protects the passen- obligations 22.Ps-onoun M.Molt I0-Blllot gen and drivers who are at fault, n.ArIthmet.le 23.Belong'in( hover Olwlth which Ontario does not do. problem topic All 5”” New York state has recently. M.DaybreAhs adopted compulsory, but not )d.I'lower state-owned. insurance. but one lloponlngs Toronto representative of an Am- 20.)llaalle erican insurance company ex- weapon pressed doubts of its success. It tlp.) falls down. he says, when a per- &.Qulek son lets his insurance run out. or 3l.l:xclann- cancels it. 1 tier: Under provisions of the On-' 3ll.Hrearm lario fund. insurance companies 31. Soul: who have paid their clients where 40.CoatlnSl the person at fault could not pay. ml I094! cannot claim money from the CI. Summon fund. 1011'! The Canadian Congress of La- C2-C1!-y (IL) bor proposed at I national higti- 03-Illdllll way conference in 1955 that com- M.Tlmld pulsory. state-owned insurance be 45-3'1"" adopted everywhere in Canada. , HIM! One objection was that this would take the licensing power out of DOWN the provinces hands and put it in 1-30W"-at the hands of the insurance com- 3-Tlmh" ponies. '3" M e a n tlm e. the Unsatisfied IAICCURN Judgment Fund is big business in 115R Ontario. In the 1955-56 fiscal year. 0-DP"! it paid out 1,791.83. against re- ceipts in that period of 2.004.634. As of last March 31, balance of 1 .54a.6l'l. m: CLEAR TANKER PORT SAID ttteutersi-The ll.- Iis-ton Norwegian tanker Vest- stopood from en- Canal Tuesday. through the waterway nednesday. The Vest- vard has been blacklisted by the an authorities for bavtal cells at uni. which was taring the Suez was allowed to plan llgyptl made more than three the lraeli port of Tel Aviv. Physician Feted By West Coast lndiano- Saved Lives latadbowDr.Dovteshadnved ttvosofslnyladtnohhiredla Ioulns accidents winds it had a DAILY one letter simply loch day the code WRNIOVNMl...Ol Val LIMVIWV IV YootnrIoy'oOrypbquoIe:N ACHIEVE OIIT OUR WAY CIYPIOQUOIB - lloco'o how to work It: AIYDLIAAXI to Loxarnnnow Itnndoforanothor. In for the three Us. X for the two 0's. etc. tnphoo. the length and formation of the iottorllndlifornt. ACUWINI O-H90! VXIZ A08 VXOV VXI VNIAV this sample A is used llngto letters, apoc- words an all hintl. NI- OINYOI XOA NA AIIU-ROIIVNDA. &-IATWAIIVC UIIINO WI'l'l-IOUT INTI-IUSIABK-IMIIIOII. GRANDMA MICKEY MOUSE -riu'fli7a"a”” oar AN a'xpi.Apu" an 1'” i HENRY TILLY THE TOILER MUGGS & SKEETER He's wonu our Foul: -JALODPIES IN THREE VEARS.' THE one He TOG5 Aszouio N NON SO WNGEY3 NNEl'EBsl. WHATS HIS DADGNING l-HM POE HIS BURT?-lDAY.' -i I. I E11'A KETI' wx1xD1Ti"' as IN wiueevs CASE, . N JOE PALOOKA MM & Tltill YKATIN W56 WMMII ! COIMOAN Ea AWN? Wit-LID TINILI 'MN OIIVKP. ll VIII he Iiotilall Oi Kanda l.IhO.inttIf foothills of snlfttatl nmvtain range- M510 - - THE LONE RANGER SECRET AGENT X-9