_ —_ FRIDAY PROGRAMS CFCY-TV — CHANNEL 13 ‘ 4:15 p.m—Afternoon Musicale 4:45 . p.m.—News, Weather ; & Music 5:00 p.m.—Discoveries ‘ 5:30 p.m.—Mighty Modte Playhouse 6:00 p.m.—Kiddies Theatre 6:50 p.m.—CFCY TV News \and _ _~ Weather 7:00 p.m.—Gazette 11:00 p.m—Cavaicade of Sports 11:45 p.m—Jim Coleman 12:00 a.m.—CBC TV News 12:14 a.m—local Weather 12:15 a.m—Viewpoint CKCW-TV — CHANNEL 2 9:45 a.m—Sign On 10:00 a.m.—Romper Room - 11:00 am —Sign Off 3:15 p.m.—friday Playbill J * News, Weather, Sports Movie - Bachelor & : the Bobby Soxer 5:00 p.m.—Discoveries 5:30 p.m.—Mighty Mouse ~6:00 p.m.—Supper Club 6:20 p.m.—News 6:30 p.m.—Supper Club 6:35 p.m.—Weather 6:40 p.m.—Supper Club \ 6:50 p.m.—Sports 7:30 p.m—Casey Jones 7:30 p.m—Sabre of London 8:00 p.m.—Gunsmoke 8:30 p.m—the Rifleman “9:00 p.m.—Suspicion 10:00 p.m.—Who Knows 10:30 p.m—Don Messer 11:00 p.m—Cavalcade of Sports 1:45 p.m—Jim Coleman 12:00 am—CBC News 12:15 am—CKCW News 42:20 a.m—Showcase - Foreign : Intrigue ~. CFCY FRIDAY STANDARD TIME =. 5.58 Sign on 6.00 Hebrew Christian Hous ~6.15 Country and Western 6.30 News ' _ 6.35 Weather ; ~6.40 Country and Western i Roundup 7.00 News — 7.10 Weather - “7.15 Country and Westers Roundup i 7.30 News and Weat 7.35 Musical Interlude 47.40 Farm Reporter~, -7.50 Musical Interlude 8.00 News 8.10 Weather 8.16 Country and Western Roundup 8.45 Weather 8.50 Weather 9.00 Morning D-votions ©9.10 Morning Moods 9.30 Top Tune Time 10.30 Melody Parade 10.45 Swift Money Man 00 News Headlines and Wea Weather .45 The Magi .0 Rhythm Raundup News and Weather P.E.I. 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Chronicle. 40:45—Morning Commentary -10:55—For Consumers “11:00—News. ; “11:03—For Piano. =: 15—Kindergarten of the Air 31-30—Court of Ovinion *32:00—Jamboree Junction. 42:30—Maritime Farm Broadcast - 1-00—News and Weather. *4:15—Jhe Archers. - 1:30—Chamber Music > 2:00—Holiday *2:15—Tommy Hunter Show. 2-45—Music in Black and White © 3:00—CBC News and T-C Mat- inee Orches- Seer of Music 8 . ‘ * RES8S 5 8 & 8 oi aes _ 4:00—Winnipeg String tra. . 4°30—Music from Montreal 5:00—News. 5:04—Maritime Fish Broadcast §-:30—Tempo '.§:00—News and Weather 6:15—Regional Commentary Maritime Sportscast aad . Musical Interlude. 6:320—Tempo. 7:00—News. 7:10—Commentary. 7:15—Music {three forms. He may pass, thus The Guardian, Charightctown, Fri, Sept. 25 1959 1) RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT - Aa. ‘ “¢ Pre ; - o Was a: Li a toe ~ 7 = 1 Dice” Sis i eeuuenenlieeeeeen oe ~- Cie ee : . a> i ie HALF A DOLLAR BILL WAS ATTACHED TO THE WiLL Pend aetna Sai aa we = ey THE OTHER HALE OF tie Bi WAS 70 RECEIVE A #12000 BEQUEST CONTRACT BRIDGE BY B. JAY BECKER QUIZ _-jthe responder passed instead at You are South, both sides vul- | this point, he might find it diffi- merable. Thé ‘bitiding has been: cult to enter the bidding later North East South West i and show his scattered values. 1@ Dbie ? | After the notrump bid! is made, What would you now bid with the rest is left to partner. each of the following five | 3. Pass. .No other bid is bet- ter, and silence is in order. Both @KIS3 YAQS $7 4.0962 the clubs and hearts are too 4296 @K82 $376 4.0973 | weak to name. The chances are $963 @K852 910 49754 | that the next player will respond | & OTS 0s gqnesis gass,|'0 the takeout doutic. BO + chance, ¢ next player passes, 5 GAT GIS O82 HAQNES lthus changing the informatory 1. Redouble. When pariner double, the opener still has a opens the bidding and the next chance to rescue himself if he is DAILY CROSSWORD affection AOROSS 21. Yes 1 Lively (Sp.) dance 4.Leg joint ‘22. Pre- €.Cattle farm 5. Affirmative scrip- 11. Black wood vote tion 12, Roman 6, King’s term magistrate adherents 23.Gun 13.Riverem- 1. Cain's (slang) (C/U IAIMIP) bankment father 26,Solar |f8! JNIRIE 14.0ld German 8. Egypt's deity tte SO NS coin river (poss.) (var. SSUEMLEDSI 15. Toward the 9. Clear 27. Railroad ‘Yesterday's Answes sheltered .. (obs. var.) bridge . side 10. Harrowlike 29. Goddess 33. Lese 16. Domestica battle of dawn 37. Earth tors formation 30, Sub- 38. Mineral 17. Gill (abbr.) 16. Three stitute = deposit 18. Assam (comb, (Ger.) 39. Chief silkworm form) 31, Overturn Assycian 19. Observe 18. Parts of again deity 20. Trying optical 32. By (var.) 24. Cattle (dial) § instruments oneself Hat 25. Orient 28. Camera ee i. ¢ 7 F opening 31. Butt oe ea. 34. Bombycid 35. Elizabeth LZ Regina r (abbr.) Za 36. Leaves off, - Y as a syllable [ 38. Young girl ° 40. Of tanes 41, Rica, inl YZ «2. Harden 43. Over 21 (4. Teasers 3 WS. — Galdos, WY Spanish £73 37 novelist Vj rs VZA4 DOWN ef Vy) 1-Mammal's aa. Y, a5 wool coat “ 2. Washington [44 7, a5 . Monument, a, Y, i * O&- . 9-24 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how te work it: : AXYDLBAAXR SB 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 wayds are all hints. each day the code letters are different. A Cryptogram Quotation FakTr BVHEWR LER M GLIFT VWwWuIF MFR BVHYK GLAKYLFA GVH—KTS- grABMN. Yesterday's Cryptoquote:; TIME HATH A TAMING HAND } — NEWMAN. (© 1959, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) . player doubles,’ the responder’ s | 2ftaid of one diamond doubled. action will usually t ai ¢ Three diamonds. This is oie cue purely preemptive and shows a showing a poor to moderate hand| hand that is valuable offensively with no other convenient but —weak—defensively The _ pur- make. Or he moy mention a suit,|P°S¢ of the preempt is to make provided he does not have more | it difficult for the opponents to than 9 high-card points (for ex-| ¢ together in their best suit.) ample, a heart bid would be ; proper with spade 65, heart,KQJ- the opponents may have a game 72, diamond 83, club, 9743). Or in one of the major suits. he may redouble to show 10 or| 5. Redouble. Again the prin- more high-card points. ciple already discussed is appl- \‘"The redouble does not promise | ied te ‘inform’ partner that res- support for the opener’s suit./ ponder has at least 10 high-card Basically, it announces that the | points. The showing of honor doubler is caught between two} strength takes preccdgnce over fires and that a penalty may | showing the club suit. possibly be exacted from the op-| A two club bid would be ac- ponents. Usually, the opener will | table if let the next bid come. back to|}were a. small spade, but since the redoubler for appropriate | the ace brings the high-card con- action. tent to 11 points, the redouble 2. One notrump. thing is to identify immediately & moderate hand (about 8 points) and the balanced distribution. If | the type of hand held. probably be plenty of time later By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Hitherto in the session, \disarma- Canadian Press Staff Writer (ment questions have been domin-| UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ‘CP)iated by the great and nuclear Italy and Ireland told the United powers. and particularly by So- Nations General Assembly Wed-| viet Premier Khrushchev's nesday a “supreme effort’ must) sweeping demand that the world | be made to reach an agreement disarmy itself completely on disarmament before mankind four years. . is destroyed. ‘ Foreign Minister Giuseppe, Both countries placed specific | Pella of Italy stresscd control in proposals before the assembly as his formula, saying disarmament the middle and smaller powers) Should be achieved by successive had their say in general debate. | Stages and appropriate interna- y g | tional control should be set up at each stage. Delayed Acton [iy aux rieins Disarmament should be pur- Rockets Planned sued simultaneously in the fields 2 tof conventional and nuclear weap- aie gee ag re ae nih and should also go hand-in- ae 7 iting ia .. purer hand with security arrangements, | s jopes |he added. chen yp Ie tg ll eae oe Foreign Minister Frank Aiken | ‘ é ‘Trela ai ri - tion rockets to help it achieve its oe - pated oh eee ages ad 5 g preliminary | goal, it was learned tagger s agreements, on which UN decis-: One of them, called a ‘kick’! ions might*be based, rests with sort = be designed - Biv, | the nuclear powers. But the “ulti- he stelle an extra, shove tale responlity “must rest 2 ~ > with the UN.” i to get enough velocity from its) Canjing for the creation ofa. original blastoff gocher — OF permanent UN police force, he | gets off course on'its way to the <iq eontrolied world disarma-| moon, ment could not be achieved in a The other, called a ‘retro’’|‘single spectacular bound” but | rocket, will be designed to slow| must be approached step by- step. | the satellite down when it gets] Canadian External Affairs Min- near the moon—and thus help| ister Howard Green, scheduled to put it into an orbit around the| make his first major UN speech moon. — late today, also is expected to Both rockets would be touched | touch on disarmament. off by remote control radio sign- Canada is a member of the new ‘als from the earth. If they are,|10-country disarmament commit- | it would be the first ‘use of such7 tee established by the UN, due to) a combined system in U.S. space begin deliberations at Geneva) history. ;.,. early next year, and also is a! Pioneer © Il, ETTA KETT 9 rHAve”’ Y nieBer”’ CONE | WHY DON'T YOU I MEAN YyouR HOMEWORK? ‘There is good reason to think | the ace of spades | ° EEE oe ae eS ee ee Ee ae ee ee oe a ee ee eS ee GRAN MICKEY MOUSE STEWART MacKAY IM DUMB: TMA FIRST-CLASS DUMMY 2 AS LOW . AS @ We Take ANY ~ 1960 PHILCO TV with Class A working trade 9. FIRESTONE HOME & AUTO CO. 17D. RUN YOUR SCHOOL View A! WORK LIKE A ALL MOPPED BUSINESS ? GET es UP! FINISHED ASYSTEM: y IT IN FRENCH| 1 PERIOD! a | =RIC 5 > | e hall il @ a, HY, The best | becomes mandatory. There will: to show the club suit and identify | Supreme Effort ls Demanded | |On Disarming To Save World within OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE I DID MY FRENCH DURING LUNCH 7 HouR“HOW Lt asour THAT? WHEN DO Sou EAT LUNCH 2? 7 WS), 77T 7 7 WMMM@EL LI Oe % AS YOU SING GENTLEMEN, 1A OFHE SIGHED I tHe BREEZE 4 OLD LADY GREETING HER S NE‘ER-DO-WELL SON~~ : HE THOUGHT WiLL ADD %y ONVICTION TO YOUR WORDS AND TIMBRE TOYOUR TONE! mua READY ERNEST 2 READY LADS ? A-ONE, A-TWO/ “MOTHER =a. ya ; Demand Is Good space probe now orbiting the sun, was equipped with a retro rocket the American, leading power in the UN emer-| gency force which has been serv- ing in the Middle East since the as a potential aid for going into|Sucz fighting of 1956. © a moon orbit — but the Pioneer| IRISH PLAN did not come close enough to the} Aiken \noted that Ireland has moon for such a trial. sponsored an Agenda item—yet The Explorer VI Paddlewheel |to be debated—on the ‘prevention satellite launched Aug. 7, is|of the wider dissmination of nu- equipped with a ‘kick” rocket |clear weapons.” . but the launching was so success-| “Briefly what we hope for is ful it wasn’t needed. an agreement between the nu- In the farthcoming moonshot—/ Clear powers not to give the weap- now reliably reported to be set)ons to non-nuclear powers, and for sometime during the period | an agreement between the non- Oct. 36 — further use will be Clear powers not to make or ac- made of the Paddlewheel techni- cept nuclear weapons,” he said. que for tapping solar energy to! Aiken suggested that as a first power the satellite's radio-trans-|step toward disarmament mem- mission batteries. ber countries co-operate in ob- taining the firm application of UN principles in certain restricted areas, particularly where the in- terests of the two great power groups are entangled and where there is the greatest danger of stumbling into war.” 11:00—News Roundup and Talk. | Nuclear powers and all other 8:25—Tempo 8:30—Repertoire. 9:00—Halifax Theatre. 9:30—Now I Ask You. 10:00—Songs of My People. 10:30—Just Imagine. 7:20—Rawhide and Music. $:00—Teen Tempo and Music. 12:00—Here’s The Weather and 11:30—Contert Hall. UN: members would bind them- PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP) |The trapping season has started |in Northern Saskatchewan and a heavy demand from European markets .for lynx and beaver makes the outlook good. Top lynx prices. are almost doubled at $47. And the Saskat- chewan fur markeiing service an area from attack by means of a “standing UN force.” Aiken said the German prob- lem could serye as a model for other areas in the progressive ap- plication of law. There could be no peaceful so- Iution there “unless a reunited Germany, together with Poland and other Eastern European coun- tries, agree to become an area of ‘law; free from foreign troops, free from weapons of blitzkricez and mass destruction, and su'>ject selves to defend the members of 4 _ . te UN inspection and guara On Trapped Furs Says the cats are plentiful in the ; wooded reaches of the tap half of | the province. Louis Mercredi of Found du Lac, an historic post east of Lake Athabasca, made $1,900 in the $2,000,000 season of 1957-58. Most of his income was made from the sale of 8 mink—cur- rently topping at $54. : FEWER MINK Last year, lower mink catches |resulted in a smaller total fig- HENRY THE LONE RANGER ure. “We expect to beat the 1956-59 | figure,, not because the species aré better but because there are more trappers,” says Harold Read of the fur marketing serv- ice. They trap mink, lynx, beaver, squirrel, ermine, muskrat, bad- .”’ | ger, wolf, rabbit and fox. <q | wl ‘5 SECRET AGENT X-9 JOE PALOOKA MUGGS & SKEETER = ~ ¥ > IW THE cinemal HinGes! IVE SEEN IT CONE “DEAR GRANDMA AND GRANDPA! > HAVING SWELL TIME AT AUNT JANES ....FIRST BOY UP MORNING SWIM GETS EXTRA AND INTO THE LAKE FOR THE j PS. I SLEEP IN MY BATHING suiT!”