. 1.2’ -195? -__ I \ \ Wnan BILL and his crew go into me woods now, they gettimber out twice as fast as they used to. Thaflnew tractor Bill bought really handles those ldgsl Back in town, the saw-mill is running full blast, taking all Bill’s crew can deliver . . a And this extra activity, this extra income spreading around through the community is largely due to the fact tliat Bill went to see his bank manager and arranged a-loam to bu)" tllc tractor e a s ‘In lumbering towns and, rural hamlets, in big seaports and tiny fishing villages, bank credit —— money at work —- helps to increase business activity whole communities. You! bank managefs job is to help men and women grasp opportunities and to put the bank’! facilities to work for you and your neighbours, l .1, in?‘ '" "I", you do merit more salary-speak to me about Wallis! w days-after if!!! A!!! l I see whether I sen replace you with e_ v-eeoormveesomert‘ 1% Rural Adventure l‘ l » " " "I'm sorry." 1-1 i 1| °°""‘"°- H“ eyes ‘seized’, tdolihl: a certain wonderment at his father. "Dad takes such pleasure in his zoo himeslf that he doesn't £3211‘: dih‘; “m” ‘Jan?’ People are e s t f animals." g n cued lie realizes it onl t 11 “W811i. and take! s00 $111,112: dellkhtlin teasing them Cflli- 1 Bo into town with YOU? she pleaded. "Of course not. in lt-—you're vacation." m; There's no paint here for a short voice was light but firm. “You write a note to Mam. selle explaining Ihlngg ‘m1 1-11 80 Sneak to Dad for a moment." He handed her a small notebook and a pencil and left, Lotus wrote a brief notq The sort of note which would inform Stu Lawrence she was safe and still on the job if he inquired of Chloe. In general it was so 1n. nocuous that even strange eyes would see nothing subtle in its meaning. The panic had been momen‘ ,. She still had things to do at Belle Fleur and of course must remain there. Besides there was no other course. She was a prisoner. She was certain o1 it now, Her arrival at Belle Fleur had been no surprise to either Stacy or his father. They had been fore- warned and were expecting her. The Corbins used that beacon light on the belvedere at night but it had been kept on during the early morning hours to guide her to the island. The dip and suck of a pole she had thought she had heard as she rested her pirogue on the hyacinth-covered lake had indeed been another dug- out following to make sure she reached the correct island. The shadows were deepening and, the gray beards of Spanish moss seemed to take on a purple tinge as she followed the shore line towards the cypress swamp at the other end of the island. She stood there thinking of what Stacy had said and peering into the thickets of the marsh undergrowth when the bow of a pirogue come nosing around the bole of cypress. The dugout held the sleek wet bodies of several recently trapped muskrats and was poled by a s-warthy ill-kempt individual with a cap pulled low over his eyes, The set of the straight should- ers was familiar. It was Stu Law- renccl “Thank God you've come!" said fervently. {'5 Fever thought you'd be that ga o soc me.’ "The fact that I've spent half the day paddling around these damn baycus might have some- thing to do with it, you know." How bitter and insulting he could be she thought, and how charming when the occasion de- manded. Since she had known him there secmcd to have been few such occasions. He studied ' hcr "Are you all right?" _ "Quite, I don't think they sus- pect me. but they wont let me go back to town." “_'1‘hat's because some of their goons are still working! iliiiéotgnd tths Cafe Duval and it mg e a if you recognized them. That little runt Paul is still doing business at the same old stand. Find out anything?" “Only that, the servants don't particularly like the Corbins. bill stay because Corbin pays better than other employers" She told him briefly since their last meeting. "The dope came in on the Gon- zales, all rlghb" he said when she was throuEh. "11’! lhkk l" U"? city-the jails are bulging with addicts." , "Why can't ycu force one o! them to tell you his source of supply?" . "Bec se they don't know them- selves. It's distributed by a variety of systems. They've evbn been us- ljng the mails. Someone mlngles with their crowd. [he word is passed along and the addicts mail money to a certain post office box and enclose their address. The equivalent amount la 00179 b“ mailed back to them. e num er 1, phgnged frequently. “why dqyft you station people at the Post Office?" "We have. and this week no one has come to collect the mail. 1m afraid they're wise to us." "Have you checked on the re- cipients of cargoes on the Gon- bales?" "A11 but Corbin. We're saving him for the piece do reslllfllwe- "I don't see how he could have gotten it-aii he received was ma: boa constrictor-s in a steel cage. “Have you seen the snakes?’ “one ~01 them, the other‘: dead." "Dead eh?" Bis mouth tight- ened. {‘What's he done with it?" "Says he's having it stuffed for his den." "See if you can get a look at he analytically t". _ He was looking beyflfld llfi- 5M turned and se/w that Lachene the across the lawn. "Guess I'll be leaving“ Lawrence said. "Try to be out. here at this same time each afternoon and I'll show up i! there's‘ any news." his smile seem sinister es he came sells. eh?" . Lawrence was pushing of: into the shadow. Lotus let him get further out in the water before she answered the gardener: "This men tells me he has some beauti- ful muskret skins st his home. He wants to sell ins ser..e to have a cost rnede." Lotus guessed he yes going te garden r. was coming toward them 1 lnchene‘: gold front tooth made F up to Lotus. "_What You do. Mlm- ‘ __ THE GlJARDIAN. CHARLO'I"I'E'I‘O‘\NN '___. , I Am ' w ' ' k T k _ encan Gro n Lily Bulbs Till GlIS 3 0 i e Thrlve In Garden son Long Chances . Lily bulbs for gardens are morq (By The Canadian l'l‘l.‘5il plentiful this n11 Ahanks to rapid- orrsws, Nov. o- Canadians "WHIIIPMIIII 0nd Palm ‘Sllfflolnle - Iruleee ly growing American production. who buy Irish sueepsiake tickets Bulbs grown i-n this country are may think they are taking a lung ' available earlier than those import- chancc, but the chance. . of ll - . ' ed from Europe. and many coa- tickets ever reatlliilg the gin: ' m Z sider them to have superior vigor. drums in Dllbllll. lci alone paying So fsr Japan. which formerly sup- ofl. are still longer. Walter J S ' plied most of our lily bulbs. has Tumbun, Deputy Pgflnigflgf-(jcn. shipped only uesllsible quantifies erai, said tonight. ' 1111198 a" "M difficult i0 Brow. Emphasizing that. his Dcpurt- ' For most varieties a medium gar- t - ~ 111 - 1 1,1 . V. _ v _ " 1 gm 105,31, such a; W111 gm“, good filleenwyggallcgdly ‘blgrillag? hfcanuhllc. an official _of thc niises not to use the mails for ll. potatoes, corn or root. vegetables, proximately 15,000 wammgb haw Board of Transport Commissioners legal purposes again. W111 answer we“ An abundance u; been 5cm to Canadians‘ more a!“ sfld he could not immediately say humus 1s o! unnomnce 1n 111v cul- on me way‘ and PM OHM 0mg: .1. lotteries by express were bsn- rnaica-raaa-obn raaosran m"- “d may be added l“ ‘he mm‘. ials will seek to stamp out lottcr- Md‘ - i of Well rotted manure (never use 1e: even i! some system o! cypress The Post Office's strictest pen- BIRMINGHAM, Eng]3nd_(CP) fresh manure) leaf-mould, peat is used 1° replace me “Eula; may ally. which it. uses reluctantly andl - Tlli'cc-y9;i1'-Old George cote, moss, compost. or sawdust from n service ' hzlni Imposed on only about 30 Can- who has been forbidden to race hard wood. Manure is best spaded _ _' . a 9115- 15 i0 deny the individual his one-horse power motorcycle 1n l seam“ 1,9101», 13131-111113 1111.“ cllmbenllllg 011 l TBPOPY; hub- concerned the use oi the mails. In - q ,1 11 A Good drainage is necessary to all 1"!"- °P M!!! Llls’. One of the "Sh"! m the Llmdmh 01"» F?" Sllfih l Case. the Department takes 1:021 a 5p” ‘"5’. ‘laud W?“ , Press that plans had been made ~ a - °“ pa“ “my “m” mm‘ lilies, even swaimp loving species Best. to fly batches or tick“ L, steps to see that the individual 11511155131115 father are found growing wild on dry mm- _ 1 s o some cioes not receive any mall. ' hmmocks’ and they lhflve under northern slope ‘is preferable, since liorthern Ontario poino and ship The wammgs hem: 59m out to. oigiclald JARGO‘ garden condmom Bulbs P811511 1." here the SOll lS cooler and drrcs l 9m by BXDFPES l0 VENOUS SQIFS- all persons found La be using the‘ i damp soil .Whare there is doubt 0W mo" Slfilvll‘; but 0n a south- m!" lhmPghmlt the COUNT)‘. the xiiails for lottery purposes containl Pia»; l‘ l‘ h ' ' about drainage, elevating the lily 9m 510W lho flowers will come deputy said he felt this. too. could a return slip which the receiver ' n1=1.1{1n,11,}ug 1S 1 is on” llllsed in bed to a fool’. above the surround- "Tller- be °vem°m° by m5'Dep3"lm‘3m' ‘M15!’- SIBH. through which he pro~ weygu»... “men s elpecm y m ing surface is advisable. ‘ " " Recent mvcstlgations make I. doubtful if any sharp line between I acid-loving and lime-loving varie~ ties of lilies can be drawn. Far no i n t a - -~ Zgiqhlazsahalhcilé h): szdnguiiral shlel. 1h: night ls filled with music ; ; . bring it into your own home The Si,“ o! the my bed should have; through the msglc oi DeForesl Radio.’ You will think the artiste free ckcmauon of 311-, mthqut be- themselves have been transported right into the room with you. lng exposed to the full sweep of high winds. Shade from the midday sun ls de- sirable for most lilies; but they should not be planted near enough to trees so that rthtey Llsuife: fret: the competition o he r001- BONANZA CAMP T0 BE GHOST _' manna. LAKE. out. Nov. 1i , '- ' . . i _ (OP) — A little gold mining _ - . camp in Oiltarlds northland. 1 ~- ' squeezcdbetween Ontario's Kirk- I ' land Lake and Quebecls Noranda. centres of mining wealth, is a v ghost town that refuses to die. Larder Lake, one of the oldest! mining settlements in Ontario. I Y ducked ghost town status by dis- carding the thing that. gave it I life-mold mining-as a major in- dustry and concentrating on com-I mercial projects. Today it ls a _ thriving community of 3.700 citi- zens-more than at any time in its past: history. Back in 1907 when pioneers d , Canada's nortliland searched for '1 silver in the forest region be-l _ _ , gefifitlilégi-‘IIZF tween the railbéll and the Que- 1n glowing tone . . . ‘Whig ,1,,,“~‘,‘;‘,, bee boundary, the mining camp] . . . ‘ , '°"°—. "w"! aw \ sprang up on 1m shores o; Lard. fhrilling clarity of tone . ._ . re-creating a rileuiihinsyf-"stiiil-lhtiii er Lake. It boomed for a while in your own homecvery delicate shading, medernesbinmiui; and several minins companies every sparkling clear note of the original Q‘,‘,';'.T.',‘,{.',“, "1113 pushed headframes toward the perfotmancm _ ,,19.1;~"¢,£,1,_ sky. . When the Canadian government * _ decided. to bring about parity- ' 1n tasteful beauty . . . $3.50 per ounce reduction in the _ Price 01 Bold-film mills-S were Sec their magnificent new beauty of {greed tolclose. lévlien wgir clams cabinet design, in keeping with the U . . . . . _ - - ,#~ P) e 9°?" a m" “mm” mm finest authentic tradition of the cabinet ‘ noun. 5411a ' .200 in 1940 to 1.100 in 1943. and makin an Hishfideliryreprodu the town looked more like a 5 ' ‘ lion of both imi- - shost than at any Lime in its filiirii‘: 3551111311’: hiSWIY- ' ' lmple rec d eson e By 1945. town council-it had . m performance ° ' ° Inco- m I lliiilili illiliiilicifiidTléiliii gaff il==igsllf=iou=lgflfiymmss- T!" was not faring so well‘ and went. ‘l “mt ac 15ml"! 0 ‘Fglueennfi back to the Shams o; a tomb grill and manu acturing CXPICIICDCG cornl; ship, me to give you mas! in ve vcty-srnoot Eight miles away the expanding tone, reserve power, range, sensitivity Kerr-Addison and Chestervillc ‘ and selectivity. "Nut nay,‘ mines were creating a major \ (_jl|.|lry_qf [Qpgqiua housing problem, Larder Lake * _ 1136:!“ gagmgzf ,1 jumped to rm the breach and ar- . in leadership features. . . rinctive film“. ma‘. ranged for construction of war- r __ l‘ 1°‘: 8 "m-‘gllvlm- time houses for 85 new families. \_ Built by mcn wh pioneered many new $2.121, ' m“ mm“ “is "m" °l lmllailvl‘ was ‘ electronic disc eries. these superb mmwed Wm‘ “mm” A“ iqulp‘ s. models incorporate all the letestdevel- ment. company began to grow and ‘h t 1 h fill orders for nuts, bolts. steam‘ Opmems a 1).“: ‘m ‘.5 - shovels and bulldozers for pur- leader‘ m the" fields‘ chasers as far distant; as North Bay and Val D'or. 7' It next built its own private fidd-flflk?! highway which completely ignbr- £11113," i311“... ed Kirkland Lake-long known as Dlllilfilgfibllilifl of vrsl- flll I . 0 I the big trading centre of the “m, do“, 1:11:11," north-and marked the town as lflyjoom. in an important market. centre of the "°"' future. 1 Chapging government gold poi- ‘ icy, unstable world conditions, the unprecedented antics of the stock market, and the disappointments of nature have all teamed to rob harder Lake of major industries but. it is forging ahead on small enterprises and her geographical good fortune in a country being recombed for traces of valuable minerals. -______.___. SKIN FLAP PROTECTION ' Alligators’ ears are found direct- ly beihind the animal's eyes slid are concealed and protected by flaps of skin. report the incident. to Curtis Uor- bin. nlobu 0.6 (To Be continued) —Muf_ in a radio of iii’ tinction and llprious ' z. l A messes instrument in a cabinet ofiruly regal beauty. Toaqesrirlngly slive- een selectivity-provide amt la listening thrills. f Ad: for GIBSON REFRIGERATOR! AND RANGES i R. '1‘. MORRISON LIMITIW) | _ CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I Hm" 302 I I22 Fitzroy l ' ‘ I . A. G. ROGERS _ L. H. KENNEDY , I RADIOS and HOME APPLIANCES CHARLOTTETOWN i I Water St. SUMMERSIDE Phone N2 ‘I34 Kent St. "M! W3 J (I'M . t, PAGE NINETILEN V: a 1:.»- ‘assays-s, —-_..,4< “I, ._