A GREAT SUCCESS Prices Will Rernain 11.; Same For This Week Only Extra Special Prices On Don't mils this money-saving chance- Every 25 cents spent here entitles you to a tic- ket on the Plymouth Sedan- GASII and GARRY STORES TAKE ., n/AIA Illa . . ... THE, BPORAGH 0F DAHLIAS often lost as a result of diseases developing in storage. super‘ ‘ conducted by the Division of deg Botany 0d the Dominion Experi- mental Farms Branch show that these losses can be reduced nmterl- ally by proper attention to the fift- ing and sorting of the root-s. As soon as the clahlia plants lhss oom- pleted ttl full nowth, it begins storing material in the root for further use. This will vary with the season, locality and the variety. When the plant is mature it should be cut down and the roots dug very carefully with l. spading fork. The loosened clump should never bepirlledupbythestalkandthe use of an ordinary spade is toxbe avoided because these pr ‘ may cause wounds which render the roots very susceptible to sot-act by mat-producing dislesel. The re- moved “ “ be ‘- ‘ up-side-down to let moisture drain out of the stems, and allowed to dry for 2 or 3 hours particularly if the soil is wet. Removing the soil adhering to the roots il not neces- sary. particularly if the clung; haa been thoroughly dried. ‘Hie mob pecking the roots. This moss, when thoroughly air-dried, took care of excessive drying. Well matured roots stood a. high storage tempera- ture than inunature ones. Mature rootsstoodlahigherstnrlge tempera- lnsfromdllto ‘ludembutsuffered oonsid “y from drying. ‘rhe vigour of plants grown from roots stored at low temeperatuiel, 35 to A5 dsg., was greater than those stored at 00 ho ‘l0 deg. There was leslsoftauddl. rotin the well matured roots whether stored it gh or low tenvperatures. Regard- ess of what the storoge conditions are, the roots should he examined from time to time through .- wiater. 11f conditions are too dry “ should be added to the Ifthercissvldenceofrotthe should be moved to a dryer. place. Fancy varieties are, as s. geuearl rule, more susceptiblete rot tinder artificial storage conditions “E i moss. loot‘, for which relson they require more * attention. (Licentiate Teacher Theory. Studio: Heart: Mr A. lluy Kendall, Academy of Music, London, Eng.) . Receives pupils for tuition in Piano, Singing and 1 g Advanced and Elementary courses . given. Group Teaching for beginners. lcltdl l total of about 10.000. Terms Moderate Phones 900 or 1024-L L.R.A.M., 4.4.6.0. of Planofortc, Royal i 1 Memorial Hall L-SIS-IO-Iiwf-tf Advertising Rails-Payable In Advance Central Guardlfl locals, do. p: wardr Welter par word: Announcements and (Jo-lug Ivlnta 2o. per word: ln llemorlalu Notlcea, 10c. per In name: lntlala o! Condolence, 10o. otlcel oi Thauka and Appraulallal. ‘Ne. p- [nah o: de. pel- Spiritual Der luelll word. Other rates cu appllmdou. erlngl, Cards, elm, 4e. llallau-Chargelol-anwadvclatafltwalfl-Clvloflla. lATlh-Zc per word, three Inlet- lions for the price of two, llriclly Uayabll in advance. incl Wanted GENTS! CANADA’! (EMIRA- ted "Royal" Series Personal Christmas Greeting Gerda. Dollar l. doom and up. wlludld profit. , or mnecessary. Flve dollar sample hook free to workers. Bradley - Brantford, Ontario. N-l459-l0-ld-12i. Miscellaneous PUB! BRIO YOBKIIIIII DOA! for service. Robert Macleen, North River. Ir-ISBO-IO-M-Si. FOI. SERVICE — YORKSHIRE Boar (Registered). David Orapeud. IrlSfl-IO-IO-Sl. IF IT'S OYSTERS YOU WAN? then get them at Alex LeClaiFs. 112 Richmond Street. All North Bide oysters-free from contam- ination. From Ray Clarke's cul- tivated beds at Oovehead Bay. Phone 1331. 11-1332-10-19-81 OPPORTUNITIES IN Old Eastern lode, lo. psr word; olaaalflel u. inch: um of IAIIIA null To Let l‘) LIT-FURNISHED IOU!!- Pbtlifl-L — on M board. Aoslv at Guardian. h-izsl-io-n-m. ‘rwo uoosll ‘r0 nan. APPLY Pearl mum-m Powual sum. r-im-io-n-at ‘I0 w!‘ — nous: A1.‘ as urrau Pflllfl- APDIy at I8 Upper Prince B91802. L-lflS-IO-IT-Si. ro III.‘ - LIIDDII H400! W‘ . U Ital!!! Street. Poslellon December let. Apply Mrs. Gillie, 115 Fitzroy Street. Is-lSTI-lO-fl-Si. Lost Infill-WILD G008! I'll IAGT River, vicinity of Olsnfinnan. Finder apply Oliver Harper at Bill! and Berrigln. Reward. Is-ISM-IO-lll-Sl l Boarders Wanted BOAR-DEBS WANTED-fl ORLE- bsr Bt. Wi th Sarajevo Says Simon a whole," said Sir John, “to faoilltate the difficult task of the Jflloslav gov," r .. . Sea Creature ls Fgp t a r e d (A. P. by Guardian's Special W!!!) museum crrv. N. c.. 01* m-A huge sea creature 10 feet- long and weighinu 110m 1.500 W 3-" 000 pounds was held captive in a hastily-constructed pool near here today, while the inhabitants of the region awaited the arrival of a representative oi the state museum coming here to identify it. A party of fishermen caught the creature in a seine, and hauled it ashore with ropes attachedtcauto- mobiles. n, i; three feet across the back. 1a inches thick. and h“ I 1w“ shaped tail. The skin is dark WWW" and apparently V"? mm- with some traces of hair on it. The face is long, resembling that of B 110N9- llt has no teeth. ‘ Year Produced Record Search For Rock Gold (By It. K. Carlwslei (Canadian Press Staff Writer) UITAWA, Oct. 21--A season that brought what is believed to hIVO been the greatest hunt 1'01- zvld in Camila’! history is drawin! to I close. No figures are available to show the exact number of prospec- tors and assistants who struggled through often inhospitable country. but a careful approximation indi- Increased prices for the yellow metal spurred prospectors’ activity- An added factor was elltenslve 1189 of the aeroplane which provided ac- cess to new districts and revealed existence of still more. AlertlYpho- tography, it is said, hls revolution- ised the metal-mining industry. Pictures taken from speeding aeroplanes tell experts much. The perceptible a On Air Derby (Ar. ‘u. Guardian's Special. Who) immmmam». m Oct y Mollison put the query in the course oi a cor- joined. Bis Majesty was asked how he would like to 80 and enJOy the warm weather they expected to en- counter soon after leavingdllngland. The King smiled, then shook his head. "1 am afraid I am getting a little beyond l. flight o1 that kind," he answered. Queen Mary evidently had no doubt that the Mcllisons would reach their destination, whether they won or not. She aslned Mrs. Mollison to take a message for her to the Duke of Gloucester, third son of the King, now in Melbourne for the centenary celebrations there. NEW YllRK EXCHANGE (By Frederick Gardner) (Alllwllted Press Financial Writer) (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire NEW YORK, 0d. 21—The stock market drifted thIOUEh another sel- sion of extremely narrow fluctua- tions Baturday, closing the week at about the same level from which it started on Monday. Week end lassitude pervaded most markets. A further spurt of nearly. three cents in the pound sterling and l. decline in grains attracted most interest in the absence of worthwhile movements in security prices. United states governmem bonds firmed. Otherwise markets gave no se to President Roosevelt's Roanoke Va. speech, al- though his references to mainten- lnn uru-amsul/lr-l topographical survey partment of the Interior p. _40.000 aerial photographs during the summer. Horn these. most them taken in Northern Manitoba. Attiabaska. Great Bear and Great slave regions and 1n the Nahanni district near the Yukon boundary. maps are being developed. 0f the De- ance of government credit general- ; ly made l. favorable impression in focussed its attention on his sched- uled address before bankers at Washington next-Wednesday. 0f a week. the share market held little 228.740 shares Oompered with 412,- financial quarters. wall street had Locked in a rut for more than, a lure for traders. Volume shrank to Planes of the Royal Canadian Air llhroe carrying aerial surveyors made flights over the famous Inns Lac district in Northwestern On- tario. some flights were made in other provinces. Much of the ser- ial photography this year was de- signed to help seekers of gold. Luck, p and geolosilll say, is still the most important fec- ter in the hunt for gold and less valuable metals. Once l. tree was blown down. its roots tore up the surrounding soil and boned what developed to be one of the richest veins ever discovered in Canada; Ialt a u- , 7r on the shore of a lake because A high wind endangered his canoe. while he waited for the storm to abate he discovered what la re- garded ll one of the most knport- dsnts are said to make prospectors superstitious. Aer-m photography has removed some of the chance from prospect- ing. 1t tells the field man what gush “~mgoldhndthetef- ritory where the soil. or what min- ers call "'0verbu;rd€n", is too deep for them to find workable veins ev- en if they did exist. They help him concentrate his effort where it is most likely to succeed. Pictures show granite formations in which metals sre seldom found and on the other hand lMlcate geological "faults" and great fract- 200 last Saturday. Statistics Co. average for 90 select? ed stocks was only one-tenth of a point higher at 71.8. A week ago it stood at 72.2, having moved in the meanwhile within s. range e1 about one point. ' served to increase caution traders. Wheat fell l l-4 to 1 1-2 cents a bushel. The May pbsltion in Chicago was down to around 97 1-2 cents. Other cereals joined the retreat, rye losing as much as I l-d cents. Cotton was unchanged to 10 cents a bale lower. with the termination of the gold Wall Street observers were uncer- tain whether there was any con- necticn. The 1d l stif- snt 1M1 or the vw- Ilwh M- 1am alum ti; dollilrrelflfleisdrift- ingllowcr earlier in the week. tion which left most of the im- portant issues virtually unchanged at the finish. U. S. Steel. Chrysler, General and other important shares fluctu- ated within a range of half a point or less. On the whole. the trade news was not convincing enough to move potential buyers of shares into action. The Standard Liquidation in the [fl-in markstf rig. Strength in the pound coincided bloc conference at Brussels, but Stocks went through routine mo- . Mvfltsmnery Ward AMBIGUOUB INSTRUCTIONS Mrs. Jones who was anxious about her elderly neighbor. whose l u‘ ole-Lila E n1 e n t e ' u-i-l-n u. 'r. by ell-law. lplehl who) tlon ln Austria or Hungary and to stick up for what they be- lieved their rights. (or. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL. Oct. 2i -- With equipment issues in the vanguard. llstlnsl on the Monti-cal Stock 11x- ohsnge moved into higher territory during Saturday's short session. While the market advanced in ir- regular fashion, sales volume was of moderate lllbporttons with ap- proximately 6,200 shares changing hands in the two hours or trading. Jamaica public service preferred on- the first board lot sale since last January jumped ten points to a new high for the year at 110. Banks were strong with Nova 5co- tla rising two points at 368 and rMcmtresl l 1-2 points at 203. »Natlonal steel Car was the lead- er of the equipment stocks with l gain of a full point at l6 1-4. How- ard Smith preferred established a new high {or the yea-l-‘with a gain of 3-4 at '14 3-4 and St. Lawrence Paper pmfcrred rose ‘l-U at 12 ‘1-8. mernstionsl Nickel lest 8-8 at 28 3-4 with Canadian Pacific Railway easing at 12 l-B. HAPPY THOUGH!‘ An American girl. visiting Eng- land, was recommended by a friend to see Lincoln Cathedral. "Oh, indeed," said the girl, “Is there l. Lincoln Cathedral in mg- turd?" “There is and a superb building. too," was the reply. "Say. now", she exclaimed. "wasn't it just too sweet of them to name it after our Abe?" ARRESTED IN BIVGLT Spelling the collapse of Catal- onia’: revolution for independence, President Luis Companyl, above, and other leaders of the Catal- onlau lecelllou, were ‘ ‘ by the Spanish government trdopl at Bamellna, and faced court- martial. llERVlill$. HEAIJABTE Mn Ada Lacey of l-lllh Si. Sr. John. N. 3., lays: "When passing thru mddle life my nerves ( olhll) . ‘~ .- mm, m,“ w,” new wont. Oetrbl-Ilo’! rig: a ‘wanszrlgnud. ilguffékfi WWW" '1 ‘"- 30- l Alexander =' '34“ Peace treaties altar the‘ Giant cilia: gumoxserxvuwnish, wucllsrmhalklllunl- lgnrmthllplrr thatledtoworld arwu/nz hrvwlflwllwv-WIIW war, declared Sir John Bunch, for-l burg Ilmflre of A 11'?- msc‘ ~v--~e*=~~“" BARBABS t::'~....... m... us. even . ‘ sclared inllu . . walled in line. Romania m- ,.§§',‘f,‘,’,“,'.‘,,.,,,_..,.,.,‘.‘,‘.°.,,,....,'fi.‘;g’§ EX r/eA FA/vzr i...“ area and population uledtcdiacmmtlnyremotepou- audOllohollovaklacametllh ibllity of such a quarrel as followed their belnl- . . Serajevo. m- thisbountry, British The Manila: her that they gglioy while against incurring my Tish! lm their My mulli- w commitments-la on aha mtingt. __.._.__ gal: 63': elllokly. so had been direc an w - . - milllllhll . uuueisblduecteltocouuleuml ' < Olwhwlvnlllvtlmthello u - ion. KmgGeor eKeen u» w» w» w» um “"13? sumo?» interests of Ilurops u g is l!" w! BMW‘! Milw- MUNTREAL sxcliual were bld, headaches were , "AD'°"A“A“°N L'm"‘°“°"" um where orvflltlble mlflffallmw“ health had been fsllin; for some 1’..'°'r'“3‘u‘ fifiili-“ZEZ 1 a‘ u" u M m . f ll k d ' v ' NII OOUIIII AVAILAILI. For $5]; u mo" .1 .11.... over the plc- a’: ' ,§“,,1:§' “m” ‘°“ ‘° "mm uiu."i‘c..l“nr.'rium-l in”, 0mm lm, 1m, at the hour Mans ndvlnhlel w lhldvlnl with tuna show the nueyl and hilla in Mm,” (wjumypqummy g0 m, m. i swmfwfi-Fmw” m‘ of r r. M. lhl following stock: In Awwved 0111MB“ 515W"- u sans canny ago-r 51mg relief. After discovery of l vein a my m, M‘, o“ Mm 3mm, 1, ‘m, wna Dr. Piano's Clinic, Buffalo, N. u, ' l Illa-fora Heifer, s years old; l ng m urers - . _ ' w‘ i‘. er n: Ayrl mo‘ gglllgrajvf Wmxacl: m- 14¢ Euston st. L-l37d-l0-20-3i study of u» Pictures helps u. de- mornlni. .'°iu'.'.‘°.ii'L-.“.'.°§L;"rl>'°§% liAzflrldflou u.‘ gzflmji“ ‘“1""',‘,,}. M," , and Wvemmeflt 0mm"- 0" rros roa sans. nanny raur. tourr of thsueollntiyhollid “Elm rahlglnmy 12$‘ mlmahslll“ Teeth flu ‘m; of lE-d’ __' l“ ,,_, -._'vnr: 1 £81“ In M!" "Preventative in in W" dim“ Brcokileld. n-im-ro-ao-u the belt route m» s med and melt ma. Brown ut». n u no business °°'-Ii"fl1FYW“°°'"°° . - ' “ foralnill. odymmhowoldsheis. P ‘ '0 d B“ °'11°==4""=l' i’ m" caaoaoano sun-Anal so: m the m» of the topographical r“ °‘"°na at ' mmr n7‘ L'“n'm'n'a" "M!!! eutholflll. M» 1P N! survey 000.000 negatives are kept I . h y tum. Guardian our». u. :11 I. summit: gig; giants: d M , ficLfiD £1 BENTLEY Female, Help Wanted ms coon non sans. lible shortage. Rai|r°a an 5 ._ 1"" ‘mm’? l nrll. emu» on. uousl- " ' uislilmquu v GOIIC "i" ‘MW "' “W e Elaine's Sardine ' Guardian. L-ISM-ld-Io-ll. may“; .. Aucnop 70],“. "yn" "h- - — , mull and who: Scorn H wanna» or scvmaln m, ax- ca.“ ma“, m“; m, I n J I18 try o!!! '°"""“""“' A - ma“ o”; ‘M, (mm. “m”; ' m“ H‘ w’ ' ammo a Attorney in 14w Ir-III-lhfl-M-M-fl-SO-Il. , m.“ m. busy-unfit.“ of n8 R e d ‘ ' m.‘ 09°". 3".“ - reason can: ._ cgzlmnilo . . add lend. a qulu- -—-- ~ . Wanted way-ls annals. Apply m» (n. s; eurluu-r lpeehl Who) PIII’ if Eylghflfl . r -t-=-====="-- aslsal, enamel. r. l. r. Accrued-A. m. on. rs-Jrsuucl a r HAITI!) a A QUARRY: ‘t: b-lfil-lo-fl-si. w indusgr w“: "out is!!! “who zsllhamuh: .- u flQ. m‘, “d” I YQITI l".m.n '¢ nu. uumroalau-olclloaculv- mus r. Waahburu. will-h- ... messsm~m'mm~-vmm -~-------- - " mayo m- a: wl an TrlIfl-lfl-N-Sl. ‘the 1m pack. . 1 mflbum fiud"mlut..a“mf m“ i‘ . ‘I'll’! Nllbvnasmluiuiullll aw_ TAHYLQR_ J. S. TAYLQR .41....“ " ‘ Tool: Profits A Probe Bore} m w‘. percent on their ‘Halter branded the operatic: tive of Fugwash, . 8., acquir- ed in a Mist to control from the Ficagolau. . Four 1 Wounded In Accidents Near‘ Halifax (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) HALIFAX. Oct. es care- lessly handled have dsd four people in the vicinity of Halifax this week. Latest victim is Albert Cornell of wkingham who was badly injured in the foot today whenaglmin his hand pre- msttirely discharged while he was himting seven miles from his home. His three companions cer- ried him out of the woods. Others injured by rifles this week include Aubrey Pulsifer and Ed- ward Needham. now convalescing in hospital, and John Lancaster, discharged from hospital today. Capetown I Likes All-In Matwork CAPE ‘IOWN, Oct. 20-402.)- This Bouth African city ll beginning to take its ‘wrestling seriously. 1t has "gone all-out for all-in wrest- ling." ls The Argus says. The paper in its general news pages thus des- cribes "this grim sport": ‘Two modern men, stripped o1 the veneer of civilisation, sweating and ling libs cave men beneath , women _ing hy- sterically at the referee. Police who leap over the ropes to protect the referee from the attafi of the beat- en wrestler. And, for an hour, the scans dominlteti b! an unknown wrestler, a sinister figure in black tights and black hood like a medi- eval executioner." Cutter 17.1.71. To Locate Bally n f Sear ’ 1n (c. r. By dun-llam- Special wmi DIDBY, N5, 0d. flit-Royal Oa- nsdian Mounted Police cutter Bay- hcund spent a fruitless day today searching for the bow of Austin olmul 46-year-old Weltmrt m- mln. drowned nlsbt in the tur- whlch separates Lond and Brier Is- lands.‘ Washed overboard last night AUCTION SALE AT ELLIOTT! WEDNESDAY GUIDE‘? Hui. IIM A dmr. lledllcnoe with large lot and bannwprqrerty of the late B. D. Hawaii. Convenient to Railway, Church and School. Alao some Household Furniture, Living Boom, Rug and Knitting Mae hine. Terror-Calla L-lSOS-lO-fl-Sl. FOR SALE I an: luliructed by Charles Moore, to sell by public auction on the At what la thrglrl point- ing? . Why? . . . What of ltTA good picture. but un- interesting because It tells no story and fall o explain tells I LISTEN-in on any snapshoollng beginner as he soes over a fresh batch of prints: - ' ‘Boy, lookut that! Got that etrinl of trout swell. But say-Bill's head ll out. of the pictureFNow bow did I manage to do a craly thing like than? The answer is very simple. The lad taking the picture failed tquse the view-finder when he made the shot. He probably law that. the string of deb was in view. but. he quite overlooked the fact that the irroudly grinning Bill was neatly decapitated. Molt modern cameras have two kinds of view-finders. First. of course. ll the familiar reflecting finder-the kind Into which you peer from above. Properly shaded, it will give you en accurate idea of what each shot Includes. Then there is the "direct" view-finder. mounted on the top" or llde of the camera. la sling It you hold the camera at s e- level and light through two rec- tangul " openings. What you see. the camera will get. With either or both of these find- arl there ll really little reason for failing to get what you want la l picture. 0! course, there are limits, defined by the else and shape of the film and the capacity of the lens. You have to select the molt inter- elllag bltl of a scene and concen- trate on them. when an srtiltdoel this, bl "oom- " hie picture. Many volumes have been written on the subject of composition. but the whole idea may T‘ ‘ story. Its ltlllf. Tnsrs ll o question. NIIWWIF. I!" h, hunter. ~ u! the snapshot of t r ... l. . L‘ . he boiled down to this A sood co position is ‘simply a pleasing a ran, ‘ of the elements of u. plo- ture, an arrangement that puts the , emphasis on the most Interesting feature. A little cars musing your viswl tinder will, almost invariably, givg you n. well-composed picture For your eye will reject an arrangemenr that. ls confusing or dllplslsing, m vvlllwarn you tllltjlllllfiblldfl head ll going to be lapped off. it will veal whether or not the finished pi ture will tell a story-the story you had in mind when you unlimbered, the camera. For "telling a story" ll the essence‘ cf a good picture. The Chinese havl' l. proverb. "One picture is worth zen thousand words." But the proverb applies only to good pictures Many a professional photographer spends hours studying the "View! finder" of his camera before he makes s single Ill0l His success in business depends on his presenting vivid story-telling plcturei, in guy sncnuhootlbl we have no such weighty considerations. We have 0N7 ourselves and s few friends tel please. Bu! we can increase tha pleasure vastly by pausing, inst be- forb we click the shutter. to chock‘ up our picture in the view-finder. lf it's what we want-firs away! And] when the finished pictures come‘ back. we shall certainly not be], grudge those few seconds of cou- centraiicn on the view-finder JOKN van ourhoan i while attempting to free the wheel lessly because c! the propeller rope which bed become entangled trouble. in the pmpeuou or his craft. Ger- ron was soon lllt in a h“?! "$- ccmpsniou. Edward ‘Ihomllv ‘ll, was unabe to assist‘ ‘ e A friend of them. Stephen More- bouae, heard Gan-en's enlel from show and inmsdiately rounded up be- somemen andwenttotharescue. but arrived on the scene too late. tomed trucks. App FURTY TRUCKS _ WANTED For hauling gravel from the Springton pit to Milton Siding either dump or _ ly at Sprmgton P1t. L-l040-l0-9-2i s1. us BUS LINE Commencing Monday, October 22nd,“ Blue Bus xvii. operate three days a week: Saturday, running on the some schedule. Monday, Wednesday and - Rtn. Sgle- From PETERS via route to STURGEON $1.75 $1.00 LOWER & UPPER MONTAGUE 1.50 .00 ' NEW PERTH 1.200 5" SOMERVILLE 1.10 .60 ALBERRY PLAINS 1.00 .55 VERNON RIVER .90 .50 MILLVIEW .75 All CHERRY VALLEY .60 ~35 POWNAL .50 ~35 This offer remains In effect for one month. 1cm? BUS SERVICE DAILY axcarr SUNDAY prrrrrrrr IlPBBB!l! flat-bot- .