ARY 1. 153a YESTERDAY? llllilll MARKET r0 c 0 10 Mt ’l. S to ck Exchange ' S llod b Pllfl ill llld COMIC"! ‘Iounlmorl ofhlontrtlol ltock cxclmulo - _ nd stock market) Itockl o Open Lost Boll Tel ... "AI-ill? 11514 -—--- Brazilian .. .. . .. il ‘g 97,; ' ~ ' B C Power A . Z9 2“. Dom Steel t.‘ 4’. Corrected For Ever (‘an Cement '1 Can Ind Al .. 10% (Jun Pac lty . 111,’, Wednesday & Sat- "1- s - o» Dom Bridge 83% A ’ ‘ lmcp Th’; lEl 4411/ n r ' urdays Issue. ‘ Mont Pow 32 _. Nat Bre in cause‘ an Power Corp 12 n1"! '-- --' 35° Hhnwiulgnn .. 201,; flny, louno cwt . . . . . . . . . . . . .. (lilo go pm, P‘. 13% ‘lfl\“'- imaged '~'“"' - - Steel of Can 59% ‘urnlps bus . . . . .. g _ ufatocs bus . . nnrnn. MAIIIKET “Mk8 , iy bunch . . . . . . . . . . . . .. , Onnnl 1h . _ _ n l'>(‘.l bl. . . k of lvlnntrcni (‘i-luy ln-nrls . 1M (‘riliilorrlfrs qt \1|nl . .. (farrcfl lb . Pnlnioel ilk . Squash lh .. . Applrs (In: .. .. Apples Pk 'l‘urnip: t! for . Splunch lh Parsley bunch lirnnrnll .. (‘lulnlmlzs lloull . Vcnllb llonst llccf Stcnk lb Stew luenlsi lluoku (‘llicken . Lnmll lb . flulior "rinm ... _ Eggs (ins ... ... . FIRII (‘zirnoil lilnclicrnl oncil‘ New g/York Curb (Canadian hog) . "TI: Cllllll . .. . (Iuppilul lay Plfflclil 0m nny Mamba-r: of Monirrul nfork rxclsnnge and Curb Market) Stock: Open Lat BAOil . . . . .. ... .... 2\ 21 Dom Sim-ca . . . . .. .. ill 10% Imp ml 2i :1 Inter Pet . . . : 34% Melchers - 11% 11 All: GUMMED-UP . TORONTO, Jan. Il-The story 0f I011!!! Peter Hepburnfis en- counter with a, package of chew- ing gum reached here today from Miami where Premier Hepburn and his wife and son spent a holi- day. The Premier-had a rush the two-and-a-half-year. old boy to a hospital tohave gum. removed from eyes. ears and hair. - The Hepburns and Mary 017°“. nor, daughter of Senator Frank P. OConnor of Toronto, took little Peter to a. movie, attempting go buy his silence and good behavior with speckled of sum. He put it all in his mouth at once. according to word received here, and transfer- red half to his ear when he found it too big a mouthful. He drew his hand from his ear across his eyes and got his eyelids fimlly struck. That led to further complications. Premier Hepburn hurried him down the aisle to the door and rushed him to hospital in a taxi. Quite Circular. "I wouldn't insult you by saying that you were largcflcooed a wo- man to a portly friend. “I'd simply say that whether you are coming W100i! C1959 Amer Qyan B ... .. .. 35 1-2 '- Amer Gas Elec 39 I-8 mer Sup Pow ,. ,, 3 41cc Gas Elec A .. - Atlas Corp 13 3-8 Can Marconi . __ lties Serv . 3 1-2 Creole Petrol . 21 1-3 iecBSh; . 17 ordofCan/l‘... .. 251-4 ulf Oil Pcn , 6D 1-4 mp Oil - . . . . . . 29 7-8 IntPete... 34 iasfliud .. .. or-a 8M1 ii Ken V. .. 21 3-4 Unnlght Pow A .. 4 3-8 Un Light Pow Pld 35 1-8 or going, sideways ‘ or revolving, you lock all thc some." rlorrl Other rah: on application r.--—.¢--.'w. For Sale 0R SALE — SET 0F BOB sleighs with box. Apply P. J. Sent- net's Forge. L-146-1-8-3i. cnsron raps-Crabs or mo sheets 5 x 759. Price 3 cents per pad. Postage extra. Guardian Office. 0n SALE 0R RENT-HOUSE at Borden. Apply Mrs. H. M. Downing, Summer '-' . L-70 ‘UN SALE - AUCTION FORT‘!- Five, Bridge and Whist Score Cards. Guardian Central Job EPLEEY- . ‘OR SALE-NEWLY IYESHENED cow, Jersey grade. Apply Frank Mitchell, North Wilishire. L-l44-l-8-8i. ADDlY rlottetown Roy- L 212 ' . 5|’. z cd cow, Guer sey Grade. lifnry Hurry, ‘Cha s ‘On. SALE — YORKSHIRE BOAR 6 months out of advanced regis- u wuuim ‘ _ l l Advertising ilatcs-Pavahlciln ‘lldvancs \ c-mm mama: local: u n a w 1' g n. 409.] on‘ IUIJ‘ Alnouucomllsh ‘lull cal-Q Ivtnfinlzn prr 22121111: '11:‘ . per arm-ll ll Irma rlun Notices. 70o Unis-null Offerings. Caron, no . do pqy trump; 141g"- nn lnelu Lin: cl’ Iloralkug of Condolence d04- MP lllflll: Notion 0| Tluukl and Appvu-lnton. 70c you Inch or lo. yo: "W"!!! (llllfll for my ndvcnlnenont canny-flu cello; ' "- x Position ‘Wanted wlbow WITH GIRL or Efififr years wants position as house- keeper in small family. Write W. Guardian. - L-140-l-9-3i. BOABDERS ACCOMMODATED, Parker House, Kent Street, Rea- ___s_ona._ble rstes._ __ _ L-1-i8-_1-9-1i. BOARDERB 0R ROOMERS‘ AC- -' ted and rooms to let_ Ap- __ply_ 4 Hillel-est Ayep_u&_ L-l38 aoolus T0 mar-m cums s-r. L-llil T0 LET — STORE AND DWELL- ing, 144 Elm Avenue, D. Living- stone, 177 Kent Street. L-l78-1-11-3l. T0 LET-HOUSE 0N ELM AVE. May be used as dwelling, or store and dwelling combined. For fur- - ther particulars apply to Eastern Trust Company. L-2l8-1-1i-3i. tcrcd sow. Apply A. " , Punstaffnage. L_-_I40-_-i_-_9;li. 0R SALE - 82 ACRES 0F LAND all under cultivation, situated at Brackley Beach. Apply Stanley Douccite. , D-IOiI-l-ll-tts-Ol. v . ' 0R SALE — FIVE SHARES IN the Imperial For Co, Montague. No reasonable odor refused. Ap- ply Box flfilbsummcrsids, P. E. I. - * legc. Halifax. Male Help Wanted APPRENflCE WANTID T0 learn Barber Trade. Short Course expert training. Molar Barbe; 05:1- A LESSON FROM THE _ precsion-Be a Civil Serv ' Postman, Customs Examiner. Clerk. Stenographer, etc. likes Booklet "How to get a Govern- ment Jo ." M. C. C. Civil Service School. Toronto <10.) M. W RELIABLE MAN ‘r0 TAKE store route. Distribute and c , L-ifl-i-D-li-Ii. ll- SALE -- I PIB-CHZBDN. mares rising 2 years, ons newly g freshened cow. Also d H. P. Inter- national ‘ . Will take cattle in excha for engine. Herbert Weeks, éricton. Irgn-i-il-ai. [lost r weekly N‘. sr-alrrwaln warn arm Kent struts last evening a snail lmroel clmtcining clothing. Finder lllcasgc; 1c at Guardian. L-ifll 511's vrcrruru or vIlNoN Rlvq. female fox hound, blue flog-brown head. nnswcrinc Io rump Quscn. Notify Jlrnos m- msn. Charlottetown ROYIltLL-m Personal mm WANT!» mustang?’ Routes in N. K. S. Prince iiu and Charlottetown. Wr - - day. Rawlci|h_ C0,, I - ML-MO-BB-A, Montreal, v - N40 .-.-_. 1m Miscellanea swam-m»:- "W- 'do:t.I70 mne- emu. ~ . n-al 11 . nsr==i== '- - "yr" nsoavrrorau ombu- lnollnThoIunLifmN f~ - I fill!" a (10.) lfilflfi Pcr-lct-tf. mm. We you- "B1040!"- “ Rind a New Rates. Yourcvcry W anti- cipotcstwc collcct ~ l-i 860 J. AJlocrqOorricl Boarclers~wanted . 1‘ t nsynrroaucts. No Sellini- 9" too. st. r ul m1 . > N“ ' 5 ' nnQ-l-dlfir ~ “is. uni i» ~» ,- ‘olQ-rwu -- wa... 1....» . » y.» .- ' _.~¢<.»..-,-.i..-... - -. iTl-IE l ARLUFFETOWN GUARDIAN MINING (Canadian Press) mnorrro. Jan. io-alw gold stocks were given a big play on the Toronto mining board today with New York buying a factor in the advance on the senior issues. A gain of nearly 2 1-2 points was registered by the gold share index setting a new top of 127.51 for the exchange index. Base metal and sliver stocks tailed along, both groups recording important gains. Volume was closed to the million and a. half mark but a little under Thursday's heavy turnover. McIntyre took the lead with a 1min of 2 1-8 tr 44 7-8 on a tum- over of 5,000 sharcs- Lake Shore and Dome added a point. each while Pioneer and Hnllinger were up 60 to 75 cents each. Revival of interest in the big gold producers appeared to be associated with the reported possibility of a new out in the gold content of the U. S. dollar. Strong spots in the base metals conbridge, up 20 cents. Sudburl! Basin up 10 cents, Sherritt up 10. and Mining Corporation and Pond Oreiile up 5' each. In the silvers Castle was the feature, selling at a. new high at 1.48, up '6 cents. Eldorado gained 2 and Nlpissing B "roaouro, Jan. 1o_ Btnclu ('|.l(‘l\l lies (‘lliboug (‘loricy . . . (‘onlnlon W (fnnlngns . (‘iminruul . llomo Dom lCxpl . ldlillwrnllru .. . l~‘ llrlflgl‘ . Foil Kirk Franklin . (lullrll-lio . 11ml» Ilnkl: . ldl - _ Nipisslng . Nurnmin . 45% Nnr mm . ‘.19 (Vllrlon .. _ 10 (llgn l)“ _ 5 PILVIIIIINIEI‘ ... ... .- YmlFY (l 'l‘oiu lnlos 1,481,000. UNLIBTED Aldo nnc .. (‘uni lrk (‘en inn . gilurifll ll - ilud Mines . Tcmlcka .. muss-Emmi»? The ambition! W“!!! HD9110 Ii for a civil service root WM tlkins his examination. All came out all right for him until no came tothc general kncwic test. "flit ulicdggv forawhiloibllt c, thought of l. way but of the difficulty. ' . “Gin the quantity of cool ex- portedfrom 11.5. A. inlh! ‘hug you," read the question. with a sign or relief he out down his chum: “In 140i. MM- were Hudson Bay 1-2 higher, Fal- ‘R 1v. Y? Stock E flange - (Supplied by Pltflelrl and Compnny Member: of ollreol otoclr exchange and Curb ill let) Stock: Am Am Am Wntclworks Alu (fun ' ".8. Am liudln nr Am T an '.l‘ . Anaconda! . Auburn .!.. A Open Cbryqlcrr: (Ion Gas . . 6 . . '21 1:11 “Icahn u . . .. .. 7012:‘ 111-2 Wosllpgllounc 102% 102% Excziéfca MONTREAL, Jan. Ill- British and foreign exchange in relation to the Canadian dollar as compil- ed by the Royal Bank of Canada olosui today as foilo\vs:— Argenima peso .2701. Australia. pound 3.8606, Austria schiliing .1887. Brazil milreis .0055. China Hong Kong dollars .3237. Denmark krone .2214. France franc .0863. Great Britain pound 4.9580- Greece drachma .0095. Holland florin .6824. Hungary pengo .2977. Ir-ib rupee .3749. Japan yen .2904I Jugoslavla dlnar .0230. Norway krone .2494. ' Poland zloti .1893. South Africa pound 4.9358. Switzerland franc .3267. United States dollar cent premium. NEW YORK, Jan. 10—Foreign exchange steady- Great Britain demand high 4.95 7-8; low 4.94 1-2; close 4.95 l-2; 60 day bills 4.93 7-8; France 6.62 7-8; Italy 8.02; Bel- gium 1688; Germany 40.30; Can- ado 99 31-32. 1-16 per _ CABLE HEAD WEST SCHGO-L Gracie X-i, Joyce MacLaren; 2, Rena MacLaren. Grade VIII-—1. Gladys MacLaren. Grade VI-l, Elliot MacLaren. Grade V-l. Alice Slmons; 2, Stanley MacLaren. Grade IV — 1, Ethel MacKenzie and Anna MacLarcn (equal); 2, Rosie MacLaren; 3, Olga Maclnren and Vernon Macmren‘ (equal). Grade III—l, Douglas MacLaren; 2. Arthur MacKenzie; 3, James Hayden. Grade II-i, Boyd MacLaren. Grade I (Sr.)—1, Thelma Hay- den. Grade I (Jr.)-—l, Eileen MacKen- e. (Patriot please copy) Postponement Of B o u t Raises Colonel ’s Ire (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, Jan. 7—'I‘he much publicized ssrap between heavy- weights Ilank Bath and Red Bur- man, with those old “palsy walsics“ Jack Kearns and Jack Dempsey, whopping it up in rival corners. will not go on at Madison Square Garden Friday night. The New York State Athletic Commission today refused to lic- ense Bath in time for a. Friday night appearance. Chairman John Phelan explained the commission found it necessary to defer action on the Californian pending re- ceipt of cewain information from its west coast colleagues. The nat- ure of the information was not divulged. , Col. John Reed Kilpatfldt. Gar- den President. aml promoter Jim- my Johnsfcn could hardly restrain themselves. “It's both outrageous and high handed," said the indignant Col- onel. Bath and Burman were being featured on Friday night's show, largely because they are managed by Kearns and Dempsey respect- ively. The Gardon had advertised the two Jacks would appear as seconds. \________._ HOME-MADE SOAP Five and a, half pounds of grease. 1 can potash. 2 tablespoons sugar. 1-4 cup borax, l-il cup of ammonia. l-I cup kerosene ‘cil- Method: Clarify fat by hosting and adding large potato, sliced fine. When potato has browned and settled to the bottom, strain and cool, Empty the can of potash into 5 cups of hot-not boiling-water. with sugar dissolved i it. Add borax and cool- Stir ofte . When cold pour in fine stream into luke- warm fats. stirring constantly. Have the ammonia and kerosene ready and pour in. Stir until consistency of honey. Some add i0 cents‘ worth of oil of sussufras. [our into not too large a dripping pan lined with cloth wrung but of cold water. who! set. or in 24 hours, cut in squares. Remove fro pan in a coupla of days. Tho i’ must be miv warm and the pot- lQl cold. New Five Year High At NewY0rk (By Frank MacMillcn, Press Financial Writer) NEW YORK, Jan. 10—Aided by the industlials, some of which rose i to 4 points, the stock market movfid ahead today to its highest average level since Sept. 193i. At its close the market, in terms of the Associated Pres average oi 60 stocks, stood at 57.4. a net gain for the session of .5 of a point. ‘Transactions totalled 3,271,370 shares against 2,988,610 on Thursday. Wall street analysts said the de- mand for stocks had behind it con- tinued favorable rusws from the business front. And some quarters added a dash of inflationary senti- ment owing to the passage by the House of the Soldizrs‘ Bonus Bill. The brisk purchases of industrial stocks was explained by brokers largely in the light of the sharp gain in December building. The total of$264,136,50J in contracts for . the 37 states east of the Rockies re- ported by F. W. Dodge Corp. was the highest since July, 1931. Ap- proximately three times greater than December, 1934. the aggregate also represented a jump of 40 per cent over November. In the Canadian list small gains were made by Massey Harris, Can- adian Paciiic, Dome Mines, McIn- tyre Porcupine, Lake Shore and Canadian Industrial Alcohol A. Shares which turned in net gains of from 1 to 4 points or more were Air Reduction at 187. Best at 54 5-8, Case at 99. Chrys‘e,- at 90 1-8. Crown Cork at 48, International Harvester at 59 i-4 and Johns- Manvllie at 101 3-8. Metals Lead Upturn 0n Mt’|. Market (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREA Jan. l0—Montreal stock exchange list got back on its feet today as metals and construc- tions surged upward, carrying six issues into new high territory for c) year or more. High-priced isues boarded the widest gains, while liquors and rail equipments improved fractionally. Power and Paper stocks were quiet and easier. Brokers said buying in New York was the stimulus for in- ternationcl Nickel which jumped a point on turnover of more than 8,- 000 shares. Smelters was stirred into action and added three points. while Hollinger. selling err-dividend, was up 50 cents. Noranda gained a fraction. Construction stocks responded to announcement that plans were afoot for a nation-wide scheme of home building and building pro- ducts touched a new high of 37 with a gain of nearly two points. Hamilton Bridge reached 6 5-8. a new high. up iractionaliy. and Can- » ada Cement preferred notched more than two points. Montreal Cottons held the snot- light with nine-point gain at 35. a new peak, while Canadian Cotton: preferred worked more than a point higher. Bruck Silk and Canadian Celanese gained fractional strength. Total sales were 40.789: bonds $4.- 600. Cotton tissues, raw and artificial silk continue to be Japan's largsst export items as a review of her foreign trade for the first nine months of 1935 reveals. British In- dia was the chief market for cot- ton tissues, followed by the. Dutch East Indies, Egypt, Manchukuo, Argentina, Philippine Islands, French Morocco. Kwamung, China Proper, Australia, United States. The United States took the bulk of the raw si‘k and next in order France, Great Britain, British In- dia, Australia. Australia was the largest customer for artificial silk tissues followed by British India, Dutch East India's and Kwantunit Province. Chief exports to Canada are pottery, Canada being one of Japan's best customers, toys, tea. rice and paddy, silk and artificial silk tissues, raw silk. lamps and parts, buttons. silk handksrchiefs. brushes, menthol crystals. beans. In imports the chief commodity was raw cotton, followed by iron and siee‘, sheep's wool, mineral oils, machinery, beans and pea-S. pulp for paper and rayon. rubbfl‘. lumber, coal, pig iron. which 011 cake. oil-yielding material's, ores COppCI‘, automobiles and parts, vegetables fibres. sulphate of am- monia, hides and skills, phospor- lie, lead, aluminum, tin, newsprint, zinc. The raw cotton comss chiefly‘ from the United States, British India, and Egypt; iron and steel from thg United states, Germany, Belgium and Great Britain; sheep's wool from Australia and New Zea- land; mineral oils from the United 5mm Dutch East Indies and Brit- ish Borneo; machinery from the United states, Germany and Great China Proper, British India; pulp Irom the United States, Norway. Canada and Sweden. The largest import from Canada was lumber, followed by wheat, pulp, newsprint. aluminum, lead and zinc for which Canada has bsen the chief source of supply for many years. imn and steel. fmsh beef. machinery and pang, cqppef, automobiles and parts according to the Industrial Dc- partment of the Canadian Nation- al Rcfways. There was an increase of 12.8 per cent in the value of ox- ports from Canada to Japan 1885 as compared with 193i and a. de- crease cf 2-5 per cent in imports from Japan. n WIRE QUERY BOX LONDON - Disappointment was in store for a this’ who stole a cuikciinz hm: from Our Lady of Lourdes Church. New Southgate. It was kept for pa-ishiomr: to deposit written questions. ll-IVAL is made by lilckey l Nicholson who also manufacture 11 d; N's BRIGHT CUT and ihc favorite chewing tobacco, “BLACK TWIST.” inc iicntral Guardian _-___- Till: column I: relerrrd for of 10ml mlercst lrul. lulrrrllslng u flan-my nnturc lnny lm inserted 4 cents u word strictly puyublo advuncc. now: u! n1 In ANNUAL MEETING of Red Cross Society Friday, January 31st. L-227 GOVERNMENT OFFICES CLOS- ED — With the exception of the Registry Office, all Provincial Gov- ernment oflices will be closed today outof respect to the memory of the late Premier Lea. ST. JAMES CHURClL-The mem- hers of St. James Church, and the many other friends or the Minis- tfi‘. will be pleased to learn that Rev. Dr. R. Moorhead Legato has greatly improved in health, and will preach at both selvices tomor- row. As is customary on the second Sunday of the New Year, Holy Communion will be celebrated at the forenoon service. EIREMEN ANSWER. CALL-A flue fire at the Riverside Apart- ments, Water Street West, about 5.30 last evening threatened to be- come serious and a. general firo alarm was sounded. The firemen answered with the three engines but when they arrived the fire had burned itself out and their services were, not required. There was no damage. POC You don't have to pay a cent more than. lflio prlco '08 BIVAL to enjoy tobacco that surpasses many blends pricod RIVAL is a blte-froo ‘blend of Southern 0ntario’s blandest Burleys. It is cool and slow- burning — a medium strength, native tobacco that cannot far‘ beyond its cost. be excelled. Peerless at s». ~ w. is 11m photographer shown in Rival. DOESN'T TAX YOUR Hickey c- Niclsolso Bird Lliiéliiiillibiidlfixi / "ET the Price this falgar Scuaré‘lnW1-5"d°'l»* 335k“ . ' l ~ picture ran into difficulties when and excited the curiosity of the p 5 he med m take a, picture in Tra- eons. T0 ADDRESS TRAVEL BUREAU-In reply to an invita- tion to address the annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island 0n Thursday evening, January 23, Mr. D. Leo Doian, the Director of the Canadian Government Travel Bureau, has replied that he will be glad to do so. Mr. Dolan is a fluent speaker and citizens who have al- ready heard him speak will be glad to learn that he will be pres- ent at the annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Travel Bureau. PERSONALS Mr. V. Fournier and Mr. Otis have arrived from Quebec to take courses at the Union Commercial College. Mr. Leigh Paynter, Long River and Mr. Herman Mayne, Emerald, were visitors to Charlottetown on Thursday. Mr. W. E. Massey, Provincial Aud- itor, leaves this morning for Ottawa to attend Monday's Conference of Provincial Treasurers with the Do- minion Finance Minister. Mr. Austin Larabee of Eldon re- turned last evening from a two weeks‘ trip to Boston. While in the city he is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson, Upper Prince St. IVLr. Seymour Murphy of Cumber- land, who recently underwent a ser- ious operation in the City Hospital, has returned for further treatment.- Friends of ‘G. Ernest Younker. Brookfield are pleased to see him out again after his recent oper- ation for appendicitis in the Prince Edward Island Hospital. NEW OOIFFURES INSPIRED BY ART PARIS, Jan. 7-A revolution in hairdressing has takcn place here. In the smartest salons, hair is "drested" in rolls or flat dlrls, but no lonzer waved in a series oi smooth undulations. The standard Cfllffllfg flinished with a cluster of curls at the nape of (he neck is banished. ‘individuality’ is the slogan of hairdressers, who seek m build each colffure around the per- sonality of the face. "New coiffures are much inspired by Renaissance art which had such on influence on clothes this year,"- says Monsieur Mnilone of Emile's. "Hair is dressed inomanner recall- ing Botticelli heads, nymph heads and coiffures of Florentine women of the 14th century. Heads are kept small and trim, with the hair rolled in soft curls around the face instead of waved in set undula- tlons". Some of the new wiffures are dressed in curled roiLs which rise up on the head all around instead of running horizontally around it. Others are roiled back from the, face in soIt coils and finished with’ a few little curls next the face. "Greek heads" like a cap of softly coiled flat curls and a more sculp- tured cciffure with a row cf small coils mounting smoothly up the side or the head are also seen. vir-‘ iuaily all leave the top of the head like : smooth shining cap with- out the series of marcclie-like wnvrs which once characterized the coiffure Travel Bureau, which will be held ~ . make one feel that ho is “looking c716.‘ rfnrlvlslnlns " m "i '—— "" I MONTREAL, Que. Jan-_9—'1'h@,' gross revenues of the all-inclusive ‘t Canadian National Rnllways__SY-§j_ tenTfFthelweek endin; Dewmb" 14th, 1935, were smmflfiii- as °°""' pared with $2,832,893. for the 00!‘- responding period 0f 1934. an m‘ crease of $519-$69- bitswlvsllol cull. THANT THIRD Ill . OW many tinlos lmvo you hoard the expression "Don't izllco n pic- ture with your cnnloru facing the sun”? It's one of the old bolinis in amateur photography that has lmrrn handed down from your i0 your in ovcry new snapshooier. While (his is gnml advice fur the bcginnrr it. is not necessary to for- ever abide by this rule. Those of us who like to try llrouking such rules have found that most of the work of which we are proud has been pro- duced under other llghtlngs. The i_m- portant thing in remember is that you must never simld so that sun- light will ntrlkc into the ions. Tho lighting of the subject has much to do with securing that qual- ity sometimes called "atmosphere" in a picture. There arc a. number of ways in which n photograph may be given apparent depth or "third di- mension." Taking the picture when there are long shadows, getting a reflection in the foreground, using strong aidelilzhting or back-lighting, and tlmini; the exposure just right co that il a detail of ohlccts in shadow is not blocked out. are pre- cautions that contribute to the de- sircd effect. Let us consider ench of ' these separately. Shadows, thrown in long drawn- out aploiches across walls and walks, more than anything also into" a picture instead of "looking on" a flat piece of paper carrying DIMENASION + Above -- Heavy shadows contribute much -to third di- mension quality. .Left — Contrast in tones and unusual top lighting contrib- ute to the rare ster- oscopic effect. + The foreground sllmllrl be well llrnllcll up wiLh .<=ll;ulov:s so that l.ll‘.'l‘\‘. is not inn lulu-ll contrast ll- twcen it and the rest of the picture. When :1 holly cf wuicr can b0 in- i‘ll1(l(‘(l ns n pnri of (he foreground, illcn illorc. taro wnmlr-rflli (Jllllllfllllll (ins fol‘ nildinl; (lepill. The rcilociiol will (mm-y film's niirntiml back and away from ill-t- f0r0gl‘0\lilll—illlo this picture-mud 10nd to (ho principal point of composition. Reflections often servo as an nvouue to load buck from tho foreground of o. aet- tlng. Tho only precaution necessary when (loaning with a water fore- ground in strong sunlight is to watch thni u. swell or waye does not throw reflected light sparkles upon the lens, as that may fog tho picture. Side-lighting, where the source of illumination comes from the side of tho object or scene, and back-light- ing, where the light comes from the rear, are not difficult to handle if the lens is protected from the light coming toward it. Shade the lens with the hand. or stand in the pro- tecting shadow of a tree to make the exposure. Also, you should time tho exposure more for the parts in shadow than for those that are high- lighted. Don't be discouraged if you fail to got the desired appearance of depth or "third dimension" in your first attempt. If at first you don't succeed watch for your contrasts nnd shud- ows and try, try again. the images of the objects recorded. JOHN’ VAN GUILDER. » JAt-ZFVL-i-IF-QGC-F‘. '. rm"; “N ' p1.- zv hi».