3 Guardian. Sat.. May,28. 1955 Page 11 NOTICE oi: PUBLIC HEARINGS g Before The School Division No. 1 Inquiries Commission, ' in THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY CHAMBER Provincial Building. Charlottetown on THURSDAY, JUNE 2 at 10:30 AM. (A.S.T.) for Residents of Central Royalty and on THURSDAY, JUNE 2 at 2 P.M. (A.S.T.) for Residents of East Royalty, South Winsloe and other areas within Division No. 1 not yet heard from. Other interested persons who may wish to present evi- dence may do so at this time. Representations may be made orally or by written submission. Dorothy W. Saunders. Secretary for the Commission. DWELLING AND FARM FOR SALE IN VILLAGE OF CARDIGAN ESTATE HERMAN P. SMITH Dwelling house comprises seven rooms. asphalt roof, large barn. together with 50 acres of land, 40 acres clear and 10 under wood and lumber. For particulars and in- spection apply John Mulligan, Cardigan, or the under- signed. MacPHEE it TRAINOR. Solicitors. AUCTION SALE OF MODERN AND ANTIQUE FURNITURE AT THE W. I. BUILDING. EXHIBITION GROUNDS SATURDAY, MAY 28 AT 2 P. M. I am instructed by t-heegecutor of the estate of Ben- iamin Rogers to sell by pu lic auction the following: Mahogany tables, walnut tables, mahogany rocker, wal- nut rocker. mahogany chest of drawers, mahogany chairs and walnut chairs, rosewood chairs. walnut desk. maple bedroom mite, two bed springs and mattresses, bed davenporrt with two chairs, antique sofa, fire screen, car- pet sweepers, electric washer, G. E. refrigerator, Mcclary slectric range. suitable for cottage, electric appliances, shine and cut glam and other smah articles. W. 1!. BEATON. Auctioneer. .; AUCTION SALE ABERDEEN-ANGUS Glen Angus Stodr Farm, in association with Nova Scotia Artificial Breeders' Co-op Ltd., will offer for sale by ptdillc auction, absolutely without reserve, a carload of registered Aberdeen-Angus cattle consisting of 20 fe- males and six bulb, at the Maritime Winter Fair Build- lugs, Amherst. N.!., at 1 pm. on Saturday. June 49 All cattle are from federally accredited herds, and all females calthood vaccinated. Catalogue will be mailed on request is W. L. HAM, Glen Angus Stock Farm, 161 Queen street it. Guebh. Ont. FOR SALE VILLAGE HOME AND STORE PROPERTY AT ORWELL COVE Excellent house. all conveniences. large store and three warehouses. all in good condi- tion. ' Apply- K. J. l K. M. MARTIN. Charlottetown. FOR SALE Two race horses-Judge Morris, trotter 9 years old. 2:09 W5, by Nibble Hanover 1:58 3M. won his first two gtasrts at Sydney Sport Centre May 24th in H5 U5 and Farscud, 2:0? U5. 6 years old by Spud Hanover, 2:03, free-legged pacer, good mannered, sound and trained in 2130: also all racing equipment. Horses may be seen at Joe McDonald's Stables. at Sport Centre, Sydney. Rea- son for selling going out of business. I ANGUS MORRI&)N. Manaw, Glace Bay. FOR SALE Very attractive single dwelling situated in an excel- lent location in the Brighton area containing three rooms. hall and sun porch on the ground floor, three bedrooms Ind bathroom on the second floor. Rumpus mom in besement. Hot water heating, oil furnace. Gangs. Large For 9 lot. ' I l'lmely.Noies On Fur Farming 1 l . The annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Fur Breeders Asso- ciation will be held in the board room in the Department of Agri- culture Tuesday. May 31. All mem- bers of this association are urgent- ly requested to he in attendance. It has been one of the mainstays Revlllonllreres. which is own- in the operation of fur farming ed by Hudson's Bay Company. here since its inception in 1929. state that there is s new cape Many will remember the first fox trend in the making of furs. 'Fil-st prize show which was held in the sign of it was last season's switch Exhibition Building at Charlotte- to the cape look in atoles which, town with over 700 entries. Shows in Mr. Raran's opinion. are passe have been continued ever since in any other form. Current in- and later when the building bumed apiration for it is the set of the down the new fox'Pavillon was cloth cape and cope cost e both erected with one of the finest show here and abroad. But the major rooms to be found anywhere. The reason why Mr. Hnran looks to association in addition to holding the revival of capes in all lengths exhibitions of live foxes also held as a fashion significance of 1955 pelt shows for many years until ll the dominance of the slim sli- the quantity of pelts becamg so houette and the introduction of the small that it was not worth while tunic line in ready 0-7 Welf- continulng that practice. As the industry is now showing signs of The Fur Trade Journal of Can- returning life it is up to every fox ads in its May issue has a column breeder to lend aid to make it poI- entitled Twenty-five Yam Asa - sible to continue the live show MIY. 19W - - - Tllele Ire extinct! which is in addition to foxes. s lrom it . . Pelt prices establish- mlnk show. ed at recent sales showed the fol- lowing: Red fox brought a top of 351.50; fisher brought 3210 to S295; otter 854 to 883; blue fox 3140 to 3195; marten 354 to 359; silver fox selected half to three-quarter sil- vers brought 3225 to 8320. Mink were also bringing fine prices, Quebec darks 353.50. Nova Scotia up to 328. northern Ontario up to 338 and Western Canada up to 3587. In reference to the above we may say that we have a distinct recollection of the year 1930 as Mr. McLure and the writer were buy- ing furs for the Hudson's Bay elation. according to Mr. Reid, are the three denied last Decem- ber by a federal court - Silver- blu. Royal Pastel and Topaz. These have been replaced by Argenia, Autumn flue and Desert Gold c The 35th annual general meet- ing of the Canadian National Sil- ver Fox Breeders Association will be held at the head office Sum- merside on Tuesday. June 14. com- mencing at 10.00 a.m. DST. The financial statement for the ' year ending October 31. 1954, has been issued to members and shows liabilities, nil. surplus, Slm.392.52, which certainly means that it is in a flourishing fnanclal condition. The secretary-treasurer is Vernon Matthew. Summerside. Til I lllil sweet bird. but were thy tender fortunes - Not": rich beauty hallowl to And resting in pastoral sglantine. Among the leaves. dreaming the night away in full-blown vision of the ripen- ing men. or dreading winter's fell and furious waste- Grlef without grievance; bedded ' and un . A moment's dearth onto a year's repeat- No-yet still fortunate, steadfast and pure. 508?? d "P and tempered to the alien night; From out our sick conceptions to endure No more. at last. the bonds of Eremite! And still to cease like passion with a sigh: No more than this, yet seem 1: rich to die! -Danny Mccarron Montague, 9.1.11.1. We bought a large quantity. paid real good prices and went over to England to attend the auctions where they were disposed of. The effect of the stock market break in New York the previous fall did not seem to affect the pelt market in London that year. in fact 1931 pelts were fairly good in London but ' 1932 there was a very severe drop and the average we made up that year was somewhere between 335 and 840. The low prices continued for two or three years and then in 1935 there was a distinct improvement which con- tinued and was really strong in I936. The big drop did not occur A six-point warning to prospcc- Company of London. England- tive chinchilla farmers has been issued by the Better Business Bur- eau of New York. Inc., through that organization's "Monthly Memo." The BBB points out that many uninformed" persons have discovered that "unfortunstel . dollars do not multiply as rapid as these Andean rodents." The bureau is critical of "newspapers as well as radio and television net- inoculations ay HAROLD rvlomuson Canadian Press ltaff Writer OTTAWA lCP) - Canada has inoculated about 750.000 children with the Salk polio vaccine so far -without a single report of a child becoming ill from it. "The double safety check on pro- duction ls paying off." a federal health department spokes- nzan said. ”There has been only one report of a child becominr 'll with polio after receiving the :- clne and it was found to have been infected with the virus before getting its first injection." The spokesman said about 750.- 000 children have received at least one injection. with the required two shots completed in half that number. MILLIONI BY JULY By July, when the polio season begins climbing towards its peak. Canada hopes to have at least 1.000.000 ehlldres , tected wl two shots. All provinces have agreed to abide by vaccine per- fecisr Dr. Jonas Salk's recom- mendation izo give the third shot seven months later. With a population of 15,000,000, Canada's demands for the vaccine have been high and supplies scarce. There have been few re- ports of - t bslklng at the inoculation program. . Mothers have camped for hours on the doorsteps of some clinics. demanding pl ” n for their children. one doctor who had sup- plies for a few persons said he made a number of nemies when he told patients he had the vac- cine. He couldn't fill the demands. MADE IN CANADA Supplies-except for 13,000 triple doses imported from a U.s. com- mercial firm last month-are pro- duced from only one Canadian Course: the University of Toronto's Connaught laboratories. The University of Montreal's In- stitute of Microbiology is expected to go into fnll-scale production next fall. All supplies from Connaught are double-checked for safety and ef- fectlveness: First at the laborator- ies and then again at the federal works" which have been carrying advertising promising "q u l c k riches lo the owners of a pair or two" of the chinchilla animals. The six points of warning follow: 1. "There is at present no one accepted standard" for grading chinchilla. 2. "Inferlor animals are frequently sold. Poor grade stock . . . will not yield salable pelts or salable breeders." 8. Fur auc- tion results ahow "that while ex- cellent pelts may be marketable at certain times. pelts which are not up to standard are either non- salable or salable at a price which justifies neither the original in- vestmsnt nor the cost of raising the animals.” 4. To maintain stands -' . " ' us" breeders may periodically have to cull their ani- mals. 5. "Certain promoters offer to buy back. offspring" but often at a very disappointing price. 0. Raislngany" t ks ,1 gen- eral breeding knowledge. Raising of chinchilla requires "additional technical skill." the BBB em- phaslzes. Three bandits. two of then arm- ed, held up Sam Brown of Bobby Brown Furs. Inc. at 307 - 1th Ave., New York, last week and escaped with an estimated 850,000 worth in mink stoles. Mr. Brown hnd his wife arrived at their show rooms at 9.10 a.m. to be greeted by the robbers. The premises had been opened shortly before by Sam Feldman, as employee of Mr. Brown, who was held at bay by the gunmen. Before helping them- selves to three cartons of mink garments the gunmen bound with rope Mr. and Mrs. Brown. Mr. Feldman and three other fur trade people who entered the showroom while the robbery was in process. Lt. Peter Devers of the 14th Pre- cinct said over 100 garl wnts worth about 350.000 had been taken. Mr. Brown said the loss was covered by insurance. At Annlng. Chadwick and Keiver sale in London last week Russian mink males were firm but fe- males declined up to 10 per cent. Sable selling was concluded with colored goods stronger. Americans took the majority of the 100 per cent sable: that were disposed of. Ranch mink'. Russian. was also 100 per cent sold. Top prizes for sable was 352. Poorer grades sold down as low as Wild mink Siberian. sold up to 817.50. Ranch mink. Russian, sold up to ssaso. Czech. 821. Scandinavian 88). mutation mink. Canadian Breath of Sprin. 335. Scandinavian Sil- verbla . The Mutation Mink lreedus Aa- soclatioa of Elkhorn. Wis., has is- sued a statement that I has so i t " of dropping it rights to lties say a few batches have been mu i'.'iklln"l'iJ'ilmlll gmlltldlalln "um hymn! an 1188.388! 8l'0 . , EMBA d rti in :."..'.I::'.'.'::.?' it: ..... .:.::...:...i or nnuaslsr " 4 by the Asso- being . TIP OF THE WEEK FROM YOUR MASTER llEliI.Eli cnuwrs snos. lii00l(FIELI r. t. I. TIP so. 43 At the and of 4th week change your turkeys in Master Turkey Starter Krnms. Keep "I6"! 0" this feed for the next 5 weeks. Let's Discuss Your Feed- Plan With Your is- landts MASTER Man IVAN KERRY C Green St. 0lI'00Wl mums 333353330933, ? .- Unqualified Success Of hygiene laboratories here. Author- - until 1939. in Canada thrown out. mostly because the tests are very stringent. They say the double check is the reason there are no reports of illness. Connaught is producing for the provinces. the federal government putting up half the cost. imports of U.S. vaccine were halted when reports of faulty production emerged in the us. No further American supplies will be per- NEWSY The origin of the word barrel is uncertain. It was common to the Romance languages and has been applied to many cylindrical vu- sets. The art of making barrels. known as coopernge. is of great antiquity. Pliny ascribed its in- vention to the inhabitants of the Alpine Valleys. The rolling ava- lanche may have supplied the idea that led to the making of a vessel that woud transport materials by rolling instead of lifting and carry- ing them. The Celtrlc form of the name barrel appears in the Gaelic "herein" and is derived from the English. The ingenious Chinese people. who in ancient times made the mariner's compass and many out- standing devices that have great- ly benefited the human race. did not create the barrel nor any similar container. The i t craft of bar- rels was practised in Britain by her Roman conquerors. as shown by the fact that barrels and casks similar to those now in use have been unearthed from sites of Ro- man settlements. The barrel was in common use by the Romans in the early Christian era. The manu- facture of barrels evidently died out in Britain following the Ro- man period. and was reintroduced by the Anglosaxons, since the name cooper and cooperage and other trade names are of Ger- manic origin. The construction of the barrel is ingeniously adapted so that it com- bines great strength with light- ness. lt resists pressure from without by the arched arrange- ment of the staves; the hoops. which are seldom less than three in number between the middle and each end, secure it from the ex- pansive force of the gues within that are often generated by the contents of the barrel. The barrel is a hollow. cylindrical vessel, usually slightly bulging in the middle. sometimes described as a double conold, as its dia- meter dimlnlshes toward each end. Most barrels were formerly made of wooden staves. bound together with hoo s, the ends were closed by clrcu ar heads. There is a bunghole in the centre of one of the slaves for filling, emptying and for the escape of gases that may generate from the contents. mltted this summer. )3 DUI! TO I! In form the barrel is most con- gyungudensi Hasdaclurcd 5! WW5” Cwmmiu '1 I AND 3317! TI! ii. I. IAIIIIOIII till. 121 Esstss St., ctsrlettstesr Notes Ql.A.&l'i.D.It IARBIL venlent for the transportation or many commodities. As a malnu- 01 lllluldl. solids or produce. it may be moved about readily, it can be rolled up or down a con. Sldewhle incline by the use of a comllaratively small amount of physical energy. or rapidly swung aboard ship by a hoist with grap- pling hooks placed under the chine or ends of the staves. In former days the bulk of many shlps' cu-. goes was stored in barrels or casks. Coopers were essential as part of every crew when wooden Ships and iron men sailed the seven seas" to secure raw ma- terlals for industry. IIPHSM III I circular came. and around their lower halves were ' fitted truss hoops which held than in Place until the permanent hoops were put on. The upper ends of the stavss were drawn together by means of a rope passed around them and lightened by a windlass until other truss hoops could be dropped over them. the stoves ,being steamed ,6 or heated to enable the bending of them freely into shape. The two ends were then finished to re- ceive the beads, by forming a chine or bevel on the extremities of the slaves and a grove into which the heads fit. Finally the heads and permanent hoops are , ; put in place. When the heads are " . T , made of two or more pieces of wood they are joined together by wooden dowel pins. The dry barrels have been medal in many ways, some for flour and sugar were constructed similar to the wet barrels. Those for fruits . COOPERAGE The making of barrels. casks and hogsheads was a specialized-can pentry trade known as cooperage. it required a great deal of skill to make tight barrels. and the trade had no connection with the making of coops to confine small animals. in Great Britain the Worshlpful Company of Coopers secu ' a charter from King Henry VIII. in 1501. which was renewed in 1661. An act of Parlia- ment of l53l-32 authorized the company to examine all barrels and casks made in London and its suburbs and mark those ap- proved. This duty continued until the 18th century. The company still exists. but its activities now are mainly confined to the admin- istratlon of charitable funds. The making of barrels was divid- ed into two distinct classes de- pending upon the character of what they were to contain; The first class consisted of tight or what was called wet barrels, for liquids or substances that would waste or leak in transit. The sec- ond class, slack or dry barrels were made to contain fruit, vege- tables and non-perishable ma- terials. The demand was largely for tight barrels and oak stsves were preferred for these because of their strength and durability. The staves were wider in the middle to give the barrel a bulge and they had their edges properly bevelled to make them fit closely ” throughout their entire length when placed in the set up. and vegetable usually have much straighter sides so they will pack more closely. Sheets of veneer wood have been used. similar to cheese boxes. These veneer sheets have had narrow triangle pieces sown out around either edge to allow the hoops to draw the ends together enough to form a lIlllEF in the center of the barrel Rar- rels to hold crude oil and us pro- ducts are made of st:-cl anri re- Wh"”l -l'”9"5 '" M","””3”F- glad"-"f ferred to as oil drums. 'l'llay- 2rpi"lE ("'70 Grad” M "l 19;'-'1- 39 straight sided and are prumdl-dl”"”" 9-"'”9d Sly Franc” -xaxm: 3 with moulded rings on which they.5t"d-V 59'9"" 5" 5”3m””"Is may be 1-nnedp lLasi year Mr. Hessian received his PnE!lflEPrlflE diploma. and this THE BARREL A5 A llliiylsliki-I War Fnmvlmfl "'9 "W 3'8" Sciclice course. It is interesting to note that ml. Mr Hessian plans In enter Mc- gasoiine etc., are sold by the sat Gull Llnivr-l-:ll,v. Montreal. in the ion but meas ed by the barrel. fall in continue his studies in Me- This dates back to 1866 when .10 chanlral Engineering l-is is who oil producers including a Dr. Eg- son of Mr. S. S. ill"-suan. Q. C.. bert at Oil Creek. Pennsylvanla. and Mrs. Hessian of Montague. P. announced that they would 'sell E. I. their oil by the gallon only. They gave an allowance of 1 gallons of crude oil in favor of the buyer for each 40 gallons gauge and this es- Science Degree Plmlgraplleli 'almlel Is Stephen S. Hessian. Jr.. who g1ldl.lBted on May ll) from St. Francis Xavier University of Antigonish. 91.5.. with a Bachelor of Science degree. mainring in Physics, Mr. Hessian rnrnpleled his early LONDON ll-Ieulersl-A would-be voter showed up at the polls Thurs- tablished a 42 gallon measure fnr 533' 3"” Rdmllml ll? C-0"1d"'t "Id crude oil. In 1372 this was allnpi-rl,"r W"?! and Mn" kn” Ll” as a standard hm-l-el lay the Pvlm-i ""”"" ”l "'9 ”"'l"l9l95- lem Prodnl-ers Association and ap-' N T proved by the United States Con- gress in 10"). in 1707 during Queen Anne's reign. the wine gallon was legal- ized. lts size was the equivalent of 231 cubic lnl-lms. The Unit:-d States Congress in 1836 ls-cnlly cs- tabllshed the Queen Anne wine gal- lon of 231 cubic inches. It re- arlnpled as the statutory measure or Great Britain and most of the Commonwealth. Its capacity is based on lho volllmn of 10 pounds of '.l"'" i"'l"ri 1"" In specific conditions. If an Ill 1 . 11.7274 llll)it' Ill .w.. n. n- ncrial gallons lrqual 9.704 cubic inches. Thus a Canadian barrel of .v.l mains as the U. 5. standard mea- 35 Imperial gallons and s U. I. sure of capacity. Thus 42 United barrel of 42 U. 8. gallons hold ap- or raise of the barrel. In as- States gallons equal 9.702. cubic proximately lhe same amounl sembllng the barrel, as many inches or one barrel. .nil and are the all barrels of com- staves as were - were set in 1824 the imperial gallon wasunm-co lm-lay. III II SOTOJ: AT YOUR soecs.u sore nus rs JOIIISTOI MOTORS LIMITED lisrrsy liver