CLASSIFIED ADS The Guardian Monday, February 14. 1955 Page 10 igonts Wanted gg CAN PLACE RELIABLE MEN 'or women interested in earning 82.50 (or more) hourly distribut- ing D0 Foods. Home and Farm Necessi lea in established neigh- bourhood routes on full or part- time basis. Fe. anent. No lay- offs. Experience unnecessary. For immediate appointment de- tails write Mr. G. Laurin. 21 St. Paul St. E.. Montreal. Borders llccomnioilatail Eoannans ACCOMMODATED.-- Dial mo. A'rcbF.vToi)7i”ritTiv- boarders. Dial 6906. U-OARDERS ACCOMMODATEI).- Preferably students. 23 Gran- ville Street. Dial 5184. f0;ar:e9JiT?iEi.s.:E5W CAR BUYERS Today's Special roifnvii Does your wardrobe in- dude a quality car. 1953 PLYM01'TH SEDAN p F. R. ;V1cLAINE LTD. Malpeque Road. Dial 7358-9 USED CARS 1951 DODGE COACH - One you must see to believe and ap- preciate its value. Yours for 3995-00. 1949 .Mi:'ri:0R SEDAN iGl”0eII). 20,000 mileage. It had a very fussy owner. Looks goodgand is good. We say this car is in A1 condition-come in and say what you think! Yours for 31195.00. STEWART MOTORS LIMITED I24 Great George st. DIAL 5431 For Sale moi?-Tjm:-j FOR SALE - NINE YEAR OLD Holstein Cow. Good Producer- Warren Dawson. V g Fo nr FEEDER pigs. Eric Maccallum. Marsh- field. 7 . gg Fort same - 1947 PLYMOUTH sedan. Cheap for quick sale, Phone 3877. this Help Wanted PLAN YOUR CAREER IN THE NAVY'S MEDICAL BRANCH g There are immediate openings -for alert young men to train as medical assistants in the Royal Canadian Navy. You can learn about first aid. hygiene. operating room and laboratory technique. MARKETS and FINANCE U.S. Steel CLEVELAND (APT - Regard- less of what happens in the auto industry. the second half of this year shotlld bring good business to the steel market. Steel magazinel says. The car industry now is produc- ing at a record pace in anticipa- tion of I strike early in the sum- mer as the CIO Auto Workers make a stand for a guaranteed an- nual wage. Steel magazine conceded that if the auto industry dropped out of the steel market for a long time. the effects would be so widespread that other consumers also would need less steel. But the magazine predicted it was unlikely the auto- makers would be out of the mar- ket for long. Annually. the car manufacturers used about a fifth of the steel produced in the United States. Now they probably are using some- what more than that. Steel mills are operating at 88 per cent of rated capacity. so a complete loss of demand from the auto industry would cut that to about 71 per cent. More likely. said Steel. the car industry probably would cut its steel intake in half. leaving a national rate of around 78 per cent. N. Y. Stocks NEW YORK (AP) - A major drive ahead last week sent the stock market to an all-time high. Records of the great bull market of 1929 were eclipsed by the for- ward surge, and prices continued to climb to the final bell at the end of the week. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks was up 82.50 on the week and finished at 5159.70. At that level. the average is 32.00 higher than the 1929 high of 6157.70 reached Sept. 3. 1929. The week was a curious affair. An opportunity was offered for a grand break on a major scale when the Russians changed prime ministers and engaged in some spectacular sword-rattling (atomic stylel. That opportunity was ig- nored. Brokers generally took the at- titude that buying was based on a new confidence in the market. and a chant was heard now and again that the l7-month-old bull market swing had been-confirmed again by the market's action. The five most active issues on the New York stock exchange were Electric and Musical Industries up 1. Hupp Corp. up 1l.'., Corliss- Wright off lh. Avco Mfg. up iii. and Faircbild Engine up Vs. Canadian stocks closed mixed. International Nickel gained be Fri- day and Hiram Walker advanced Va. Canadian Pacific was off is, Mcfntyre was down ')6 and Dome Mines dropped Vs. On the American stock exchange Giant Yellowknife gained VI: and Lake Shore lost Vs. Much Involved In physiotherapy and x-ray in the; medical branch of the Navy. 1 Let the Navy train you in one. of these important jobs while youi enjoy good pay. travel and ad-i lventure. if you are between the iages of 17 and 25. have grade 10 leducation or better. see your lNaval Recruiting Officer today at H.M.C.S. Queen Charlotte Kent St. Phone 4913 Charlottetown salesmen Walggtl gg SERIOUS MAN TO TAKE OVER profitable Nationally Advertised Watkins business in Charlotte- town. Established custome s. Must be over 21 and satisfied with income of 560. a week at start. Apply in writing to F. Ranger. 350 St. Roch Street. Montreal. Que. STAMPS WASTEPAPER. NOT WHEN millions of collectors spend tens of millions yearly for old stamps. Send 30c for a very interesting pamphlet dealing with subject of values. X. Bileski. Station "3". Winnipeg. Man. Television TELEVISION. RADIO AND El..- ectronics are all expanding fast. Trained men receive excellent pay in TV Repairs. Broadcast- ing. Communications. Govern- ment departments, Research Labs. and Radio Servicing. We can train you - by home study or in night or day classes. No experience needed. Please write today. give age and last grade of high school and get 40 page TV Booklet by return. Radio "Fort sans: -. t-Ewtv ransa- ened cow. Stanley Foster. Dun- staffnage. dgiv ion SALE - sit-on'ri-ionn HOL- stein Bull Calf. Apply Cecil Stetson. Marslifield POR SALE - 4 cows"1'0 ransa- change for fat cattle. Apply Wendell MacQuarrie. Milton. -mm FOR SALE Seven room bungalow with ves- tibule in Brighton area. consisting of living room. kitchen. dinette, two bedrooms and bath. New fur- an in March. Will sell or ex-. College of Canada. 08 Bathurst St.. Toronto. Ont. Est'd. 25 years. g To Lot "ro LET-TWO HEATED-TROOMS Phone 7295. TO RENT - ONE FURNISHED I room. Phone 6677. 10 ET - HEATED APART- ment. four rooms. bath. do- mestic hot water. vicinity of P W. College. availablc March lat. Apply B.J. Guardian. Teachers Wanted TEACHER WANTED - FOR 1 Coleman School. Supplement 3500.00. David Lockhart. Sec- rotary. G. H DOUGLAS 96 Upper Queen Female Help Wanted QUALITY COSMETICS SOLD FOR many years in U .5. A. now available in Canada. Local rep- resentative needed. Act now and inquire at Doraldina Cosmetics Co.. 576 St. Catherine East. Dept. 4, Montreal. Cashier & Typist WANTED y Neat young personable girl wanted for permanent salary posi- tion. in modern office. with ex- cellent future. Must be good typ- lst and enjoy meeting the public. Apply in person to Household finance Corp.. 150 Great George Street, Last I. Fosnii LOST - BOYS HOCKEY B001 and skate. Size 4. Phone 5950. East - mm MEN'l sroiii trousers. Between Guardian and Kent It. Dial 4001. LOST-GET OF UPPER FALSE teeth between Murray River and Georgetown. Please phone Murray River 2-12. Collect. WGIJLD I'll PEIIGON Wllo took lady's states from the Forum by mistake please re- turn And get your own. 42 Orlebar St. lllmllsmss II! DEALER - ND- uy 1. Jeffrey. Phone 7000. GARDENIIS Whether caving vegetables lu- hanse eomsnsrp - cues. I.I.IaTeve it will Ill Q nace adjustable to oil or coal. 4' This house just completed. Sellinli wlntad 9”” I.”.0”i””' C" '” ' want ii: D - ALE norrri.ss. LIX”. O ' Pints or quarts. Dial 8505. pp yT Michael Bros good Baled Hay. G. C. Green. Emerald. P. E. I. WEIGHT LIFTING EQUIPMENT. ; If you have bar-bells you aren't using. members of the Char- lottetown Y. M. C. A., would ap- preciate their loan. or consider purchase. Please write or phone work Post Stamp Production By H. I.. JONES l Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA ICPT-Behind everyp Canadian postage stamp lies a story of much planning and hard All stamps begin as an idea which may concern a person such as the Queen. ii great event or an industrial subject such as a hydro- electric station. Until recently. Canadian stamps were reproduced in o s t I y from photographs. Now, because the post office wants to encourage many Canadian artists, many are produced from sketches or draw- ings. Two types of stamps are is- sued-regular issues to carry the greater part of the postal load and commemorative ones to mark some event of historical interest. On lovier denominations. ordin- ary issues all bear portraits of the sovereign. On the higher. play is given subjects such as electric p o w I r. industrial development. Canada's farm lands and military. machines. LENGTIIY PROJECT Portraits of the Queen appear on the set of stamps currently in use. A four-cent stamp issued in 1953. commemorates her Corona- tion. Her portrait also is on all ordinary issues from one to six cents I Look what went into that Corn- nstion commemorative; . The post office decided on Coronation stamp in April. 1952.! soon after the Coronation date was i set. Emanuel Hahn. Toronto sculp- tor. was asked to create a profile plaque of the Queen and design the stamp. .Then artists of the Canadian Bank Note Company of Ottawa.- which has printed all Canadian' stamps since 1935. interpreted the artist's design by hand engraving on soft steel. Design details were settled in conferences of company officials with W. J. Turnbull. deputy postmaster-general. L. .1. Mills. director of financial services for the post office. and J. R. Car- penter. superintendent of the post- age stamp division. DELICATE TASK Engravers. working with infinitei patience under magnifying instru- ments. cut the design in reverse on a stamp-size piece of blank steel. Every delicate line and groove which gave depth and form the " ' S ” design was cut by hand. Proofs of the stamp were taken Wanted wanrap - II A Y. sfnnxm. non. Mermaid. WANTED - ONE FURNISHED heated room. Phone 3676. WANTED - WOODTURNING lathe. suitable for posts. Write particulars including price to David MacKinnon. Union Road. Work Wanted "wiiman". WOMAN WITH one child wants position as house- keeper. Town or country. Write 3425. Tenders will be received lottetown. P. E. 1. Drawings and Specifica Architects. will be available town. P. E. I. ' marked not later than 5:00 1955, and addressed to:- 644 Bayview specifications. TENDERS JFOR GUARDIAN BUILDING for a new building for the Charlottetown Guardian, Char- Toronto. the Moncton and Halifax Builders Exchange. and the office of the Charlottetown Guardian in Charlotte- Tenders shall be forwarded by registered mail post- THE CHARLO'I'TE'POWN GUARDIAN, Box X. Guardian. by the Woodhridge Company tions by Barnett &. Rieder. at the Architects' Offices in P.M. Monday, February 28. cm Barnett dz Rieder, Architects. Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. S25.00 deposit cheque required for drawings and 158 Kent street ton (2.000 lbs.). scrap car l0cpei-foot. .WE NEED JUNK MAURICE BIDCX 1: COMPANY Charlottetown We are paying ror scrap iron and steel 810.00 per batteries 31.25 each. Fast ready cash for any qusntttiu of good scrap materials. Beer Bottles, Hides. Etc. l'orsale-Janddinchbotlsrtubingataocand o from the master die and carefully icheckcd. Some changes were or- dered and the die altered. The color chosen was purple. Then the master die was hard- ened and impressed at a pressure of 20 tons per square inch on a soft stecl roll. The roll. known as the working die. in turn was hard- ened and used to transfer the de- .sign 400 times to a soft steel print- ing plate. READY TO PRINT The plate, then comprised 400 replicas of the master die. each correct in every microscopic de- tail. it also was hardened and placed on a rotary press. Specially-manufactured p a p e r was prepared so it would take an ink of last color and great tenac- .ity from the plate. Perforating machines handled the next step. After inspection and cutting into sheets of 100 stamps. the new issue was shipped to post offices all over Canada for sale beginning the day before the Coro- nation. That was almost 14 months after the planning of the new stamp be- gan. Trawler lmpoTl's Are Restricted OTTAWA (CF) -The fisheries department does not permit in- discriminate importation of used trawlers by fish meal firms in e .'viai'itimes. Fisheries Minis- ter Sinclair said Friday. He said every fish plant is permitted to import one used trawler. if they want to import more. they must match them with Canadian-built trawlers, he said in the Commons. Mr. Sinclair replied to Clarie Giilis ICCF-Cape Breton South) who asked whether the govern- merit refused a German firm a permit to operate a fish meal plant and affiliated industries in Louisburg. N.S. He answered that such permits are issued by provincial author- ities. Mr. Giilis then asked who- ther the government's refusal to allow importation of fishing traw- lers prevented. in effect. the un- identified company from setting up.its plant. Mr. ,Sinclair said the govern- ment does not want to allow one plant to import any number of trawlers without matching them with Canadian-built boats. Oil Companies To Spend 400 Million This Year DALLAS. Tex.. (AP)-Oil com- panies plan to spend M00.000.000 in Canada this year. the Petrol- eum Engineer magazine says. The magazine says that Canada has become the third largest oil producer on the western hemis- phere. with 3.000.000.000 barrels of proven oil reserve. Natural gas re- serves were set at it trillion feet. N. E. Tanner. president of the Trans-Canada Pipeline ,Company, was quoted in an article as saying Canada has more than 6.000 prod- uclng wells. Only one well has been drilled for each 170 square miles of productive oil areas. com- pared to one every 12 square miles in the United States. "This in itself gives some idea of what the future development in Canada may be." Tanner said. Canada's average daily oil pro- diictlon was figured by the mag- azine at M0.00fl barrels. Plans AIm;sT Ready For New A-Power Plant NEW YORK. (AP)-Consolidat ed Edison Co.. of New York. is about to announce plans for con- struction of the first U. 8. atomic power plant relying mainly on private financing. it was learned Thursday. An electric industry source said that Consolidated Edison will build a Itll,000 to 130.000 kilowatt plant fired by nuclear fuels. Last November the company purchased a fonner amusement park site .on the Hudson river. south of Peekskill. N. Y.. which an official said "might be suitable" for an atomic plant. The oountryls first commercial atomic power plant is being built at Shlpplngport. Pa.. by the gov- ernmentfs Atomic Energy Com- mission and the Duquesne Light Co.. Pittsburgh. This will be a so.- mo-ltilowatt plant. BIEAKAGE RATE HIGII GODERICII. Ont. iCP)-Collegl- ate student Bill Barwlclt has frac- tured his leg three times in 1! months. First time was is an auto acidcnt a your eso: the second. is another smash-up sis weeks ago. Costa Rica Sends Out SOS PARIS (Reuters) - Costa Rica Friday launched an "S 0 S to the world." saying it was mcnaccd with aggression from outside its frontiers. The appeal. issued through Costa Ricnn diplomatic missions through- out the world, followed up the Latin American republic's application to the Organization of American States for guarantees against out- side attack. Dr. Francisco dc Mirandes Mir- anda. Costa Ricnn minister in Paris. said the appeal was being made "to alert public opinion to the immediacy of the danger faced by Costa Rica." Mirandes Miranda said that ”the new threats of aggression and in- vasion weighing on our country" .emanated from Otilio Ulatc. n ;foi'mer president of the republic. The departuicnt Post Office Brings Native Art To Stamps By I. L. Jones Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--The post office. with Canadian artists already do- signing many of its postage stamps now is giving thought to getting more Canadian native art and more color into the issues. Canadian stamps now carry plo- tures of polar bears and pulpmak ing plants as typical Canadlana. Before too long they may depict Canada's Indians and Eskimos and where and how they live. And these stamps may come out in multi-colored issues instead of the single or double colors of today's stamps. Canada's stamps once were de- signed mostly from photographs. But Governor-General Massey. then Chancellor of the University of Toronto, recommended in the 1951 Massey royal commission re- port that Canadian institutions should encourage this country's artists. POPULAR COMPETITION The post office then announc " a competition for artists. asking them to submit stamp designs. Payment was 5300 or more for suggested subjects in industry. the outdoors and animal life. The competition paid off. It now is a continuing affair from which postal officials hope to build a "bank" of designs into which they can dip when a new stamp is needed. They are considering more color and broadening the range of sub- jects to include not only the na- tives themselves but the works of art they produce. Officials envisage these being produced in a four- color natural range. PRAISE AND SCORN The post office stamp designs have earned a lot of praise over the years. was proud of three wild life stamps issued In 1953. The two-cent polar bear in blue. three-cent moose in brown and the four-cent bighorn sheep in black drew acclaim from stamp collectors and from editors of stamp magazines. . The polar bear was designed by John Crosby. an artist at the Na- tional Museum. Ottawa. The other two were by Emanuel Hah, Tor- onto sculptor. A follow-up series showed a beaver. a walrus and a sea bird. the gannet. QUEEN'S PORTRAIT But the department got plenty of criticism about two issues of Queen Elizabeth stamps. One was the four-cent Coronation commemo a- tive of 1953 and the other a regular issue bearing the Queen's likeness on one to five-cent denominations. People complained the portraits didn't look like the Queen. They said her check was shrunken in the three-quarter portrait; in the profile portrait her upper tip was too short. Post office officials said the dif- ficulty stemmed from the fact that line-engraving process, rather than a photo-engraving, was used. In the line process every stroke. dot or feathery touch is cut by hand on a "master die" of steel from which the stamps ultimately are printed. Subsequently. a new regular is- sue was put out in the one to five- cent category and. while it also was line-engraved. the portrait of the Queen was much improved. ABSTRACT ART The post office entered the realm of slightly-abstract art in 1952 and still feels pleased about the ven- ture. The stamp was a 20-cent brown forest products issue created from a design by A. L. Pollock. Toronto industrial artist. It showed a paper-making plant with a Douglas fir tree in outline to one side. From the tree a scroll ex- tended across the stamp to an out- line of the plant. Public reaction was favorable. Officials were pleased that no one wrote them to point out that no Douglas fir is twice as high as Mr. A. P. Mayne Mr. I, W. lhannon ROYAL BANK APPOINTMENTS The development and growth of the Royal Bank's business in recent years have placed upon the management such heavy ICIPOIISIDIIIIIC3 that it has become necessary to provide for a more even distribution of the burden. The Directors have decided that the situation could but be met by creating the new post of Ass ' t General Manager carry- ing with it responsibility for the management of the Bank's nag. domestic business. Mr. A. F. Mayne. who has been an Assistant General Manager. ha; now been promoted to be Associate General Manager. Mr. R. W. Shannon. who has been a General Inspector. has been appointed an Assistant General Manager and his duties also will be concerned with the Bank's business abroad. The selection of Mr. Mayne and Mr. Shannon for these duties is I natural one in view of their knowledge of the r. n-domestic business of the Bank to which their activities have been directed for a number of years. it appeared on the stamps. They said it apparently was accepted for what it was. a simple design tell- ing a lot even though it was ab- stract. The department didn't have such a happy time with its fur resources stamp. a 10-cent brown showing an Indian woman drying beaver skins in front of a wigwam. Scores wrote in pointing out that the skins were bigger than the woman and that a man peering around the wig- the chimney of a paper plant. as wam appeared to be nine feet tall. Officials said the stamp's faults resulted from its lack of perspec- tive. AUTO CHIEF KILLED PARIS (AP)-Pierre Lefaurheuq, 56. president of France's giant gov- ernrr ' " Renault automo- bile works was killed Saturday h an auto accident. Driving alone to Nancy. Lefaucheux was thrown from his car when it left the road on a curve. What's news at Inco? The heart of this device Is two slender rods of pure nickel that change their length when magnetized, causing a diophngmlevlhreteendsend antseondwwvessehlglr pltshodliey oennefbohoevdlvyhomen nets. Iuftho slightest movement by on thunder dstvvhs the sound THE BEAM OF A POLICE OFFICEWS HASNIIONT picks out I burglar who has been caught by sound waves he couldn't - BIIT IIIIRELAIIS IN Tiuv. nun or THE NIGHT a burglar is sniffing silver into a bag. Suddenly he is pinned in the glare of,a Iashlight. The police have hint . . . trapped by a sound he couldn't hear. The Alertronic Alarm has done its fob. waves and sets OH lie down. loco research and development teams in cooperation with industry have been in the forefront of die world's modeling- in! developments since 1921. The knowledge and experience. gsiudsnuaoagIeco'spuaoest suns. lacuna-at poles: thewqsohodsfuanl Thursday he slipped while walking to sehoo and fractured I again. lieu. These sound waves are sent out by the Alentosit Alarm -s new devioein whicl-i.nIalInl(u':bl.mq a mid pan. IIIEO IIIIIKEI. RIIIIS SET IIFF ALARM IIIIIIIIIIT HEAR IT liilst am that llicliol lielps rqioit fins -A i W so high-pitched are the sound waves that mice-who can hear them.-are driven to an insane helm:-skelter duh for safety. T191: 1: only an of luundnda of am: of ultra-reel: rum- Bven in heat of a wad of paper smoldering In an ashtray will dis- turb she sound waves and set of the Alasuonic Alana. trivos mics" crazy sake . range lronufiedingjrb is flu an n qQ aboeu. Whhnenu MdJ".n7I-pngvbd,InQ ileum ', ' hnnffrugbdztul. lull Illa qp& 17 hndlu. THE iiuniiunoiui morn l:fillPAllY or ciiiuin, imiirii . 25 out siiitn wtsi, ioiium