TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1950 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PACE SEVENTEEN CLASSIFIED ADS (Continued from page 16) 42--Female Help Wanted EXPERIENCED SALESGIRL FOR time work. Apply Nesbitt's La- dies' Wear, 33 King Bast. 97t1) GIRL FOR DOCTOR'S OFFICE. Apply stating qualifications to Box , Times-Gazette. (100c) MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN AS housekeeper for elderly couple, coun- try home. Phone 1615J12. (100c) '43--Male Help Wanted RELIABLE BOY AS SERVICE station attendant, Write Box 310, Times-Gasette. (102p) CAR LOT BOY, FOR GENERAL work around lot. Apply 133 King W. 81 021) BE YOUR OWN BOSS! WITH over 260 guaranteed household ne- cessities. Give service in the Homes and you will be welcome anywhere. With a Familex Agency you get re- peat orders, a fine income and estab- lish a profitable business of your own in a short time--NO dull sea- son. A few territories open in your county. No investment required. Write today for FREE details to FAMILEX, 1600 Delorimier, Mon- treal. (1011) ENERGETIC YOUNG MAN, WITH pleasing personality, as driver sales- man, and general store help. State age and wages expected. Must know city. Box 308, Times-Gazette. dio ROUTE MAN Required for established house-furn- thing route. We pay salary plus liberal commission. ar essential. Exceptionally good earnings for right men. BOX 315 Times-Gazette . WANTED MEAT CUTTER Young -- Ambitious To train for Store Management Apply BUEHLER BROS. . 12 King St. E Phore dy 02e) 46--Employment Wanted STUDENT WISHES BABY-SIT- ting, considerable experience. Will go any night. Phone 4101 after six. (103b) BABY-SITTING, ANY EVENING of week. Write Box 314, Times-Gaz- ette. (102b) STORM WINDOWS REMOVED & windows "cleaned. Also chimneys Built and repaired. Phone 875R2. (101c) REPAIRING TRILIGHTS, R A N- gettes, ranges, all' househnid elec- trical: appliances. Frank Snudden. Phone 919W. 107 Athol East. (My18) YOUNG MAN WOULD LIKE PART- time employment, 3 to 4 nights weekly, age 24; available after 6 p.m. Phone 3194-J. (B8e) . §7--Legal Notices NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT W. R. Fleming and Company Limit- ed, will make application to His Honour, the Lieutenant Governor, for leave to surrender its charter. Dated at Oshawa this 1st day of THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW *. By Al Figaly and Harry Shorten | a" H: STUDIED EVERY ROAD MAP IN CAPTIVITY BEFORE HE TOOK THAT AUTO TRIP «= : yO : % «AND GUESS HOW LONG IT TOOK THE NAVIGATOR TO NAVIGATE OFF His COURSE ! WHAT LOST! WE'RE HARDLY OUT OF THE CITY LIMITS! 48--Auction Sales Auction Sale of office furniture, car- penter"s tools, furniture, at 38 Hall St., Oshawa, Thursday, May 4, at 6 p.m. sharp: 1 double Desk; Typist's Swivel Chair; Cheque Writer; 1 18x82" Fil- ing Cabinet, Drawer; 1 18x36 Filing Cabinet, 3 drawers; 1 two-sectional Steel Filing Cabinet; Letter Puncl; Carpenter's Tools; Kitchen Range; Icebox (wooden); Phonograph; Ta- bles; Chairs; Hotpoint Electric Range; Icebox, metallic; upholstered Chairs; cooking Utensils; Dishes, many other articles too numerous to mention. Terms cash. Frank Stirte- vant, Auctioneer. Oshawa phone, 2714-7. (102b) Government Is 'Sued in Rare Legal Case | Ottawa--(CP)-- A case believed to be unprecedented in court his- tory anywhere in the world will be unfolded in the Exchequer Court next month, It is an intriguing patchwork of modern history, war, and their complexities, and the unfortunate case of a French civil servant who has been forced to change his na- tionality three times. The case is that of Jean Kieffer, a retired post office worker in Stras- bourg, France, against the secre- tary of state for Canada. Evidence is expected to show a startling suc- cession of "events dating from the Franco-Prussian War through two world wars to the present day. chase of 190 shares of Canadian fer back in September, 1918, just War, Mr. Kieffer was residing | him an enemy dlien as far as the May, 1950. Margaret Fleming, S t ary. (102a) ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, April 21, 1950. I will not be response ible for any debts contracted in my name by my wife, Mabel Olenick. Dated at Oshawa this 24th day of April, 1950. Signed: Nick Olenick. (My2,9) ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, April 24, 1080, I will not be respons- ible for any debts contracted in my name by my wife, Mrs. Ann Gray- bouski, 300 Festubert St. Dated at Oshawa, this 24th day of April, 1960. Signed: John Grzybouski. (My 29) Classified ads are sure to pay, Phone 35 with yours today. York and turned in on a C.P.R. re- financing scheme. This resulted in Mr. Kieffer réceiving 760 shares for his original 190 shares. It was then that the secretary of state's officers seized the stocks because they were on a Canadian company and in the possession of an enemy alien. Became French Citizen fer had become a citizen of France in' good standing. This came about through the directions of the Ver- sailles Treaty, which returned the Pacific Railway stock by Mr. Kief- | | Strasbourg at the time, which made | | before the end of the First World | action { secretary of state's department was ned. Later the stock was re- | gistered through the H.W. Schnie- der Banking Corporation at New | New Super-Gasoline Is Not for Jalopies Quietly with little fanfare, new high-quality gasoline has been drifting onto the Canadian market. By the time the heavy summer motoring drive is on high-budget advertising campaigns will be telling the motorists all about fit. This is the first of a long- promised, super - quality gasoline, product of the sweeping postwar refining swing to fluid catalytic cracking process -- the process de- signed to turn out gasoline with new highs in anti-knock value for use in modern high compression automobile engines. Hall-mark of the new product is record tops in octane rating ' (scientific measure- ment of gasoline's abllity to with- stand knocking or pinging on rapid acceleration), Recently, at least three Canadian refining companies hoisted the oc- tane quality of their premium grade gasoline to approximately 90 (research method); a fourth refiner will follow suit within a month. or two when his new Montreal "cat" cracker goes on flow. This is a new all-time high in gasoline oc- tane number for Canada and marks the first sharp postwar step for- ward in a trend that top petro- leum experts claim will go to 100. Alsace-Lorraine region -- in which Mr. Kieffer was born and lived--to- It will revolve around the pur-| France. Apparently Mr. Kieffer received no satisfaction from authorities in Ottawa, so in 1932 he started court in the volved stalled. off any action until just before the Second World War. During the Second World War the Germans took over Mr. Kieffers' home town and again he became ar enemy alien in the eyes of Otta- wa officials. After the war, Mr. Kieffer again started proceedings. Last November the British consul-general's office sent its re- presentative to the new-retired civil servant's home to record his evid- ence. Mr. Kieffer's sworn statement will be read into the evidence ths | June. However, by this time Mr. Kief- | Mr. Kieffer figures the custodian of enemy alien property owes him $80,000 on dividends and interest de- clared on 760 shares of stock since its purchase. Exchequer , Court: | against the secretary of state. But in| the distance and technicalities in- Every refiner is keeping close tab on the rising octane trend of his competitors' gas and a sharp octane war could develop if it wasn't foi the auto manufacturers. - . Here's the situation, Since. it takes high-compression engines' to get full value out of the high-test gasoline there is not much' incen- tive for either refiner or auto maker to stage a one-man cam- paign .to. get .too far ahead of the other. The new high octane gaso- line 'will - just about 'satisfy the most exacting of 1950 high com- pression engines (with = average compression ratios of 7.5 to 1). That doesn't say anything about what the auto makers might have up their sleeves for 1951. But by that time' all the major Canadian refin- ing companies will have their new cat crackers in full operation. All the early production kinks will have been smoothed out and a: furtheg hoist in quality will be in the cards. But as the octane rating of the premium grade rises the second grade quality now around 84-85 will be moved up proportionately. This trend, plus a tightening in, the motorist's - fuel 'dollar is producing a 'sizeable swing to second quality gasoline. An official of one of the big four in Canadian refining com- panies tells The Post that sales |are now running around 60 per | cent second grade, 40 per cent pre- | mium. Just about two "years ago {it was more like 70 per cent pre- {mium, 30 per cent second grade. | The gasoline 'advertising cam- | paigns about to come into full {voice are designed among other things to make the motorist much more octane minded. But choosing {the correct octane gas for his par- { ticular car will be no simple mat- | ter. Unfortunately there is no hard {and fast rule to go by. 'Two similar | type cars coming off the same as- | sembly line might differ in their | octane requirements by as much as |5 to 10 points. Here is perhaps the best testing | method for the average motorist. | If ignition timing is set to a manu- | facturers' standard and the engine |is free from excess carbon and yet | a loud pinging is heard on accelera- | tion «then a higher octane gasoline lis likely to improve performance. | Until recently, Canadian oil | companies have been lagging be- | hind the US. industry in this | business of octane numbers. Some | motorists with new, higher com- -- i bh OUR 1950 e coal BUDGET PLAN READY RIGHT NOW! 3 BIG ADVANTAGES Convenient s-p-r-e-a-d out LAST YEAR [crossworD - - - By Eugene Sheffer Z 13 7. CN 7 7 50. drenching 52. Spani gentleman 53. street rail- ways (abbr.) 54. observe 55. wise counselors 56. female deer 57. S-shaped 6-2 VERTICAL 8. young 1. crab roe salmon 2. declaim 3. regarded 4. Chinese plant b. city in Nevada 6. cuddle 7. feigned 9. accumulated 10. Brazilian coin 11. unit of heavyweight 16. bars of cast metal 20. small pies 22. before 18. solar disk 19. weasel-like web-footed T 40. restaurant car 44. Indian tents 47. feminine name Answer to yesterday's puzzle. (¢) Distributed by King P 25. land-measure 26. by 28. propel 29. church o v p [© service 30. ship diary 31. feminine name 32. trying out 34. primary color 37. necessitated 39. imitators 41, clamor 42. eagles 43. raves 45. cry of Bacchanals 46. card game 48. donkey 49 d 51. employ Average time of 48. living Glasgow Tea Rooms Remain As Monument Glasgow + -- (CP) -- Tea-rooms known to generations of Glaswegi~ ans are to be preserved as a monu- ment to Charles Rennie Mackin- tosh is described by the Glasgow Herald as the city's greatest archi. tect. Glasgow Corporation's general fi- nance committee has recommended that the city purchase the premises on Ingram Street formerly known as Miss Cranston's tea-rooms. ' After 50 years they 'are much the same as when Mackintosh designed them: a Chinese room with a maze of grilles and flamboyant orna- ments, a panelled smokeroom and fireplaces with wrought-iron gates. The original high-backed chairs are still there, as well as the solidly- simple tables, specially-designed cutlery and' decorative umbrella stands. Mural decorations . by Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh, the archi- tect's wife, reflect the influence of Aubrey Beardsley and the pre-Rap- haelite school, ROYAL ARTILLERY COMMEMORATION A fine literary memorial to the 30,000 Canadians and Britons who served in the Royal Artillery and died in the last war has been pre- pared by the regiment and will be published on. May 10th; the "Royal Artillery Commemoration Book," is a picture in broad outline of what British gunners did from 1939 to 1045. The book is largely written by the gunners themselves, and de- scribes actions as different as the manning of the ack-ack batteries which brought down the German bombers in Britain and the man- handling of artillery through the Burmese jungle. TASTY FOOD HELPS END "WS CONSTIPATION 1 '""For years suffered the mi of constipation. Remedies? I tried 80 many! It took a simple dai ly dish of KELLOGG"S ALL- BRAN to end my A constipation! Many thanks!" Mr., T. Patterson, Bay St., Hamilton, Ont. One of many unsolicited letters. You, too, may find lasting relief from constipation due to lack of dietary bulk. Just eat a serving of eiapy KELLOGG'S: ALL-BRAN daily, drink plenty: of water. If not completely satisfied with results after 10 days, send the empty box to Kellogg's, London, a DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK g furnace! to burn evenl more heat for Jess fuel! trips to basement! pression engines have not been able to freely obtain the proper gasoline for top performance. But Canadian refiners faced with an ever more phenomenal postwar demand for their products than the U.8. had to make a choice between supplying a larger proportion of the market at the expense of a small minority with special demands or vice versa. --The Financial Post DIETARY SUPPLEMENT Free milk for school children in British schools was introduced. EFFERVESCENT Kempsey, cleaning away silt, coated his win- dows with cleaning materials and left, it to dry. Somebody finger- wrote the message, "Bismuth as Usual." FIRST IN UPPER CANADA lished in Upper Canada was the | Gazette, which made its appearance |at Newark (Niagara-on-the-Lake) | in 1793. i Australia--(CP)--After | a flood here one of the chemistsy The first newspaper to be estab- | | 100% SATISFACTION AT ALL TIMESI ---- AUTOMATIC HEATING ---- COSTS LESS WITH COAL OR COKE Invest less than $40.00 for equipment and have an automatic regulator installed on. vour. present Fuel costs can drop as much as 20%! You will save money because a thermostat regulates draughts automatically . . . allows fuel . + . eliminates waste. Assures You save time! Heat is quickly controlled by regulator. from upstairs . . . cuts down frequent SOLID FUEL GIVES SOLID COMFORT AT SOLID SAVINGS! LOOK FOR THIS EMBLEM! * Dealers who belong to the NATIONAL SOLID FUEL INSTITUTE | Guarantee YOU dollars--and a producer. have not been successful. Over the past 30 years oil men have worked continuously against these odds. In western Canada Imperial alone drilledgl34 wells-- all dry--before the Leduc field was discovered in 1947, . But the end result has been new oil for Canada and benefits for Canadians. There are thousands of new jobs. Millions of U.S. dollars are being saved as the need for imporfed oil lessens. 'And, * * ° as another natural resource moves toward full development, the * Canadian standard of living climbs higher. . These are real benefits to Canadians and they will increase as more oil is found. But to find more oil and to spread the advantages it brings, oil men must a to work . Sometimes a job that must be done can't be done without great risks. gainst long odds. Wildcats are risky To an oil man a "wildcat" is a well drilled in an area where oil has never been found. Drilling a wildcat is a risky undertaking and a costly one. Some wells have cost more than a millien For that reason oil men make as certain as they can, before drilling, that there is a good chance of finding oil. They use the most moderna instruments and skills to locate each drilling site; but still the odds are 20 to one against them. Only about one wildcat in 20 becomes 1. THIS PLAN SAVED ME REAL MONEY. \ THATS WHY Im ORDERING EARLY RIGHT Now o Payments. Easy ferms fo suit you Ne worries! Coal is deliv- o ored in plenty of time . : ; you're all paid vp before next winter Handy coupon payments eo make household budgets run smoother all the year" 'round Bringing you oil is a big job . « . and a costly one About Canada's Oil--Canada's proven oil reserves now amount to about one billion barrels, as compared with only 72 million barrels in 1946, It is estimated the oil industry will spend $150 millions for exploration and development in western Canada this year. © Thi n's a real "life saver' for pinched pock ks! Spreads out payments! Easy to usel Saves you money because you get the benefits of special Budget Prices. Don't delay. Start the 'blue coal' Budget Plan today. THE SOONER YOU START THE MORE YOU SAVE -- Phone today Lander Coal Compan 43 KING ST. WEST PHONE 58 ° "FREE FURNACE INSPECTION . ++. CON save you 'as. much as 30% on next winter's fuel, - bills. Get your free inspection 'now. No obligation. Last year Imperial drilled or shared in the drilling of 70 wildcat wells. > vl Wells drilled by Imperial to find and p oll in C during 1949 totalled 231 miles in depth. . fo IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED IMPERIAL €sso