.' iiiiRE SPEED EFFICIENCY The installation q: The Guardian's i which is now in operation after sev- en weeks‘ nuous work, marks a period in the printing annals of ‘ - Prince Edward Island. Capable of frilnningoffsixteenllagqofnewll printatilienmolsiiodilcopies per 7 houratasingleoperation. thisprus . is a marvel of modern mechanical . duign and completeness, and will undoubtedly give great satisfaction ‘ I m the pilblicgenerally and w adver- " tisers in particular. The installation ofthe new ‘press was a work requiring great skill, and was completed under the direc- -tion of Mr. H. G. Peace, press erec- ior for Griffith's Press Company ‘of New York Oity. Mr. Peace. who basbeeninthepresserectlngbusi- 'ness ior upwards of fifty years. and -who has travelled practically , all over the world in the interests of the placing of every piece of ma- 7chinery in the press. l-le was cap- ably assisted by Mr. Charles Young press operator for The Guardian. The electrical equipment necessary to operate the machinery. ‘including a5h.p. starting rnotor,a50h.p. motor, main drive, and the con- trol switch boards, was supplied by the Cutter Hammer Electrical lhuip- ment Comluny and installed by the local firms of Palmer d: Watson and the Mariflme Electric Company. FOUNDATION WORK One ‘ imagine the thousands of various parts, large and small, viii-cl. g: to make up a press of the modern design of the Duplex Rotary; v Iowa-i necessary first w lay a~solid '5 foundation of reinforced concrete l i foot gliiqx, l: m: deep, fol-min; a " .base 24 feet by 12 feet. which work <wns carried successfully ‘out by hdafsrs McDougall d: Mcaulay, oon- -ouwi_-;._ _ In addition to the erection of the press it was necusary to install‘: bcomplete new equipment of cutters, mat moulding machines:- trinuner, finishing block, searcher, casting box, cetc. ‘ An entire change in the electric y‘ ~circuit was also ..hecessary, from .t.rarlsfonners in the street w massive ,. swtlichboards in the press room. I _Mr. Peace. the expert in charge oi the erection work. was in Porto Rico, "when he received word from his firm w proceed to Char ‘tetown to erect rthe new press. f‘. ‘i . i . . THE MODERN PIES! . . Wrhe printing of newspapers icons of the great industries of the mod- ern world. in every important town or city in all civilised nations the daily newspaper is ‘ubiquitous. Huge machines, the product of the won- derful inventive genius which in the last hundred years have transform- » a ed the world, are constantly , r‘ _ -iorth_a flood of printed lhevfl f8- cording the spinning! oi the ‘day in all quarters of the globe. March- ‘ing abreast, the Telegraph. the Itali- p way, the Airplane, the Radio and .5, ' the Printing Press have reduced the -, “ “w asingle point, and that t is located whplesoever a per- cam who can road may chance to as. .Butweareconaiderlnghereonly its» press and its enormous product, e thousands oi tons of paper print- dayintheyear. Indthl mmtlpllsd thousands of men em- ployed in the industry. The allied art a lmwmins h" m“ i-hll . . g result possible; and this aft. ‘" amPlWM in the Induction. of pewapapers, u only sixty years will g_ m» alnwising, therefore that therein remained to be ' Duplex Tilbular Plate Rotary Press, ' whenprlntdngmonrthan eight. pages of reducing speed one- ‘ . because oft-ha necessity‘ of eeting the sheets. ‘ nus-nannies” ols Style Press A Momentum Change- Considelq the. millions. oi these send-cylindrical plates-in use in the world every z day>arld compute the resulting .aggmgaie loss of- time,< in an industry iin which lthe most essential ielement.~ is .i.ime,—and then estimate the value’ to the world of an-invention which, by a ailnplechange in the form of the plateflnvolying» no additional ex- penseorother- disadvantages, pre- vents ‘all this enormous waste! Buch an invcntiqnisnow ademonstrated and an established fact. It is the TUBULAR. -PLA-'l‘.l_l ‘ Charlottetown Guardian. , , _ _ I » The grdatest and most __vl_l._luable invent-ions in usually the most sim- ple andinvariably _lead"w_ the re- mark. “Whrdid nobody, ever think oi this before?" It is thus with the invention to which .we'refer above. Simply Nilucing the diameter. of the vista cylinders. one-hall and who: the stereotype plates in the form ‘o! a cylinder. brings; this plate, when imoperatiorl, all the time incontact with. the web and, it will print pel- hour precisolyjdouble the number of pages printed ,by the went-cylin- drical plate heretofore. in universal use, which _is idle half the time the press is in operation. _- , , A Great Invention _ The -TUBULAR- SIW-EOVYYPE PLAT! is one of the great inven- tions of ‘the agef It xis destined speedily to supersede the ‘semi-cyl- indrical plate in all progralsive- news- paper oificu} ~Illd, ltlnlateiy. m render it obsolete. That is the rea- son The G v ‘selected the pu- pie! mullin- m- installation. I In many rupeeta thrmost re- ' ' product of the“ Duplex Works,‘ it was ail-st. naturally, ’de-‘ veloped m- m» two-‘plate-wide 45w field, where the need for economical stereotyping is most Before its introduction then was‘ no U10!- oughly - satisfactory machine ior printirw daily‘ newspapers with ‘cir- culation or with number‘ oi pages we large thrills Dilpler-Ilat-Bed Web-Perfecting Press, recently in use‘ by ‘lhfflilardian. bufwo small to iiItifrthe-great initial oostand the expense oi operation ofa metro- politan- outiit. The ‘city presses available-for this large class oi daily paparswhioh includes The Guardian were handicapped by the expensive nedflity. otduplicate plates, and, i: 522%? i Jolie" . . menu iille‘ , . . . s-nsfiabl-us-s . piateathevariatioll. plate oapaeityoitnaprenianein- may each be made lighter than those of other presses. All these great advantages are secured, by the intro- duction oi TUBULAR. PLATES, an entirely new feature in newspaper presses. ‘ New Press Widely Used As is well known, this Tubular- Plate Press, built two plates. wide and thus adapted to the intermed- late city field, has been on the mar- ihem are now in daily operation throughout Canada, Great Britian, the ‘United States and in foreign countricsJTo adapt. the machine w the 1 requirements oi j metropolitan newspapers. it was very y that it should ‘carry four-page wide ‘webs. It has recently been developed ior this purpose and is now in equally successful operation’ in‘ metropolitan offices‘ in increasing numbers. The Tubular Plate The Tubular platsw-which gives its name to the press-marks the greatest advance in the art of news- paper printing in the last half cen- tury. It doubles, the product, while the reason may not at first be- apparent, the explation is, never- theless quite simple. Up w the time of this invention all rotary news- paper presses were_ equipped with semi-cylindrical plates and, as a con- sequence, when such presses are in operation, every plate in the revolv- ing cylinders ;is out of contact with the web and not. printing Just. half the time. Therefore, half the move- ment and hall the time is wasted. or, in other words, half the efficiency of every plate in'i.h_ey press is lost. The tubular plate avoids com- pletely this tremendous‘ waste. In this machine there is substituted for the semi-cylindrical plate a. plate tubular in form‘ which completely encircles the smaller cylinder upon which it is placed (excepting only a margin-space) and which, as the cylinder revolves is on the web and printing all the time. The result is that a. press equipped with tubular plates as compared with one equip- ped with semi-cylindrical plates will. in the some time, and running at the same rate of speed, print precisely double the number oi papers. t Speed! '- Let us consider s. press of the old style, carrying. sixteen semi-cylin- drical plates and being operated at any given rate oi speed. Qach one of, these plates is printing half the‘ time and is idle the other half. In the; tubular-plate machine, carrying sixteenplates, each plate is printing all the time, and it is clearly evi- dent that‘ if it be Opellikd with ‘ills same peripheral- speed of cylinders it will do precisely‘ double the amount of workuThe Tubular-Plate Press, moreover is more; simple and more easily operated than one of, the old style. The ‘advantages reaultilu-from this principle . ofcorlstrustioil are prnporiionaielyjthe some in presses carrilfll any number of plates. lxtra Pages - ‘there is still another very linsoljtubulu plum. ~m number olpsgespolsibietobeprintedvar- iisonlybytwmupioihafiiilplatling capacity oitho-pressfwbereasin ptfles carrying" semi-cylindrical E ‘ket for several _years. Hundreds oi ' and ‘ bola-ball with l. layercf clean-ab- aklvantllewhich issecursdbythl_ Miiady: Beautiful - I s‘; Lou use. - = n-n-n imcnsmdhl. usssaos 4 ‘Thlsls thejge _oi machinery. Me- chanical devices have ‘invaded every field of-work; including those of the physical culturist and the oosmetlcian. Some of these beauty aids‘, like the large _ "vibrators. are ex- pensive, motor-driven ,aifairs: others, like the potion are very simple and are opera-ted by hand. ' All ~.device_sfof this sort. however. have. _ ‘“ ' in ‘ That ishtheyare substitutes for hard mas- sage. -Thos__e.oi us who _callnot.ob- tain the services of a masseuse now have the opportunity w massage our- selves with thejlglp of rubber rollers, suction cum.» electric vibrates-a. etc. Today I am», going to descrihesome home-made massage implements that l-hops willmake this type oi beauty wept-merit easier ior my readers. - WW1! mil-Mil! undertakes to mas- sage her own face there is necessar- ily a certain amount of nervous ten- sion in_her‘ fingers ‘andiaoe. ‘which. o! course. makelit impossible for her w relax as she should. nus element is lessened when a massaging device is held and opaated in one hand. zThe patter “isperhaps the best- knownexatnplsof mechanical mas- sage. It may belnade by stuffing a large volour powder puff with cot- ionand attachingitfirlnlywtha end_ of a slender, flexible rod or whalebarle from a corset.‘ ‘A gentle ,,(_~ mashed-go with the patter u especially good for sailow. wrinkled skins. , If vigorously it helps reduce double chins and overfat choeh. _ Petting massage brings the blood to. pals cheeks and improves the muscular tune‘ oi the iacs. A rol- ler;w_ii.l1i__a.aoft_ rubber surface and a convenient handle is good for mas- saging ileahylfaoes and necks. A lnpdiiicat-ion of the roller may be made by covering a two-inchrub- aorbeqlt; The. cotton may be moistened Iiih-lblaachhgoranas- tringent lotion. frhe ball may than be mllespn ti," with the palm of, ihfhand. ' is a good way to apply skin-icningqotion after a tactile-pennant. i ‘ l Anotherl rolling..devica. may he facility; while other ootary presses oannotprint lonu silly-an. aim or to uiafioqusincjjsagwlui equal ‘ DUPLEX TUBULhK-PIJATE ROTARY PRESS Now INSTALLED BY THE GUiiRDlAN hen No. d in pen l0 is third with 53 ....D..,Y Argument AUNT HET gill Ito-ills * durum eggs 58.1 points. . .The pens leading. in production First Eliperimentsl Farm, Freder- icton, N. B., B. R. pen-d, 415 eggs. Second, Mr. '1‘. H. Foster, B. R‘. pen 13, 13.416 eggs, 885.4 points. Third, Ibrperimental Farm. Char- lottetown. Pen~l5. B. R... 395 eggs, 333.4 points. LETTER. OF SYMPATHY To daughters '0! the late Mrs. Isaac Sharp, Mrs. l-lenry Weeks, Mrs. in’ in get he!" girl! married of! earl!» Yifllfil think she tryin’ to get. ‘em off us. hands before they disgraced her." " “That salesman didn't pg] _ uoh attention in me. H; seemed to think that if he Jollld sell Ma we would both be sold.” "The way Sallie is schem-l m mo. LsmvdcoN-rgs-l- . Notes on the Prince Edward m.“ E3‘ 147ml Contest. For the Week 5'14!!! January zs, 1929. The Contest laid 4'19 eggs fm- u“, week which was lower than last. ",1, by 80 was. but 1a eggs highq- “m, lllt year. V The total Pl ‘uctlon is 5101 eggs. ‘ The Experimental Farm, Frederic. im- N- 8-. B. R.- pen s led the con- test for the week withsasggs. 41.0 pointi‘; Mrs: JJ-l. McPhaiYs B. R. Pen 591"" second with 44 em. 41.1 Will“; ‘Mr. T. H. Foster's B. R. Pen (l8 with dl eggs, 40.6 points, The Kenairlgwn Baby Chick Hatch. 817 8- R... hen No. Din pan 19m, taken the lead for individual laying with il-esrl. 5'13 points: Mr: n. o. IWilIWfWP-Aifilbiillrfw _ ". ‘paprdailyinaitaotienoiiiietilne. can printanyevennumberof - vibrating! v must keep their skin so smooth that ., studios have made it the official ‘soap in their dressing rooms. ' You, too, will , love the smoothness it gives your skin. ‘Golden Weeks, and Miss Ruby Sharp. ' We, your sister members of Pleas- ant Ynlley Women's institute wish to express i0 Y0" W!‘ BYlIlPI-lhl’ in Y0"? hollr of sorrow. Your ‘dear mother vice,‘ Ilhila. you know aha is llawli and Heaven ‘seems nearer and more real to us when our loved ones have gone before, we realize how sad your hearts are at this time oi parting. 4 , . . you at all times will comfort you more than any earthly friends can. In the passing of your mother we have lost a, valuediriend, although _,I._¢v'“ Jam oqm (For) and m; mam». he: loveliness inqiredl y l _, Smooth skin all-important; g . . . leading‘ directors ‘declare ‘.1 HE innocent: loveliness of. petal-T mooth skincan set heart-strings ~ When the close-up reveals the full charm of the screen star's smooth, soft: skin, a thrill of » emotion grips the audience. ' Famous directors say screen r-atara . even under the merciless glare of the close-up it is lovely. Nine out of ten screen stars use Lux Toilet Soap. There are in Holly- wood 451 important actresses, includ- lng all stars. 442 of these use this fra- . grant, white soap. All the great film ' .Nlll_l'ou_t el_ ran l! but Toilet has been called home‘ w Higher Ser- ‘ ~, He‘ who has ‘promised to be with - “There is} caressing qual? ity to Lux Toilet Soap that _ I have never before found . . except in costly French ~ soapir-my skin feels so soft - ' and smooth.” . - , unable ,to~ attend our nwdtinga, sin . was always interested in-iilb until and welfare oi-the community. Please convoy i0 youriatber. also , sisters and brat-tiers. our ainceremli- » pathy. _ ' - ~ - . .' signed in behalf oi the numbers oi our Institute: Mrs. H. I‘. McKay, Mra- a. n. McDowell. lsi-s soils s. McDonald. p . . ._ i Jan. 2s, i939. _ h . ___.,__.__._. .4 a . slintss _ ,1, New Song nil; ' ‘ ‘ _. -§1-lqw..l'rou ‘In: Dim: on the Piarm, after They've Clot lla- 1181?" W‘? \ ‘ ,..J'_.