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VACANCIES—MALES A CAREER IN PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING There are bright and encouraging apprenticeship prospects for boys leaving school in PrintingNew Zealand’s fourth largest industry. With a wide selection of specialties. boys would be wise to investigate the opportunities. The training is sound, wages are good, advancement steady, and Printing is an industry with an assured future. A minimum of 2 years’ Secondary School education is required for apprentices. In certain sections of the industry boys receive three weeks’ schooling in Auckland during each of their first three years. WOULD YOU LIKE TO INSPECT A PRINTING FACTORY? As there are still some vacancies for apprentices, the Canterbury Masters Printers’ Association has arranged for a visit to a modem Printing Works. If you are interested in a Printing career telephone or write to the Secretary. Canterbury Master Printers’ Association, P.O. Box 381, Christchurch, ’Phone 65-993. Would boys interested in inspecting a Printing Works contact the Secretary before next Wednesday, December 14., Inquiries from parents are welcome. 7345 ACCOUNTANCY JUNIOR A firm of Public Accountants has a vacancy for a boy leaving school wishing to study accountancy. Good training will be given in all aspects of the profession, and promotion will readily be given to a suitable applicant. Duties will be varied and interesting. Please apply in writing to: P.O. Box 1045. CHRISTCHURCH. 9357 AWATERE COUNTY COUNCIL COUNTY ENGINEER APPLICATIONS are invited for the position of Engineer to the Awatere County Council. Commencing salary £l5OO p.a. rising to £1650 in three annual increments. Modern home available in Seddon for moderate rental. Copies of conditions of appointment may be obtained from County Office, P.O. Box 21, Seddon. Applications close at 5 p.m., on January 31, 1961, and should be addressed to the Chairman, Awatere County Council, and endorsed “Engineer.” W. F. KNUDSEN. County Clerk. 7921 ACCOUNTING CLERK WEEKS, LIMITED WILL have a vacancy for a youth leaving school with University Entrance. This will be an excellent opening for a lad intending to study Accountancy, the Company being an “Approved Undertaking” in accordance with N.Z. Society of Accountants regulations. In due course the successful applicant would be given opportunities in the fields of Financial, Cost and Management Accounting. The Company is expanding rapidly, and offers a bright future. Telephone for an interview with Mr Perkins. Acountant. ’Phone 65-553 WEEKS' LIMITED, Cnr. Tuam and Madras streets. 9317 APPRENTICE WANTED New Year, two years’ secondary school, for the Fibrous Plaster Trade. Shirley district. £5 week to start. ’Phone 77-411 after 6 p.m. 7551

RANDOM REMINDER jp \ \ • 0 \ NX / /1 /X 1 g Ayl v y s|) I 1 1 W I BALLERINA ABSOLUTE Even the scroogiest father pressed itself at an early torium is fastened on its will probably admit, to age by more or less grace- own child and no other, himself anway, that the ful cavortings about the Then, as she executes an expense was nearly worth- kitchen when they played elementary fouette he perwhile when he watches his that “Swan Lake” record ceives that she has talent, youngest daughter appear- on the radio. It was then. Perhaps one day she may mg on stage at her annual he remembers, that he de- be another Rowena Jackballet recital. She cuts a cided she should be taught son, climbing to fame from charming, nay radiaht, ballet when she was a the boards of the Theatre figure as she forgets her little older. He wfaces Royal, to Covent Garden steps here, stumbles there, slightly as the memory of who knows and even to and canons into her part- those bills comes flooding the great Bolshoi itself A ners in between. He well back—to dancing tuition prima donna, no ballerina, remembers the day she etc., to 15 yards of nylon he muses, the toast of the was born, a wonderful net to 10 yards of tin- world. fragment of feminine sei, ribbon, to five yards of The reverie is broken by beauty after a run of four satin, to one pair of danc- an interruption from his husky boys. Her daintiness, shoes . . . But he youngest son seated beside he recalls, became appar- soothes the bruise in his him. “If those girls have ent even before she could chequebook by imagining to get up on their toes to walk, her love of pretty that she is the cynosure of be seen properly," he asks clothes was apparent even aII eyes in the theatre. with devastating lo’ic from the bassinet while Actually, she is not; every “why don’t they get some her love of dancing ex- Patr of eyes in the audi- bigger girls?”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19601209.2.251.5

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume XCIX, Issue 29383, 9 December 1960, Page 28

Word Count
765

Page 28 Advertisements Column 5 Press, Volume XCIX, Issue 29383, 9 December 1960, Page 28

Page 28 Advertisements Column 5 Press, Volume XCIX, Issue 29383, 9 December 1960, Page 28