Dryden Observer, 25 Nov 1921, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

DRYDEN OBSERVER < ine FAR 1 Deering USING IGE 0 N NTHEF CAN Helpiul Avice: as to Storing of a Good Supply. McCormick INTERNATIONAL Dairy Products Must Be Kept Coole A Variety of Plans for Handling i Ice--Good Drainage In the Ice { House Necessary. Bobsleighs. (Contributed by Ontario Department ot Agriculture, Toron to.) It is a very rare occurrence in Ontaric that the winter weather is not cold enough to make plenty of ice on our lakes, rivers, small streams, and ponds. We can, there- tore, feel pretty sure of a good crop of ice this winter. Ice is the only other means of cooling on farms, except in the case Chatham Intonation Bobsleighs are made OF of vers Tange aniiien wubte the. us well seasoned wood, and are exceptionally well 5 55 mca svsiem may be war ironed. No better Bobsleigh made. POS coming 0 op by Made with 2-in., 214 and 3-in. runners, cast or : steel. Either cross chains or stort reach. lack of a convenient supply in their immediate vicinities. This may not be an insurmountable difficulty, how- ever, as there is always the possibil- ity of ice being shipped in during the winter and stored for use in the summer, Dairy Products Must Be Kept Cool. If the quality of our dairy products [is ever to become supreme in the + world it will be necessary for the { producers of milk to get the natural { heat out of the milk as quickly as Dossible after it is abstracted from the cows. This will mean more effi- ecient methods of cooling than most farmers have to-day. Then would ice . be required by all dairy farmers, and they would have to secure it either : from nearby bodies of water, if pres- ent, or through some suitable organ- i lzation shipping it in as referred to | before. The superior article selling i at better prices would likely pay the ! producers to ship in ice if it were ; y. Many farmers now have ho hold refrigerator or small { cold storage plant for keeping the {daily food for the (able pure, sweet, i: and fresh, and never fail to store ice { for this purpose alone whether need- purposes or not. They Get Our Prices before Buying. J. S. CORNER, Oxdrift. or write to NTERNATIONAL HARVESTER CO. Ltd, Winnipeg, Man. AS TL PBHODOPE *YIDIBVVBIVCHODIEPDOROICE NEED 2D ® 2 { The Busy Store 5] 2 202606EDeBDOC on BOT BONO CHOOT E 026 CROP LESTE! THE MAKINGS of the ed for other find by experience that this practice is worth while. If much milk is pro- duced on the farm, so much greater : the need for storing some ice. : The Problem Deserves Consideration. The problem of siorage should be | considered carefully and plans decid- or upon well in advance of the har- ; esting of the ice, as oh Jy be Rese. ; fo vy to make storage bou or.a new one nay be I needed. Co 'uction work on the farm is more sily and cheaply done in good weather, so it is desirable . to get the ice s'orage ready for the {| next crop of ice before the wintry weather begins, or just as soon ag the fall work will permit. It may be necessary to do some of the work right away, e.g., concrete work, and leave the rest un'il later, in all probs ability until the freeze-up drives mea and teams off the land. Plans of Storage Vary. The kind of storage for the iee * erop will vary with the conditions cs the farm, and the ideals and tastes of the farmer himself. One thing ie certainly true, namely, that the siop- age need not be elaborate in come struction and costly in order to he efficient. Many farmers have used for years such inexpensive and sim= ple storages as a*large bin made &f old boards and planks and located im some well sheltered place, sueh ag under an open shed, in mow of barn, or in corner of woodshed, a simple single wall lean-to on the shady side of a building, an old abandoned silg, or any convenient enclosure well pre tected from the sun's direct rays. The form and style of the storage for the ice does not matter materially pre vided the following named conditions are faithfully fulfilled. These eom- ditions apply to any kind of gg storage house, and require special emphasis, 'as usually some of them are frequently overlooked. Note a@arg- fully what they are: Protection froma gun's rays, plenty of some material a poor conductor of heat about the ice on all sides, top and bottom, good circulation of air over the ice bin, i.e., between the top of the ice and . any roof that may be above it. In other words religiously avoid the . closed attic or loft condition in hot weather because stagnant air under a closed roof becomes very hot, and so 'heat will naturally pass down through the covering over the ice and melt it very fast. Good Drainage a Necessity. Are mow are in stock All Seasonabls Fruits and Delicacies D.W. SCOTT, al BIGEDOQONCHOBIDO 3 BEDOBO ER 2BDOBGEY Goi DLDOPOIP 2 Bv 447+ "2D IBV I0 PODS SRIWE nn PHOEBE SBOROBOD SORDID OV rs SW us Is your Furnace in nod condition for the long winter season? If* any repairs or alterations are needed, why not have them attended to befrire freeze-up is sctually upon you? Weare ma Bing a specialty of Furnace work and Stove repairs ai this time of the year. LATIMER' i Another condition is good drain- Shop age, either natural or artificial, un- sesmeemmmmrrmssme der the-ice pit, as water backing up -or failing to get away rapidly from the ice melts it quickly. Another, air should be kept from getting in at the bottom. . § another, cakes of _ 'ice should ed in the house on ; frosty day and no sawdust be put between them, only the ot des next the walls, Hardware and Furniture i a 9 but all © 2s between | cakes V ~ ghould fill rell en Ready for Hea y Duties | oy dy "snow ry ily Weal Lo of this is to get rid of the es and secure as far as pos- solid bleck condition of the not freeze blocks together Whenever any ice is re- The Case 10-20 is noted for ite reserve For belt work this tractor drives a ower. Owners state that these tractors Gase 20x36 thresher, fully equipped are always capable in emergency, for silo fillers, hay presses, feed mills, ete. bl extra hard plowing or for grades For all round use this tractor demands - t 1 : summel dry say. § 1 i [ ver govering is used, This 10-20 ig recommended for pulling your careful consideration, It has long r al Trig ns 0 three 14-inc's plows which it can pull proved its worth. It is economical in ie ; Jons are rel] pre be very/little loss tion, burning kerosene successfully. © very] 3 opera 3 ge within the bin or It is built of the finest materials. You et your monay's worth, 5 Botore you decide on your tractor, let us show you the advantages of the Case in sod or st' pbble. It alse, handles other implements usually re quirin, about six herses, such as two 7-/ foot binders, two 20-shoe grain drills, sis ¢ sedtion spike-tooth harrow, 8. fine. You'll then be better able to a to 10 for ,t doubledisc harrow,ete. Judge. a 2% iy on) p f : > FE, ; 7 i AS 5 KEROSENE F. 1. BRIGNALL, ; 33, H C an 1, 4 LYE - : yme, n ve easily grown in (ae C ks a TRACTORS Oxdrift, Ont 2A gar den, FORGOTTEN Delights Old-time' Elections Nominations for the federal house of parliament being now all in, there remains a period of only two weeks before the verdict of Canada is rend- ered by the votes of the people. The old joys of election have largely vanished. ' All writers who have noted the main characteristics of the campaign of 1921 allude to the same thing--the apparent lack of the old-fashioned enthusiam which "used to idolize ome candidate and heap scorn upon the other. People have been advised to "wait until the cam- paign warms up and then seg them go," but up to the present moment there is no sign of more than a sober and somber, staid and steady intexest in public affairs. From what can be learned from other places in the Dominion, the state of affairs is not unique to these constituencies, but is common all over Canada. and more to hear Hon. McKenzie King seak in the armories at Port Arthur. No speaker could have en- joyed a more courteous hearing, but at the close of the evening it was to be noted that the cheers which used to come spontaneously at the end of every meeting for the leader and his candidae, when any political party had a gathering like that one, were half-hearted and forced, with them the tiger. * Two thousand persons turned out at Fort William and Port Arthur, made masterly speeches, and was lis- tened to with admirable attention, but the joyous noises that formerly used to punctuate the speech of the great premier, the buoyant hilarity that seemed to be ready to pick the ban off the platform and carry him shoulder-high round the hall was lack- ing. Twenty years ago, it is not un- likely that the prime minister of the Dominion would have been escorted from his hotel to the hall by the youths of his party carrying torches, and no doubt a similar torchlight pro- cession would have been accorded by the young men of the opposition to their leader. But none of these things was even hinted at. and ready to fight for his chief or for his party. There was once 4 meeting in a small town in Manitoba at which | a flying wedge carried the "people's i set him up on a table, in defiance of | the protest of the chairman and of the enemy while Bob addressed the people. with that sort of zeal today. Some of the apologists for the pre- sent attitude of the public to the 2olities and politicians of 1921 say that this lack of enthusiasm is not due to paucity of interest, but to the immeasurable intensity of the appli~ cation of the brain power of this elee- torate toc the issues of the day,which hace so exhausted the voters that not even talnac would restore their nerves to normal. As in the case of the par- tot which refused to talk, it is surmis- ed of the electorate, and on little bet- ter authority, that it is doing a pow- erful lot o' thinking. It 'cannot be that the man on the street feels that Canada does not want the best government that can be given to it. It cannot be that there are less important issues today than there were a quarter of a century ago in the days of election enthusiasts. It is more than likely that the theory of silence is a sign of brains being at work is as erroneous as the belief that a certain man, who was afraid to speak lest his bad grammer should betray him, was a scholar and a student. t is more than likely, however, that we have a plethora of excitement during the last eight years and that the relief from the day-to-day anxiety --national, as to whether we would survive as a nation--personal, as to whether we would ever see again the man who was overseas--has: left us rather callous as to whether the counting of noses will result in plac- ing this man or that at the head of this or that goup of ministers. 'And to this may be added the feel- ing that the world has got to find its material, salvation, economically and not politically, and that the things which really matter in the intimacy of laws decree, regardless of who sits in the seats of the mighty at Ottawa. From whatever cause it comes, whether from an attack of brain. de- velopment or from an attack of brain fag, the result is to be noted in the lethargic way in which the campaign is moving.--Times-Journal. The Bride mos fly Yhoks stunning, while the groom Sppears, i hw and carried) The premier of the Dominion ook : 'ed quietly, but in view of last night's Bob," since Senator Watson, from the 14x20 -- 2 Its __.. entrance door of the hall to the plat- | 14 x 28 -- 2 Its 'orm at the other end of the building, 116 x 20 -- 2 Its. formed a body guard against assaults' 16 X 28 = 2lts __. But no one seems to be filled | 118 x24 -- 2 Ifs ele iain 200 18 x 20 -- 2 Its ___. Saban Less [18x28 -- 2 lts AR P0202 Ln din 2.60 20x24 -- Ss ol iE 295 20 x 26 -- 2 Its - 3.00 POISE a 3.15 le Te ELE TR 3.00 22 x 26 -- 20ts L_.._ 3.10 22x28 --210ts = 3.45 24x24 --21ts 3.35 24 x 26 -- 2 ts __ 3.40 X28 ZU l Lf HC 3.65 x80 --2Its __.._: 3.85 25x20 --2HMs iii 38.95 26 x 28 -- 2 Its _ 8.95 Ix No, IRE ot £29.25 the home will be settled as economic - 1x6 --= No.2 Fir eee. 24.25 1x 8or 10 -- No. 2 Fir ._...... 25.75 SHELVING No. 1 Pir. 848 : 36.75 No. 1 Cedar 84S oem, 56.75 No. 1 Spruce S48 i. 56.75 No. 1 Hemlock oof 41.75 WELL CURBING No. 1 Fir Random __io_..__... $34.50 hs LATH No. 1 Fir $8.50 i £ a THIRTEEN ARE DEAD DURING IRISH. RIOTS. BELFAST Nov. 23.--Belfast's long list of fatalities; 'the result of faction- al strife, began to grow early today, one victim being added: almost at the outset to the thirteen killed in out- breaks attending the: assumption of governmental powers by the new ul: ster parliament yesterday. ) They wes comparative quiet in the city after midnight and the day open- events little hope was entertained that ths quietude would be enduring; Fears of further trouble were realized by the time activities were on in Dock Street, a foreman who was engaging laborers there for the shipyards being icked off by a sniper. ' The foreman's whose name was - Brandon, dropped dead on th e spot.- ' Meanwhile, precautionary measures for safety were being taken by the working population, workmen's cars in the early hours proceeding without lights, so that they might have better chances of reaching their destinations without casualities. As aresult of the virtual vendetta against saloonkeepers many saloons in east Belfast have been closed. BELFAST, Nov. 22.--~Two bombs were exploded in a tram-car full of shipyard workers here this afterneon, killing three of the oc- was to have been held today between Mr Lloyd George and Sir James Craig the Ulster prmier, has been put off until the atter part of the week. Mr Lloyd George met representatives: of the sinn fein this forenoon in their first conference since the discussons with Ulster, and afterwards the prime minister communicated with the Wl- ster premier asking him to postpone their conversation until Friday. It was announced this afternoon that no further meeting with 'the sinn fein representatives was likely to be held until Mr Lloyd George had seen the Ulster premier. The government at today's' enters ence put before the sinn fein various alternative proposals for meeting Ul- ster's objection to the proposed all- Ireland parliament, as well as a sug- gestion that Ulster be left temporarily 8s she is while the rest of Ireland re- ceives fiscal autonomy, which would make its taxation less than that of Ulster. The sinn fein publicity department, however, declares the Dail Eireann can consent to none of these plans. The all-Ireland parliament, it declares, must be established at the outset, and not postponed for any term 'of years. It likewise insists that the parliament must be so constituted, that Ulster shall not have more than her propor- tional representation in the body. The sinn fein objects strongly #0 cupants and injuring 18 others. Decline to let Ulster Act. LONDON, Nov. 23--The conference on Irish settlement propositions which any proposal which would leave Ulster or any part of it outside the Irish system. The entire force of soldiers and police is said to be unable to cope with tha situation such as arose yesterday. Wholesale L and The season for Storm Sash i isright upon us. Order | now, and get them on before the weather gets 80 : 'cold you can't hang them No one seems even to be lie from us you buy them at properly. By ordering Wholesale Prices. Our Prices on some Stock Sizes. ss AR inary $220 2.75 2.25 2.50 rr 3 aor i 4 om a at 16x24 --2 Its __.. 26 x 30 -- 2 Its 4.25 Combination Screen CET Ra 12.00 8-10 x 7-0 -- 1-% orm mire 1275 28x28 ~--21Its ____.__.__. er. S448 BBP Uy 4.60 nT REE © SE Sr A 4.95 10x20 -- dls i 2B Ge ER oe A 2.80 Weg, 2.95 1222 ae GE a 3.15 12224 -- 41s. 3.30 2x26 bd Ue i 3.45 14x24 --41ts __.. -- 3.85 14X26 418 imei + 5.95 14 x28 me 4 1S coi. 435 Oriel Storm Sash 3-8 x 5-0 86.60 3-6 x 5-2 8.70 3-8 x 5-2 7.58 4-0 x 5-6, Glazed Storm Doors 2-6 Xx 6-6 -- 1-38 Leen. 28X68 -- 1% Li TO 2-10 x 6-10 -- 1-% __.. lo. - 7.80 3-0x70--1-% ____.__.__.__. 825 and Storm Doors. 2-6 x 6-6 -- 1-3 2-8 x 6-8 -- 1-3 All prices quoted above are F.0.B. Winnipeg Man. Our Lumber Prices. DIMENSION 2x4 --2x8--8x14... mei 331.50 2x 10 -- 8° x14 . rl 32.75 2x12 --F¥1e I. 18 and 20 add $2.00 per M : SHIPLAP 1x6 --No.1 Pir __...$20.25 1x%80r10 -- No. 1Fif coe. . 80.75 1x6---No. 2 Fir le... 23.25 1x8o0r 10 -- No. 2 Pip --....... 2475 BOARDS » 1x8ori10-- No.1 Fir _...__. 30.75 STEPPING No. 1 EG." Fir BN. coo $36.25 No. L8G Tir BN. oa 76.25 FINISH : 1x4 -- No. 1&2 Clear Fir ___381.00 1x6 & 8 -- Clear Fir oo... 84.09 1x10 & 12 -- Clear Fir. __.__. 67.06 "FLOORING 1x3 No 1&2EG Fir ____ 70.00 _ 1x4--~No. 1&2 E.G. Fir.__ 70.09 1x6--No.1&2 EG Fir__. 67.00 125m No 15s F.G. Fir 47.00 1 x 4 -- No. 3% Flooring __..__ 85.26 . CEILING 1x4---No1&2 Pir... 44.08 1x6-~No.1&2 Fir oo. 46.00 % x4 --No.1&2 Fir __.__. 35.00 SIDING 1x4 -- No. 1& 2 Fir Drop B44, 00 1x6 -- No. 1&2 Fir Drop __ 46.08 1x6 -- No, 8% Drop __.__.. 37.85 SHINGLES : No. 1, XXX Cedar _ $4.50 3.73 No. 2, XX Cedar ove. 1538 von TYRE BLOCK, i WINNIPEG ] { Manitoba. Wholesaler of Lumber to the Consumer.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy