Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 17 Mar 1892, p. 3

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come home vill grow a great covcnience, 0 any of their 511 in street. 'ph his house from is junior clerk can at prices to suit try surroundings in r Ruskin and Other ngrms has hem ;‘e to be found from led at fifteen hun- gy have just receiv- land. is an especial- [s and pretty cots the newest designs 3 1 higher figures, can L' is that the price plain figures, but which will necessi- Ig special induce- would have be titure was new 15 at least. .stead for $2, 01. a S, Hall Furniture, I Mattrasses, is junk at Dr at th ng aimed at. (3 found m the old 1 rcvciation; in fact fustrial exhibition in ms of anyone who nd mikes a tour nf ,uites. Odd piece e-a-tctcs, piano and of all the newest 'd and work-tables, nd cascls. cnown house is a visit to the 111: house of Messrs. :s. The cntireeSP ailing everywhere; 2 enormous stock :ct at their liberty- rerooms on Notre' :play of TUBE asy and Reclining bent wood furm- ent of ,ere: :et. c Pvicssrs. McGarâ€" ion on this floor. 5074. : Gaunty .iture. >inatx’on Chairs of' ,ses, Wardrobes, the Market. CHEAP Y ',e from a twenty. , and prices to a tour of â€"_â€"_ We have pow in our warehouse a " and. Plaster 1n barrels and bags, an 14 . Road and Dmces reasonable. “notch. One Price onlY- fore purchasing - '9 offer TAM r. w" «manta W in“. LETTER HEADS. .- NOTE HEADs, ifferent ALL KINDS OF Hamlin, ,1 WATGHMAN, 50 GENTS PER. ANNUM MAGISTRATES BLANKS, to the collapse of the Wholesale Grocers’ Guild the other day, it is more than probable that the result will be an appreciable drop to the consumer in the price of Granulated Sugars. FOR THE LENTEN SEASGN A Earrings, <a1t W’hite Fish, Salmon, Fresh Baddoc] tgrades Will arrive for Us this Our customers invariably ge inc stock early this week. .3; Earg f our now famous line of 2-50 Tea, - â€" - f0r131n.3.money DEAL Nefll’s Shoe Store. J OS." COOPER, 'T‘ZEIE five for_ us this week, and will be seld at the lowest :1 navarmbly get a share of the discounts glven Salmon, Trout, Labrador Herrings, Haddock, Fresh Salmon Trout, etc. See them be- 3a. earload of Beamish’s and Land Salt in Sack: AND PLASTIC-B CITY PRICEb .92. large portion of this shipment is Tea, The quality is un excelled At' Home Proprietor. THE WATCHMAN FAMILY GROOEB REAL ESTATE INSURANCE. FINANCIAL AGENTS. FIRE INSURANCE- The Actna. Fire Insurance Co , of Hart- ford, 001111., incorporated 1819, losses paid i1171 years about, $05,000,000, assets over $10,000,000, iL‘Ps‘Dlul'CLV the strongest; Ameri “an Co, in existence. The North British and Mercantile incor- porated 1800, paid up capital um. $3,500,000 tam] assets 455055005}. The N B ..\". M is the largest, and strongest (30. in existcnco. \Vc aim represent other Fire Companies of high standing, and 01” give suicst su- cuz‘it)‘ for the .owch mtm. LiFE INSURANCE- Thu Cmfcdcrutinn Life Association, of Toronto, issucs Policies l”(1)11[L‘StlL1)]L‘.ilH(31‘ three years. Flu-:1: from ALL ulcsx‘uw'rusz as to IHGSIUENCE. TRAVEL or occurxnox. T1103 0“ Annuity I‘Indowm‘nent, Policy : {Honk absolute mutuclmn against contin- mm .m of c an]; death. provides an IMYOME n 0111 :1 4c, and is a '40 )d {m utmeut Rate 15 to '20 per cent lower than ordin- ary rates. REAL ESTATh, \Ve have :1 large list of valuable Build ing Lots, Bx‘wkzuul Frame dwelling houses, Farm propcx‘blcs, and choice lots on Sbur~ 7L _-‘A In... Acnnu- I-.vrv._.v ‘ 7 geon Luke, whichwczm be had cheap for cash, or mortgage at] a low rate of interest. MONEY TO LOAN at a low rate of interest. Persons desiring to place their property in the market can have It advertised free of charge and will be sold or exchanged by us at a small commlsmon, nish’s Celebrated Grey Sacks. Convenient to IllllthLJ, L‘vvo Ava-., -V‘, Repreqent, the Beaver Line of Steamships plying between Montreal and Liverpool, Boatq large and well equipped and cheap rates of passage. Represent the Norwich London Acci- dent Insurance Co. Capital $1,000,000. Rates extraordinarily low and security un- urpassed. OFFICE WILLIAM-ST. NORTH OF KENT STREET. Lindsay, Nov. 19th, 1890.â€"-45-1y. KNOWLSON BROS. KNO’VJLSON BROS. KNOWLSON BROS. a ' ~;:r'~L;j'_.' .All men can’t be ‘ / Apollosof strength I and form, but all may have robust health and strong nerves and clear minds. Our treat- ment makes such men. The methods are our own exclusively, and where anything is left to build upon, the VIGOR OF MEN is ““5“” “m” ly, permanently restored. Weakness, Nervousness, Debflity, and all the train of evils from early errors or later excesses, the result of over-work, sickness, worry, etc ., forever cured. Full strength development, and tone giv- l en to every organ and portion of the KNOWLSON BROS. body. Simple, natural methods. Im- mediate improvement seen. Failure impossible. 2,000 references. Book, explanations and proofs mailed (sealed) free. Address, ERIE MEDICAL 00., . BUFFALO, N.Y. 1gs, Fresh water etc., etc. TEA. LINDSAY, THURSDAY MARCH The Imlians were the first; sugar-makers in America, and with their rude appliances were able to manufacture a kind. of sweet stuff, though it could hardly be called sugar, as the boiling was Gone, before the advent of the white man, by putting the sap in vessels hf birch bark and plunging red-hot stones into it. ri'his must have been a slow, tedious and dirty process, however The white mzm introduced better aPP1i “£91 uuces, and the pro El}\ duct was greatly 1m- . . onxaau I‘xun)...a“a..o.\..u‘ u\ u‘ "Elia-"1.1 ........4..(.....-...‘.-n 3-13.: nanulu‘ansalso:\.-\ I. It 1: [null-on-5::-nu:.unas-nna.\a(-.‘:una-| posr v. .n- The furnace may be made of common field stone, with a few bricks to straighten the top where the pan sits and about the door. It should be built to extend past the end of the pan, as shown in the cut. The top edges should be twenty-one inches apart: this will give the pan a. half-inch lap on each side, which is quite sufficient, the object being to expose as much as pos- sible of the bottom to the heat. The pan should eat perfectly level on the furnace, and for rapid work the sap should be not more than an inch deep while boiling, though it will require close watch- ing. A new beginner would do well to 1 keep a. little on the safe side and run it a no. ').'~.“L, o Uuu W ..-r . Spout. for etting olf syrup. FIG. 4.â€" C U. Iron side and end of pan; D D D, \v’vooden frame attached to pan; E E, Wooden cover made in two sections; F, Furnace door; G G, Grates; H, Place where sap enters; I, Smokestack. little deeper till he got used to it. The pen when set on the furnace should be plastered all round the edges with mortar to make the furnace perfectly tight, and preventing l the fire from reaching the wooden frame. The furnace should be so constructed that from a. little back of the grates the bottom gradually rises till about half way back it comes to within seven inches of the bottom of pen. Near the back end it is again depressed gradually. till at the end where it reaches the smoke stock it is fully twelve inches deep. This in to secure e good draft, without which it ie impossible to de . tepid work. ‘ . ‘ WIS L- -A‘ ‘m ‘k‘fl‘ ’1. I! v.- Tho Imoio luck uhuld b. not less thul .rn A I7, Q1153 it‘ GUNDEIDGE, Ont, twelve Tripp of this pace‘ ‘ ”a Round Like with» g A. :M 11ka lattin First as to the cost. The buckets and spiles can be bought together for $13.25 per hundred. The evaporating pan such as I . have described, fourteen feet long by 1 twenty-two inches wide, with a capacity of l twenty-five or thirty pails an hour, will‘ cost, complete with cover, about $14. Any 2 handy man can build the furnace, and a piece of old smoke stack can be got cheaply ‘ at any foundry. The trees should not be bored in tapping more than an inch and a quarter in depth. The deeper the tap the darker the color of the product, and vice versa. The s :p should not be allowed to stand long in the buckets or store trough. The quicker it is transformed into syrup the better. It must be gathered and boiled as fast as it runs. Any farmer who has a. few acres of maple should have one of these outfits. With care the utensils will last twenty years, and the work is done at a time when other work is not pressing, and the product obtained is a wholesome luxury well worth the time arid trouble of makingâ€"G. C. Gaston, in Farmer’s Advocate. .l by.)- After two years of extensive experiment l ing with the various methods of generating ' electricity for train lightning the Chicago Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Company built two separate tenders with the neces sary machinery for lighting and heating its ‘ vestibule trains. A recent issue of the Western Electrician illustrates one of the trains running from Chicago to Minneapolis the tender connected with this train supplying about 154 lights. Each tender is thirty-four feet wide, and is divided intc ; two compartments, in one of which is 2 ; tubular steel boiler for heating purposes. 1 while the rear section contains the I ‘ dynamo. 7 777L3-â€"- A: (Jan Electric Lights in Railway Cars city from \Vindâ€"Humc-Made E â€"Hardemng Plaster Casts â€" ' u, Mun-av. One of the most artistic portions of the equipment is that in the drawing-room. Over each chair in this car there is an in i candescent lamp most conveniently hung E under a fringed red lamp shade of tasteful design. The effect of the light shed by these lamps from beneath the two rows of ' colored shades on the sides of the car i: ‘1 most pleasing to the passenger entering : from the darkness without. The lamps it ' the sleepers are arranged in a manner that delights the weary traveler. The man 1 whose eyes have suffered from attempts ts i read his evening paper by the far-off and; dim oil lamps hung near the car ceiling find: i a. lamp not only at his elbow, but one that gives him the light from behind and oven ‘ the shoulder. Each berth lamp is placed within a drum, having two rotating shut ters, which can be raised or lowered when it is desired to use or shut out the light. As the shutters open on both sides one lamp does for two berths, the. closing ef the second shutter cutting ofi’ the current. Should occasion arise during the night to use the light, the simple opening of eithet shutter places the lamp in circuit. thw] Lost?» Load. W .lsllv ..vw»-».. ._ v )- Red F yfe, the standard of the North- :1‘ west, was a moderate crop. 1‘ ' Ladoga. did not promise well; was thin K1 on the ground ; straw weak,and head open. \‘Vild Goose was, if anything, s’ill worse. m ‘ Red Fern promised more favorably, al- is though it has never been considered a. reli- lg able sort. For general cultivation, it does d- 1 well in some sections. seed Grain Tests at Guelph._ Last. Sept-ember we gave a. review of the work on trial plots at the Ontario Agricul- tural College F a: in, Guelph, a. summary ‘of which may serire to freshen the minds of our readers. Of the fifty plots of soring wheat at, Guelph, al- though promising and very free from rust, few appeared to us to be growing close enough or sufficiently heavy to yield any- thing extraordinary. Of necessity, all re- ports of ploLs are slightly misleading, as the ground is meas- ured only to the out- side of the growing grain, while the crop has the benefit of a. large field, hence the heavy yields here in proportion pearance when growinw. lav-.0 Lu.- ‘4' .__--_ 0’ Colorado and Harrison’s Bearded made much the best showing, growing closely. The heads of each were ”well filled. ‘v .u "White F \fe was very like the red variety in appearance . . ’1‘, ___ .J. _:-IJ, “larva“..n.--‘ White Russian was later, although yield- ing well some seasons. “ It is not to be relied upon in many locali- ties, though in some it does well. Of the one hundred varieties of oats, only a few appeared to be worthy 0t cultivation on the best lands. CAMPBELL'S VELVE'! Doubtless some of the CHAFF. _ earlier sorts should be tried in localities where oats ripen late. Of these, Early Calder and Early Racehorse are reliable. Vil‘iv L any. a...-- “.7 --_'_-VV Of the moderately early sorts, Banner; \Iatrnet and Clus1er .me very much alike. The t“ 0 former have yielded well. 1 The \\ hire Cave is a particularly heavy cropper, - very heavy yields are reported last season. It has a strong, Sufi straw, standing fully 4:1.- feet, - berry heavy and- light s"".1111ed . 21 good milling variet” .. ‘ Earlx (irothl‘ 11111 1s (. xery handsome new sort from S11 edeu, and, like the White C111 e,ri1)e11s earlier than the black var1et-ia. It 11 .15 1 close, heax y .1ead, stands well and. is reported to haw: done exceedlngly we]! 11. lavim er grown. It is certainly one of the nvs‘, nz~otz1isi11g of the 11ewoat1s. All the fun-2 1311.: are \\ .111e. 1 lsxc Black Tartuian, than which there 1:1101‘», xcliahie sort, should never be 5::111el 0:1 ‘11111l w.1ich suits it, bu; grow- er $11111le. r2211umber 1t requires care in tho sews-110:1 of seed. â€"â€"Farmer s Advocate :4. o w- (‘11 (u is no more discarded ‘ ers must 1‘ selection u Owing to the comparative scarcity 0! water power in many parts of England for the generation of power for electrical pure poses, attention has been given to wind power, of which the country is well sup- plied. A small experimental plant ha been in operation at a flour mill near Lon- don, the windmill supplying sufficient power to run a. small dynamo. The current is used to charge a storage battery, fro- which a. number of arc and incandescent lamps were lighted nightly. Although the current obtained was small the experiment was successtul in demonstrating the vain of this torm at power for generating eloo’ tricity. The accumulators give out a. steady curb rent to the lamps, of course, independently l of any conditions of wind and weather, and ‘ practically the obstacles which have hither- l to stood in the way of running dynamos by n“ Homeâ€"Made Electricity. A French chemist who has been giving considerable attention to the problem (I ' heating and lighting from a single source 1 has devised a. novel stove, which in ap- ‘- pearance resembles an ordinary heating i stove. It is so arranged internally that the ‘1 waste heat is utilized for the generation a! ‘ electricity. This is secured by a number (i ; rectangular boxes of sheet iron, containing % the necessary metallic elements for furnish- W avuvu .u v... V wind-mills have been overcome. There in no reason why country houses standing on elevated ground should not be supplied with light from this source as well as with water. The cost of an installation should be in no way excessive, and that of operat- ing trifling. The current 01 amount, but. the seem to he favors used for storing u] nil lavish Subply. “I hsve a pair of suspenders for every pair of trousers [’vo got," he said. “Gracious How my pit: of “up“ er! hsve you got. 2” “One psir.” Electricitv From \Viml. These elements are insu- to the ap-

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