West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 23 Mar 1922, p. 8

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

.8 # KAR perirac t ractk 9 Get your Sale bills Neatly Printed at the Review Office. Cross & Sutherland Hardware Co Repairing promptly doneâ€"â€"all work guaranteed. Large can Royal Purple Stock Food, reg $2....1.75 Maple Leaf caoned corn, reg 20c, 8 tins for 1 oo t * _ Peas, 6 " _ 1 o0 *€ "* _ Tomatoes " " _ _1 oo Lynn Valley Jam, 4 1b pail, reg 80e for .... _ S0 Old City pure Jam, 4 lb jar, ‘reg 1.10 for .... _ 83 Shoriff‘s Orange Marmalade, 4 Ib tins, reg 80c _ 55 Lombard Piums, 2 ib tins, reg. 20c¢c, 2 tins ... _ 25 Black Currant Jam, 16 oz Jars, reg. 50c for.. _ 35 Finest Del Monte Red Salmon, 11b tin ‘talls‘ reg 50¢ for Cascade Salmon, tall tins, 1 lb size, reg. 20¢, 2 tins for Our motto is to sell for less and sell for Cash. Salada Tea, black or mixed, 2 lbs for .... $1 oo Galvanized â€" 1 bushel tub $1.00 Lanterns ... $1.00 2 gal. Oil Cans, Hand Made $1.00 100 1b sacks St. Lawrence Sugar 7.50 98 lb sack Pine Tree Flour, $4.35 Heavy Galvanâ€" ized steel pail 1 00 Bananas per doz. 39¢ Nice Fresh 3 Tin Pails XXX â€" Antiâ€" Rust Pails $1.00 Specials, March 24 and 25 BEGGS‘ STORE, Durham Plumbing, Neating, Tinsmithing and Electric $1.00 13 Bars 13 lbs Best Laundry Soap| Brown Sugar for 1.00 for 1,00 The Review and Daily Advertisâ€" OY fGF OHO yOUF.sa «ces esasvrerserrerree The Review and Weekly Witness SOF 1 YOUE..acvecsresserersrricessserres The Revi w and Toroute Da«ily Globe tor 1 YG&T...........c......... Phe Revyiew and Toronto Daily SEKE TOK 1 YOME.sssersixcerci¢eccise FREEâ€"With every $2 purchase not advertised a 25¢ can or bot. of Metal or Furniture Polish 2 sweat pads ... 1 50 Axes, regular 2.30 Dollar Day .. 1 75 M§. S. & Egyptâ€" ian Paint, per gt 1.00 lb tin, cup grease .....$1.00 Clubbing Rates * Limited, Durham 675 10 75 Ten roomed house, on Garafraxa St. south, Durham. Large light rooms. fine for boarders _ Barn, stable, hen house, and a lot of land. Convenient to stone crushing plant. Also a small house Apply to _ Miss Elizabeth Murdock, Box 65, Durham Whips, reg. 1.25 Dollar day .. ] 10 ibs axle grease Willow â€" ‘Clothes baskets, reg 2.25 Dollar Day .. 1.75 House For Sale or to Rent for /.‘.... RTwZ Finest Del Moute sliced Pineapple, 2} 1b tins reg 50c, each ...... Aunt Dinab cooking Molasses, reg 150, 2 tins Excelsior Dates in pkys, reg. 20c, 2 pkgs for Nice fresh Oatmeal, 25 lbs for.. .. s .ls Suniders caoned Tomato Catsup, 16 oz tin, reg 20c, 3 for o atss Challenge Brand Corn Starch, 5 pkgs 5 1b pail Golden Syrup, reg 55¢ each | .... Fresh Macaroni in packages, 3 pkgs........ Canadian canned Apples, 24 1b tins reg, 206, 98 lb sack Milverton Jewel Flour 4.00 24 lb sack Pie Crust Pastry Flour, $1 25 lb pail Dr Hess Stock Food, reg. 3.50... 2.80 Call and see us : Estimates gladly given 13 lbs Best Gran. Sugar for 1.00 1.850 Butter and Eggs Taken as Cash Store MARCH 24 2 Brooms for 3 pr Half Soles .. 1.00 4 Hame Straps .... 1.00 15 packages den Seed . Fibre Door Mats, large size...... 1 Willow Chaff Basâ€" kets ..........$1 00 at Beggs‘ Compact five room brick residence with woodshed, quarter acre lot on Bruce st. Durham. Good garden, well on proâ€" perty Warmcomfortable homein choice location _ Apply at Review Office, or on premises to owner, Residence for Sale 5 string Broom, reg 70c each JOHN G. BEATON, Durham AND 25 THE DUBHAM REVIEV ... 1.00 Garâ€" : 59¢ ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 25 Don‘t beat rugs such as Brussels or Wilton on the right side. Lay them face down on the grass, beat and sweep on the wrong side.. When replaced on the floors wipe the surâ€" face with a cloth wrung from hot salt water. This brightens and freshens the rugs. ; Don‘t wash all the curtains at one time and don‘t starch them. Use a little rice water or thin starch in the last rinse water. New curtains are not sta:ched; why advertise that your curtains are old by starching them ? 3 As stated, the tank is usually filled by a hand pump located in the kitehâ€" en or cellar. The pump used for this purpose must be a force pump in order to lift the water to the required level. If electricity or small gas engine were available either might be used to pump up the water. Sometimes the tank is filled by windâ€" mill and sometimes by an hydraulic ram operating at the spring a conâ€" siderable distance from the house. Write the Department of Physics, O. A. C., Guelph, for further partiâ€" cuars. Make modern conveniences for the farm home your special study this winter.â€"R. R. Graham, 0. A. College, Gueliph. Don‘t use water on waxed woodâ€" work. Rub with a waxed cloth, then with a clean fannel cloth. The tank itsell is usually conâ€" structed of pine or spruce plank, tonâ€" gued and grooved, well held together by iron rods and the inside lined with Al quality salvanized iron. A tight top should be used in order to keep dust and dirt out of it On one side near the top there should be installed an overflow pipe leading to the outside or to a sink or some fixâ€" ture below, preferably in the kitchen, so that the one who is pumping may know by flow from pipe when the tank is full. The tank should be large enough to hold at least three or four barrels of water. In some houses it is possible to arrange for running part of the rain water from the roof into this tank, in which case considerable pumDing is climâ€" inated.. The tank should be located preferably over a partition so that the weight of water would not cause a sag in the floor of the attic . A tight metal tank about five feet long and two feet in diamete: strapped to the ceiling above the bathroom might be used instead of the wooden one in the attic. The Filling of the Tank. Some ‘"Don‘ts" for Hous4â€"Cleaning. The Attic Tank System has given protty fair satisfaction where proâ€" perly put in and cared for, and thereâ€" fore has been roally worth while. It is doubtful, however, if many movre of this type of water system will be installed, as the more modern ones, which I will describe in subsequent articles, are very nmuch superior. The chief objections to this system are, first, the water tank is liable to freeze unless weH protected, the tank may spring a leak and seriously damâ€" age the interior of the home and the furnishings, the supply is not high enough to give good pressure, you have to wait a long time to get a pail of water, and as the tank must of necessity be protty small, pumpâ€" ing must be resorted to very freâ€" quently in order to keep enough water on hand; gnd lastly, the water has to be pumped up to the tank by hand pump and few people enjoy pumping even if the pumping is done indoors. How to Make the Tank. This system is popularly known as the Attic Tank System because the water supply tank which supplies water under pressure is usually loâ€" cated in the attic of the house. To get enough pressure to force the water through the hot water boiler and the coils in the furnace or kitchâ€" en range and supply any fixture as sink or bath tub with water at a reasonable rate of flow, it is necesâ€" sary to get the water tank a conâ€" siderable distance above the highest Axture. To secure say 35 lbs. presâ€" sure at the kitchen faucets the tank would need to be at least 80 feet higher than the kitchen, so you see that in order to got any pressure worth while the tank must be loâ€" cated at the highest possible level inside the house, hence the attle loâ€" cation. More pressure and hence faster flow at fixtures may be had by locating the tank outside the house on the top of a high tower, for example, just above the wind taill, but outside tanks are not popuâ€" lar for evident reasons. The System Is Not an Ideal One. My last article described how the farm pump on shallow wells may be located inside the house or .stable, thus doing away with the carrying of water. This arrangement, of ccurse, will not provide for water under pressure, and, therefore, a complete plumbing system is not posâ€" sible, nor is hot water made availâ€" able. To secure these great advanâ€" tages, it is necessary to either eleâ€" vate the water to some form of tank at least a few feet higher than the highest fixture in the house, or pump the water into a stroag metal high pressure tank against the enclosed air which when compressed into about oneâ€"half to oneâ€"third the volâ€" ume of the tank will create sufMâ€" cient power to force the water out when the faucets are opened. The first arrangement or system is usâ€" vally called the Attic Tank water system, the second, the Compressed Water System. Why Called "Attic Tank System," Useful for Rural and Small Town Houses. ABOUT THE ATTIG TANK Not an Ideal System, Howeverâ€" Something Better Later Onâ€"The Making, Installing and Filling of the Tank Described. (Contributed by Ontario Department otf Agriculture, Toronto.) water while at the same time ing ntore free air space, Dri also makes a soil more porous, by producing the same _ r/ Coarse sands retain leas water loose than when compact. Cuitivation and Drainage Pays, Loosening up a soil by cuitivation increases the pore space, and with loams, mucks and clays this increases their power to absorb and retain °_ ° C CTV2I5b process, and will allow tor sufficient contraction and expanâ€" sion. Ssound and rigid posts and proâ€" per stretching of woven wire fence are the lirst considerations in fence building. Regardless of the type of posts, or the height or make of a wire, the farm which is fencea stockâ€"tight is a valuable and mouey making farm in any section of the country.â€"Prof. John Evans, O, a, College, Gueiph, PSE t MPDOREnEN Autiharttaudics â€"i0.4.4 4 Large neavy wires not lighter than Nog. 9 in woven wirs fence are much more durable than finer wire, and a lasting itiprovement for the tarm, Hinged gJoints in the stays make the most subsiantial union, so that unâ€" gder pressure, the stays forceda out of alignment will spring back when reâ€" leased. Triple tension curves in the wire fabric will not be pulled out by the stretching process, ana will allow tor sufficient contraction and exnanâ€" Concrete fence posts properly reâ€" enforced and made trom suitable maâ€" terials, carefully selecied and proâ€" portioned, should jast indennitely, and are, therefore, a good investâ€" ment. Considerable vamety of surâ€" face finish and ornament, limited only by the skill of the indivad uai worker, can be given to the concrete corner, gate, and iine posts (Fig. 3.) ; uin on CDMNOT OW Snn dn\ /ukdviidh Cns o e e y is subjected. it must be Capa resisting and sustainimg shocks out benaing or breaking. However, every locality differs in | the material used for fence postsâ€" | wood, steel and cement are all used. | The supply of farm timber available, | or the prices and condition of the ] local market for the other commodiâ€" | ties determines largely the fence | post used, Oneof the most importâ€" ] a&nt factor in the construction of steel posts is the anchorage. The end and I corner posts and their braces should be set in concrete whenever possible, as in that way best results ana MaAxiâ€" muim efficiency and service will be secured (Fig. ~2). i A sieet post cannot possibly give complete satisiaction, no matter how lasting the material itseif may be, it it is not strong enough to withstand the use to which the average fence Pnd 2 NE s P The setting of wood posts in ceâ€" ment as commonly practiced is not conducive to the longevity of the post, because a waterâ€"tight union between the post and the concrete is uot secured, and ultimately decay sets in, By far the most effective way is shown in diagram (Fig. 1). The post is first notched as shown in sketch, and the concrete worked well into the notch. This sheds the water trickling down the post, and cannot possibly get between the post and concrete, and the iife of the post is considerably lengthened. A post concreted in this way, and kept painted, is practically immune from decay C That the end or corner posts bear all the strain, and are the foundaâ€" tion of the fence, is common know}lâ€" edgo to every experienced fence builder. They must, be well anchorâ€" ed, rigid and strong, and so conâ€" structed that they can be depended upon to give proper service at ali times, and under all conditions, The foundation carries the strain and must, therefore, be absciutely solid and permanent, so as not to permit the fence to sag. The prime factors in a fence are fair cost, durability and service,. The annual upâ€"keep of fences is considerâ€" able, and to the farmer a material that will do away with the expense of repairing, replacing, painting, or other form of maintenance, should strongly appeal to him as representâ€" ing true economy, almost regardless of first cost, The opportunity for economy is found, first, in using the kind of posts which, taking into acâ€" count both cost and durability are cheapest in the long run. in setting a post which will have comparativeâ€" ly short life, he loses not only through having to buy new posts, but also because of the additional labor involved in removing the old and setâ€" ting the new one. There is, howâ€" ever, great difference in the lasting properties of different woods, The average life of a fence constructed of wood posts cannot be safely figâ€" ured as greater than 8 or 9 years. For length of service cedar and white oak outlast all other woods. By treating the posts with creosote, coal tar or charing them, the cost of upâ€"keep might be materially lessened. (Contributed by Ontarto Depurtment oi Agriculture, Toronto.) LESSED is the farmer who, conscious in the security of his fences, can leave home on a day‘s business, or retire to rest at night, without anxiety as to possible depredation committed by straying cattle, or his own stock, to corn, roots, or grain, during his ab sence or rest. Brush, stump, and stone fencesâ€"relics of bygone days â€"â€"can still be seen here and there, but are rapidly disappearing, and are being replaced with modern upâ€"toâ€" date woven wire fences that are built, not with the idea of the smallâ€" est possible initial cost, but with forethought for the future, rememâ€" bering that quality and material as well as the design and construction of post fences are elements that deâ€" termine its life and service. Posts of Wood, Iron or Cement Can Be Used. Important Factors to Be Considered Are Cost, Durability and Service â€"How to Lengthen Life of Fence With COndue Costs. LATEST IN FARM FENCES must be capable of space. Drainage time allowâ€" results, withâ€" Each member 6f the staff is a Univâ€" ersity graduate and an experiened‘ teacher. Intending pupils should prepare to enâ€" ter at the beginningol the fall term. Information as to courses may be obâ€" tained from the Principa), The School has a creditable record in the past which it hopes to maintain in the future . wl.)urlndm is an attractive and hnmg n and good accommndation can obtained at reasonable rates. The School is thoroughly cquipped to take up the following ccurses : 1. Junior Matrienlation 2. Ertrance to the Normal Schools 3. Sentor Matriculation BHIGIBI | SCHOOL W CALDE , Town Agent Central Draug Store. Telephone No Parlor {Buffet Service from Palmerâ€" ston to Toronto on evening train. For full particulars as to tickets. &e. apply to Grand Trunk Ticket Agents. Lve Taronto 650 Arr Durham 11.46 Lve Durham 7.05 Arr Torontc 11.10 #@» Mr MoPasii has a teleonamne in * dence in Cevyion Cerms, moderate Arrangements for salo + i0 dutes &c., must be made at the Reoview . M Ace, Durham _ \@#" Gorrospondence addromed there. or to Ceylon P O | wil}l he prow=‘y »«ttended to Termson «pplication .« DURHAM â€" AND â€" HANOVER HONOR GRADUATE of Tormmo, University, graduate of Royal Ooliege of D.uulgnmou of Ontario R«:mnc Over J & J HUNTER‘S New Stope O t# > â€" ver Jeweliry store nd 1nn gite Post Office Hom G.IDAMATI ‘l‘ug.n:a ?nhm Dentistry in nlnlu oranches, O. MePHMHAIL_ â€" Office and residence, corner Countess â€"and Lambton, opposite old Post Office Office Hours : 9 to 11 a m., 1.30 to 4 q"h m., 7 to 8 p.m, Sundays and ursday afternoon excepted. J. G. HUTTON,.M.D.. C MO J. t. SMITH, M. B., M.C.P.S. . Orrick 2â€"5 Afternoon Hours: 7â€"8 Evenings « Except Supdays Mewber Colloge Physictans and Burgeone OrfloI: Qver J. P. Telford‘sofice, near ly opposite Registry Odice. RESIDENCE : Gecond house sonth of Registry office on east sice of Albert 8t. OPFICE HOUKS hell a m 2â€"â€"4 p . 71â€" p. m Palophone Communicaiou between Ofice an Residence at al} hours. DRS. JAMIESON & JAMIESON ivii:‘PéCKElleu D. D S.. 1 U S HONOR GRADUATE of Tormo, Is strictly firstâ€"class in aill Departâ€" ments and unexcelled in the Dominion Students assisted to obrain employâ€" ment. Write forhandsomecatalogue. Enter any time.. C. A.Fieming, F.C.A. G. D. Fileming Principal since 1381 _ Secretary First class corches. Owen Sound, Ont. Practical Coursesâ€" Exâ€" pert Instruction â€" Emâ€" ployment Department Cement Tile and Brick Pumps & Pump Repairs Licensed Auctioneer tor Oo _ s» J. F.GRANT D. D0.8. L D. s JOHN SCHUTZ Durham and Toronto C. H. DANARD, B. A. Principa MARCH 23, 1922 Yonge andCharles Sts., Toronto 4 A. B. CURt+EY rain Service promptly attended to D MePHAIL Ceylon or to C. RAMAGE. Durham always on hand. betweenu W. J. Elliott, Principal tm 9.05 4.25 dly Cl.Sunday ©.40 i6 Whitn s : Old Stiaa Durham w9 $ & | Silver § { Get your & of Printing Nich MARC MEAT k Lt H, B W 0 1J un uy ] ro sA ecade is h

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy