Ontario Community Newspapers

Listowel Banner, 29 Jul 1920, p. 5

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We sound the last call to our Great Shoe Sale. * - Be. on your guard !: ; We have reached the time limit of our sale’ .* and when ‘we close our stor€ eigeneturday night Shoe u every member of i is yet me. in Men’s Women’ 8, Boys’ at 4 Don't Get Shut. ‘Out! “Where Quality Coney 9 ——— PYREX ‘Transparent Oven-ware ‘SAVES FOOD—BAKES QUICKLY pyres | is the labor-saving, greaseless, and odorless oven ware. The housewife’s delight. Pyrex saves about one-half the fuel_usually required because it .-. mbsorbs nearly all the oven heat and bakes food quickly. Saves food; meats, vegetables, etc., when cooked in Pyrex, retain their natural color and ftavor. Most foods cooked /on top of the stove can be better prepared in the oven. Pyrex will not dis- color, rust, craze, dent or chip, and is made in all sizes and shapes. Has the Name on Every Piece. Guaranteed Not to Break in Use in the Oven. ° ADOLPH’ Ss Hardware The Store with the stock. _ LISTOWEL. e State Mr. and Mrs. Dierlamm, of ‘éakera, Mr. and Mrs. Welker of W: ville, and Mrs. Hartung and baby, called at the home*of Mrs, Al McCabe on Sunday. » Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bell spent Sun- day at the home of Mr. Smith Vines. Mr. D. Dipple, Milkdmay, is renew- “ad imi in the village this k. wire. Rheiber spent Sunday vith her daughter Mrs. Lonis Berlett. TROWBRIDGE Se Miss Gordon is spending part of her vacation. with Miss:-Murdoch of Trow- bridge: She formerly taught here for five years and her many friends glad- ly welcome her back. Lett te wont tal— . Zarbrigg, who recently watever an operation for appen- dicitis,.is doing favorably and on Monday left the hospital for his home. Growth Removed— Dorothy Meldorf is doing nicely af- ter an operaton to her throat for “the removal of a growth. q Tonsils Removed— Mrs. Laura Danby underwent an operation Tuesday at. the Listowel Memorial hospital, having her tonsils; removed. Had Tonsils Removed— Howard and Dorothy, children of Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Hube, had their tonsils rémoved at the Listowel Mem- oria] hospital on “Monday. On For ndicitis— Eva Ronald was operated on for appendicitis by Dr. McEachren of Linwood, at the Listowel Memorial hospital on Wednesday. A c Has Eye Trouble— Miss Pearl Good, linotype operator with The Banner Publishing com- pany, has been confined to the house this week with an infection of the eyes that has been quite painful. Paul Gischler Allowed Pass— In view of his satisfactory relative standing during thé.year with fellow, pupils iWho “were “sdecetsful, Pa Gischler, Listowel high school stu-|* dent, who was Unable to continue his lower school examinations because of injuries as thé result of falling from a horse, has béen advised that the Our Special In Black Tea Has been a real success. We have Only 50 Ibs. Left to Clear Out on Saturday At this Real Bargain Price | 52c perth. LYONS’ BROS. Door West of Lee’s Photo Gallery hb! . Phone 9 2 = fhinister of education is prepared to admit him to normal when he has passéd his middle schoo] examination. News Photography. . Mr. ‘Wiliam marthey sometha€ art editor of the Star, Merning Leader, and Daily News and , gives an attractive account of the. beginning and development of thé photographic news pictures in th€ London daily papers. {¢ wae mot until the early nage that any tions of a deaire to pittorially Hiustrate “copy” was shown; but in 1688, when Mr. T. P. O*Comtor t#sued his first halfpenny- - evening paper, the Star, illustrations begah to _— in the form of four one-column — crude line re« sults—bat the vo was no regular use of line biocks till 1@91, after the ap- | - dai Do you want’ things mofe- handy around the house and barn? Put in Deleo-Light. It furnishes. electric Power for operating light machin- ery. It furnishes electric lights the house and It pumps and forces the water to wherever you want it, and does other useful work. Write for ‘Oatalog " H. Gourley Darroch f A COMPLETE ELECTRIC PLANT FOR THE FARM | = pearing of the Daily Graphic, which “may be said to have been the frat @aily picture tag ted but can searcely used the illustration ul scém com with the re- suite obtainable at thé present t ~. From all over the glo heights usknown and Beitr of by the ordinary m—accurate pic- looming of a rose are re- reproduced in a few’ hours; and now the air-pictures, giv- ing a new view of old places, bid fair ‘| te Become as papuiee as the pictures * from the solid grou e * e . e A SIMPLE. SERMON s ee#ee Just keep on a seatvin an’ ‘hope for bes the t. Don't give re the game an’ retire in disma: bs ‘Cause eats are thrown when you'd like a boquet. | The world would be tiresome, we'd all getsthe blues same views; Se finish your work, show the: best): ofeyour skill, Some folks won't like it, but other folks will. 7m If you fs. baal an army, or buildin: One small i word f eit the jour- Guveaiaen. in the ds ot’ ‘against The plants that we mon-place w hs 3 $5 " as com- ort Bsinne' to be just what : ary field in the eastern part of thej If all the folks in it: held just the ‘and by th Do the most. that you can with your iblé tér many oulpreaks of typhoid fever. is is due to the fget that the isdliond bacillus ‘is frequently, present in be rage or sprface seepage with which the water supply is so easily. eontaminated if. proper care is not taken ‘to prevent such contamination. Typhoid. bacilli get- into sewage from two sources, viz,, typhoid pa- tients. or convalescents and typhoid easriers: The excreta, both solid and Hgnid; from sueh individuals is liable- to contain millions of the typhoid | | becilli, consequently angthing that gets contaminated therewith, particu- larly faod materials or water, is li- able to spread*the disease. ‘In connection with the water sup- ply 6f towns and cities steps are us- ually taken by the authorities to see that seepage contamination does not oetur or to see that the water is puri- fied sous contamination take place, am it occasionally does, even when t care is taken to prevent it, Fre- ent bacteriological analyses are e of such water supplies and these readily show the presence of #eWage bac , should contamina- tion ‘occur. The water may look pe inden and hee 3 and still have many » imeluding the ty- peoid 1 beciti” present.in it. If these ‘ate found the water is purified, us- ually by chlorination. : connection with the- private water supply on tne farm and jin}? small rural communities where de pendence is largely placed on wells and springs as sources of water used for household purposes, it is essen- tial that adequate measures be taken to prevent contamination of these sou! of supply. Agatt and again outbreaks of ty- phoid fever have occurred on farms where the well or spring. from which the household water is obtained has e contaminated. In such cases thé trouble does not usu@lly remain ed to the farm, as the contam- inated water, when used for washi dairy utensils, milk paile and ca and for cooling the milk is liable t contaminate the milk. Then when peas typhoid bacilli get into the milk the contaminat pails, cans, sotkore hands, etc., they. multiply and Sy consumers of i ontbieaks A typhoid ‘fever in’ towngs-and cities have“Been traced to the contaminated well water onthe atm from w which milk has been sent for usé in’ such towns and cities. “thé necessity for the strictest care béing taken to prevent contam- en of the sources of water supply the farm. ould contamination oeeur it means danger not only for the@garmer and his household put for the ‘entire ew that uses the B, ially the milk, from the farm. Every cate should - taken to pre- st surface d r seepage get- tate the well or caring, because rainage or seepage may con- tein’ i we typhoid bacilli that have been given offby typhoid convales- | Gist Golleee. —Prof. D. H. Jones, | College, Guelph. Béptic Tank for Sewage Dtapéenl. This systerh consists ordinarily of o. ibo-chbunber eoncrete, waterproof equipped With an inlet, over- and vent pipe, and ah automatic oer for ecaptzing.thd the tank of the id sewage from time to time, and oteosene of tile, called the “absorp- tion bed,” consisting of several pa lel rows of 8 or 4 inch iand tile laid with .open joints, almost level, and }@hgllow, and, branching off from a main, line of sewer pipe which con- it to the tank, For th ome each tank Troula be about 3 fect uare and §$ feet deep, and 15@ feet, 200 feet of land tile a be required for the roa hg im The vitrified. sewer tile is best the main and the number of them will depend upon the distance of the on bed from the tank. sewage enters one chamber. by “g 4-ineh inlet pipe, where it is de- fenened © Py large extent by a cer- bacteria, thence fn a sect ligula “tonaition it passes over inte the other chamber threugh a #ineh overfiow pipe. Here itremains until a depth of about 18 inches is reached, when the siphon automati- cally comes into operation and. dis- eharges it in a couple gf min in- to the main sewer pipe, from w it paeses into the rows of tile. Through the open joints in these it escapes in- to. the top ted of soll where an- othe. kind of bacteria completes the work of destruction began ones in the tank. The bacteria fn the tank thrive and work best in the dark closed except for a small. vent for e.air being forced out of ‘the .soit. on , cueharen of.siphon and: coming back into it. pure and fresh. Tf this aston Ny be properly installed toatl = Gigt Some erer needs. 7 So “ep ats don’t say stan-|'! Uke you, bat other 8 ATER pollution ‘is reapona- b 5 ee ordinary |. - 2 Et will B paired and oy> guaranteed of: course. EXPERT WATCH MAKER by. you every minute of the pti’ nes “year > aa “ and does it’s duty foryears'and’years: That isMit does: tr eS, it receives, a lair amount of attention and. bare. e Ts you to nive.3 your fatitsa and ‘loch re ulead; ‘ We: maintain a. staff of e watch and clock makers and repairers, “who can fix y time piece up 0 that it will be 100 %-effictent. © os Fs C. DOUGLAS WALLACE STREET Pia wt ae ? “Let us know and we’ will send for your’clock; and > ese Soha deliver it.to you again when itis §nished. You will ind ~ our prices for this’ service remarkably low. All work = LEADING JEWELLER. 7 Tt ‘? With the coming of electricity.-te, the farm the farmer has ve terested in the storage; piece ‘of electrical peeps which has undergone #xtensive devel- opment in the two years. A good many years ago engineers saw that some way should have to he} developed to store electrical energy generated by mechanical devices such as the electric generator. This ne- cessity arose from the fact that there were various classes of electrical ser- vice which demanded the production of current in comparatively smalt amounts for intermittent use. One of the best examples of-such inter- mittent use is the electric service de- manded by the farm home. Lights are of course used=principally at night, but there are many times during the day when electric light is wanted for a few. minutes and there are mary more times when électric current is wanted for the operation of power appliances, su¢h- as pumps, vacuum sweepers, washing «machines, churns, ett. If this electric’ current had to be generated for each of these uses by going dnd starting an engine and generator it would obviously be very inconvenient. In order to have cur- rent available at any time whether the generator is running or not the THE USEFUL STORAGE BATTERY i storage battery is used. The storage battery is simply an electro-chemital machine consisting of a number pic jars filled with a chemical mixture called electrolyte, in which aré sus— pended lead plates. When current is: : sent through this battery by the gen- - erator a chemical reaction takes place which stores electrical energy in the battery. When current is wanted tor the burning of a light or the running » of a motor, the storage battery sup- “ “4 plies it, releasing the electrical en-.» ergy stored in it while the generator>*:. was running. In this way it is nec- essary only to run the generating’ uxit:: for a farm lighting plant two or three” times a week, at which times it may run for an: hour or so. . . This combination of the generating unit, consisting of a kerosene engine’ - and generator, with the storage bat- tery makes it possible for the farmer and his family to have electric ser-. vice in the home as complete and as convenient as that given to the city | dwellers bya central -power. station, and both the generating units and the storage batteries have in the Jast few years been developed to ha. high point of efficiency that’they de liver this electric service at avery. low cost and with the greatest of dee. pendability. + —-> | . | | MOLES WORTH | + 4 Miss Allen, a former teacher in! Robertson's sthool, is visiting in the section. y Will Middleton, G. ‘ft. R. operator at Preston, is holidaying at home, as is also his brother Cecil of Tofonto. Mr. and Mrs. Georgé Brown, Wat- few days with friends. Stewart this week. Mrs. Oliver and daughter, of Ux-) \bell’s. Miss Margaret ford, is the euest of ster. tions. The wae party, under the-aus- pices of the Women’s Institute, was, day evening. tween erectile and Molesworth re- sulted in one goa! in favor of Moles-' the large crowd present. ham band enlivened the evening with’ their beautiful music. The program and Mr. Cecil Middleton of Toronto. Mr. J. C. Hardie, of Listowel, tocal| | | | | *-- son, Nellie and John, have returned! from Brantford where they spent. a friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, of Guelph, | tow were guests at the home of Mr. D. F.| one day this week. | zies, of Brant-! tamily from Macton visi iss Ethel Save ; et Miss Spence, our schoo! teacher, is} + -to be congratulated “on the success of; | her pupils at the entrance eon held on the schoo! grounds on Mon- Butter A football match be-! Eggs worth. The ladies served a very gen-' Pork erous tea which was much enjoyed by; Beef The Wing-| vee) was rendered chiefly by local talent,; Bran assisted by Miss Allen of Wingham! ‘Shorts . representative of the Fairbanke-Morse Hides Co., made the grounds gore ys with hig splendid electric light p booth was managed by Mr. Pian Mit-.- chell. rn TRALEE Mr. Paul Hammar of Elmira and... son Philip spent last week hea pe Miss Bertha O'Grady entertained es of her friends to a birthday party -~ Mr, Harold Merse and son Grey, of otabere spent the week-end with ral- |-bridge, are visiting at Mrs. C. Camp-! Mrs. L. Smith. id + Slee Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kreamer with Mrs. M. Hanley. | a MARKETS | dl + Potatoes ane exeye a rr ee ee Horse tlie iw Western University London, Ontario Arts and Sciences Medicine Fall Term Opens October 4th .. i :

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