Grimsby Independent, 5 Jul 1922, p. 3

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forty pounds (less . than water DY more than oneâ€"third). This gives the timber in a crib a lifting power of 100 pounds to the foot when subâ€" merged; take that from the weight of stone and a cubic foot of stone in the bottom of a crib weighs only sixty pounds. Wednesday, July 5, 1922 The pier that The: Taylor comâ€" THE MEN‘S STORE of POPULAR PRICES MOUNTAIN AND MAIN STS. King and Queen Streets. BLOW OUTS, $2.50. TREAD SPOTS, 75c UP. WORK GUARANTEED VULCANIZING SHOP We wish to take this opportunity to thank all those who have patronâ€" ized us on our opening day and made our beginning a complete success. The volume of business was beyond our expectations and we will endeavor at all times to reducé our prices to the lowest possible margin and establish our store as the shopping headquarters for the workingman. - (Continued from page 1) pounds (less than water by QUR PRICES ARE LOWESTâ€"â€"â€"BUT QUALITY THE HIGHEST BOYS‘ SHOES Mllltary Sty1€, b]ack strong and $ durable /. . .: 3-75 Men‘s‘ : Work . Shoes. Military _ ‘style;; wide width; heavy sole. A special °_ 63.98 MEN‘S SHOES CONSTRUCGTION "AT HERSHS" "AT HERSHS" FOR GOOD TIRE REPAIRS, TRY F. pPULSON HOW ? PHONE 40 $5.00 casH PraAymEnNt REAL PHONE 93 ESTATE. FINANCIAL AND INSURANCE BROKER WITHIN THIRTY DAYS pany is building here will be of solid concrete and stone with heavy steel piling as added anchor and protecâ€" tion from ice, etc. From the shore end steel "H"â€"beams have been driven in two rows eight feet apart, and ten feet apart in the row. . These piles are ten inches wide with sixâ€" inch flanges and are driven about eight feet into the solid hardpan of shale. These two rows will extend to the end of the pier, while around the end as an added protection, will Black Overalls Onâ€" sale at. Heavy Cottonade Work Pants. Few left Cew ic _ 061.95 Men‘s Grey Flanâ€" Boys‘ Heavy Bloomers. On sale ‘at:..};","; . Men‘s Balbriggan Combinations $1,000.00 ssTaATE nel Pants Boys‘ Bloomers Black Overalls Flannel Pants Combinations Work Pants CREATED A Beamsville, Ont. ASK US Heavy â€" Cottonade _" $1.29 _ $1.00 .. KIDL $3.69 $1.00 The building up of the. work > which. is now going onâ€"is also inâ€" teresting. Forms are built and boltâ€" ed to the piling and the pouring of the concrete begins. But not like it is done in ordinary concrete walls. If the concrete were poured into the water it would disintegrate before it had a chance to "set", so it is gradâ€" ually forced down and outward by its own weight as it is poured in one heap abhove water. As ‘the concrete goes in, huge boulders ("niggerâ€" heads") are dropped in. Some of these boulders weigh over a thouâ€" sand pounds and range down to a hundred pounds or so. The bank where the pier is being built. is about twenty feet high, and the stone is being piled along the brow of the bank. The concrete will be mixed on the beach as it is easier to wheel As the cement is piled up and the stone is thrown in it gradually it out than to hoist the gravel to the top and run the concrete down a chute as will be done with the stone. be driven Lackawana steel sheet pilingâ€"fourteen in numberâ€"which forms a solid steel front to the waves. The pier will be eight feet wide; will be six feet above zero water ‘level (the lake is now about one foot and nine inches above zeroâ€" normalâ€"level); and will extend sevâ€" enty feet out into the water which at this point is six or seven feet deep. Of: Dark â€"Cottonade Tweeds for everyday wear and 3 8 tear : ...} .ss, $ -9 Men‘s Dress Shoes of fine quality, in wide or pointed lasts. $ Ofly ;s.:..; 3'98 BOYS‘ SUITS DRESS SHOES GRIMSBY THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTARIO The St .Georges Cricket Club of Hamilton, continued their â€" unbroken record of league victories on the holiâ€" day when they visited Grimsby and defeated the local team by a score of 89 to 58, in a hardlyâ€"fought contest. Batting first on & soft wicket, ; the Grimsby boys put up a stubborn deâ€" fense, but the Saints‘ crack bowler, Harry Blunt was in great form and wickets fell quickly. A. Whitelaw with 15 made a fair stand, and‘ Jim Powell, hit up 15 in jig time, which included three fours, and Corfe also showed up well with 13. Art Griffin for the Saints, lost no time in letting himself out upon the visitors opening their inning and compiled 10 in short order. The big stand was made by Ed. Buckingham and West Jones, the former giving a most masterful exhibition of allâ€"round hitting for his 46, the top score of the day, all the home bowlers looking alike to "Buck", who was in rare form. West Jones gave a brilliant display of deâ€" fensive play, and freely punished loose balls. Though falling one short of double figures. It was owing to this wonderful team play with Buckâ€" ingham that the game was won, comâ€" bined with the splendid bowling of Blunt, who was ably supported by his fellow bowler, Percey Howard. Art Pennett, with 14 (not out), showed he was recovering his batting eye, and with any support might have run up a good score. Blunt took eight wickets for 26 runs for the Saints, while Corfe did excellent work for Grimsby, capturing five wickets for only 13 runs. A friendly game was played after the league game byâ€"‘geams selected from both teams and.r resulted in favor of the home team Py score of 95 to 75, the feature of %vhich was a wellâ€"played 25 by BOb Sparrow of the Saints. The visitors were most hospitably entertained by the Grimsby boys and their lady friends, and all present had a most enjoyable day‘s outing. The score: A. Griffin, ct Wolfenden, b Whiteâ€" law.slan.." aay. + vwgt Ks Ae ) s . ..‘ G. A. Dewberry, ct Corfe, b Whiteâ€" law s . .ss.., o k.‘ ..ll..... F. 8. Buckingham, cet Ryan, b Powell..: «.‘ "a4a R Lveil...; .. sar‘s. ..... .46 J. G. Jones, cet Whitelaw, b Powell 9 J. Ghurch, b Corfe., (§.... ....... 0 A. Pennett, not out. /.. ........14 F. Wise, b Corte.... MB .... ...; 1 P. Howard, b Corfe..iMi.... ...... 1 C. 8. Stewart, b Corfe.... .... .. 0 A. Flewitt, ct Jackson, b Corfe.... 0 H. Blunt, stump Ryan, b Wallis... 3 A. Whitelaw.. .. H. H. Wolfenden J. Powell..." .2, C. Coffe... ‘..ur H.° Wallis.... #2 H..~ Blunt.:‘? T. P. Howard.... . H. H.. Wolfenden, ct Church, b Blunt. ..; wWyy â€" <niindine O« .. .. . A. Whitelaw, b Bluntiy... ....... J. Morris,)‘ . Ct Buckingham, b Howard.... .. .. BBR .. L..l.. w. Ryan, b Blunt...Mikk.l ....‘ .. C. Corfe, ct Griffin, Db Blunt.. ... J.<â€"Powell, "b Blunt.. Wake......... N. Ashton, b Blunti.WV ... ...... H. M. Scott, b Blunt. .... ...... N. Jackson, B Blunt.. ...... ..... H. Wallis, ch Griffin, b Howard ... Extras....~... _ _ m The man who had struck one of those rare not-as0=very-prohifbition parties and didn‘t want to leave it had made two unsuccessful attempts to get into the telephone booth, the third time negotiating it like a ferry going into a strange slip. He dropped his nickel in. Extras Total "H‘llo, h‘llo, h‘Mo," Re cried. "Say gimme Line‘s Busy, thassa good girl. H‘llo, whassat? Line‘s busy? aw right." e He staggered out. _ "Lord knows I tried to get. her anyway," he murmured, UAlhlhih‘hhlAhfAiith4th CRICKET f SPORTING NE W S piaced his fEEtF On t~ff§?{PJPPOSite seat, Just then the condu,r came up. Conductor: "Now, my man, take your hoofs off the S$€at, can‘t yer?" Jinkson: "I say, 4te you taking me for a cow was Conductor: "NOWy look here, I‘m here to issue tlckets{i@;g't to argue naâ€" tional history." â€" a Ww 51 settles and spreads to the sides of the forms, and when the sides have risen above the | water the work rushes up in lively shape, and the surface six feet above the water is smoothed off. ~Toward the outer end the pier begins to slope downward, being at the end only a couple of feet above the water, thus giving but litâ€" tle face for the waves and ice to batâ€" ter and allowing the ice from the winter banks to slide off easily. After the concrete forms are placed in position the sand and gravel is reâ€" moved from the bottom so that the concrete is on ‘the solid bottom with no chance of undermining, which menace is the worst feature of wooden cribs which are floated out to their position and weighted down with stone. onAAA y suppose Total Jinkson boarded ced his feet on Liz â€" 100 0) oo L2X POntibAine â€"Aindiiti t th h 2 all the livelong da “,?’: 1 :/ 1."Yeâ€"es, l tfi}so. You‘ll me a chance t0o stop for meals, I WANTED A BUSY LINE Bowling Analysis ST. GEORGES rded & tramcar and t on the opposite seat, conductor came. up. "Now, my man, take f the Seat, Can’t yer?” ~gaYy, aBE&vOu talklinc m GRIMSBY il1 .21 Ag.1 . 4 18 9 lookin you always love 26 21 18 13 10 26 30 W 10 89 15 13 15 58 â€"+} {( Be Sure You Put Them Out ARELESSNESS with matches,, cigarette butts, cigar ends, pipe ‘ * ashes, camp fires, fly smudges, railway locomotives, slashâ€"burnâ€" ing operationsâ€"human carelessness of some kind accounts for 97% of the forest fires which every year add further devastation to the northern areas of this province. DON‘T take any chances with fire in Ontario‘s forests. DON‘T throw away cigarâ€" ette or cigar butts, pipe "heels" or burnt matches until you are dead sure they are out. DON‘T neglect to drown out your fire with lots of water. f PON‘Tsbuild your camp fire against a rotten log or stump; nor on windy points; nor near moss patches; nor at the base of a tree. Build it in a former fire place, or on a flat rock, or on a spot cleared down to the true soil below, or by the edge of the water. DON‘T forget that the upper layer of ground‘ in the _ forest consists of. partialâ€" ly rotted wood which will burn. _ Then, at your convenienceâ€"come in and see us, or phone your orders, at our expense: . . The 1922 crop prospects throughout the Niagara Peninsula are producing the highest degree of optimismâ€"financially. _ Most of us will have at least a small amount to invest in securitiesâ€"soon. You are one of the prosperous ones.â€" Save Ontario‘s Forests D O N* T CITY OF ST. CATHARINES . 514 per cent. bonds, due 1942, to yield When you are prepared to place your orders for securities why not look for investments at hand. St. Catharines boasts a complete and competent inâ€" vestment service. CITY OF MONTREAL _ 514 per cent. bonds, due 1932, to yield DOMINION OF CANADA War and Victory Bonds....... PROVINCE OF SASKATCHEWAN 4 per cent. bonds, due 1949, to yield PROVINCE OF QUEBEC 6 per cent. bonds, due 1930 to yield THE NIAGARA PENINSULA â€" 1922 We want you to compare these offerings > s "â€"ilaAx e coâ€" ALLAN & CO. A ALLAN & CO. AT YOUR SERVICE L IN ST. CATHARINES \Co‘/ &Tm/ S JAMES ST. INVESTMENT SECURITIES ST. CATHARINES.â€"ONT. They‘re Yours o on rese Here are typical cases picked at random from last year‘s Fire Rangers‘ reports: The rangers on the Ombabika to Fort Hope canoe route in the far north on July 4th found an area 10 miles long by 4 miles wide which had been swept by fire since their previous trip. A camp fire left on a portage was the cause. A prospector on the Montreal River started a fire on July 7th which burned over 4,800 acres in Baden Township, destroying 1,000,000 feet of pine and 9,000 cords of pulpwood, and which required attention for a month. A party of fishermen camped on Porcupine Lake, Burton Township, Parry Sound, were responsible for a fire on July 10th, which burned over 25,000 acres and 2,000,000 feet of timber. Indians smoking moose meat started a fire on June 26th, which ran through 1,700 acres of young jack pine trees. D Careless trappers on May 7th caused a fire in Head Township, which burned over 2,280 acres, half of it young white pine. Ontario Forestry Branch Parliament Buildings w Toronto, Ont. The best way to fight forest fires is to prevent them. fere t Senictalaiiitiia‘s. dn > hedc W * 0 %00 e rere eeil tok. ditsreitenreticn‘s Pein +4 o ce ce nbeirntt RHHOHATRTTTIRAINTTAIRTRITRTNTINITaTratamrmemmremmmemmmmnmnnmmss oc a t 2 20000 Allan & Company‘s financial connections and experience are at your service. Our advice to you is valuableâ€"we must make good nowâ€"by increasing your prosperity. PHMHQNE 1G41 4o > At market. ‘rim0.g0 per cent. . 5.40 per cent. 5.40 per cent. 5.45 per cent. THRER 62

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