Grimsby Independent, 1 Nov 1922, p. 1

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

a water turbine at a high speed, and any chance of dirt remaining is im- probable. The stranger in noticing the neat little building from the street might not possibly realize that each month over 3000 gallons of milk are bottled and properly fixed to be sold within the precincts ofits four walls. He would possibly admire the lovely garden of beautiful flowers that. have been a treat this season but are now 'suffering the effect of frost. But it is unlikely that he would think that he was looking at the most complete lit- tle dairy in the province and rated as such by the Dominion inspector: During the short period of the present management the output has doubled and the sanitary qualities have improved loo/per cent. New equipment has been installed all round and the last old milk wagon hat has seen so many regimes in the wnership of the dairy business come nd go is to be replaced this week ith a real, honest-to-goodness brand ew one. Each bottle is thoroughly steamed to kill germs after it has been first washed in two waters, the first ex- tremely hot and the second moderate- ly. The inside of the bottle is scrub- bed by a revolving brush driven by The matter of keeping the milk 000] in the summer is ably taken care of by an immense ice box, and the tact the pasteurization helps to keep it from spoiling coupled with the fact that milk is never many hours in the dairy makes sour milk an impossi- bility. has happened in the history of dairy?” ing. Grimsby is fortunate that its residents are able to enjoy this safe- ty. Besides being equipped with the pasteurizing machine the Model Dairy has a bottling device that is capable of bottling at the rate of twelve bot- tles a minute, that is one case every 60 seconds. This time-saver is like' every other dairy machine, absolutely free from any corners where filth might gather, and all the tubes in con- nection with it come out to be wash- ed. The taps are made to come to pieces and there is nothing that may become clogged. The straining cloths are steamed each day and the milk is strained in every process that it un- dergoes. After being delivered to the dairy by the farmer it undergoes the pro- cess of pasteurization which renders is absolutely free from tubercular and typhoid germs." This process, while important, is extremely simple and does not affect the milk in the least in the matter of taste or food value. The safety afforded by this treatment has had a wonderful bearing upon the in- fantile morality of the town. The apparatus involved is far from being complicated, ‘consisting )of a large trough-shaped vat inside ot which there is a coil that revolves when the machine is in operation and through which water at almost boiling point continually passes. The hot water passing through the tube quickly heats the' milk to the nearest degree that milk may be heat- ed without being soalded, or approxi- mately 17 degrees F. When the milk has reached this heat the water is turned off and the heated milk allow- ed to remain at that temperature for some time, then gradually cool. After half an hour cold water is passed through the coil and the milk is Rre3rmteut-ttr the temporature-of about 50 degrees F. This heating and cool-- ing of the' milk eliminates all danger from harmful bacteria and is undgubt- edly one of the getsratege reformsi that Not a single drop ot milk that leaves the dairy can be contaminated, every bottle is steamed, and every pint of milk is pasteurized, insuring per- feet safety, to the person who .pur- chases the milk. The customer is pro- tected in the first place by the system of dairy inspection, that the manager ot the Model Dairy insists upon, and every farmer selling milk must sub- Pit,it to the tests before he is able to dispose of his ware there. To fully appreciate the value ot modern sanitary appliances, one has only to inspect the Grimsby Model Dairy, which is undoubtedly the most up-to-date establishment of its size in any town in Ontario. Everything that is going to give the consumer bet- ter and cleaner dairy service is to be found within the small but. scrupu- lously clean little building. The management have tried and succeed- ed in, making it the home of cleanli- ness and service. ' All the machinery has been installed during the past eighteen months and the old type of machines have been thrown into the discard, entailing several thousand dollars' expense, but the results in impoving the purity of the milk have been highly gratifying and from the standpoint of health have been of untold value to the com- munity. _ ' o-o-o-o-o-o-e-o-o-o.. GRIMSBY MILK PAST EURIZED Wr-o-o-o-r-o-o-tr-oar-o--" 0:0 THIRTY-EIGHTH YEAR 1 his subscription account at the do of Mr. Richard Frost, near Vine- ount on Tuesday of last week (Oc- Will the subscriber who paid our r. Jas. A. Livingston two dollars HI .24) please send us his name so at the payment can be credited to m, as Mr. Livingston has forgotten Lo it was who paid him the money? The famil yet the late (Mrs.) Alice R. Louks desire to express to their ny neighbors and friends their rtfelt appreciation for the many dnesses and expressions of sym- hy extended to them in the recent ess and demise of their mother. CARD " THANKS WHOSE MONEY? BOOST GRIMSBY (By Jerry Reid IlllFii-iiilTiiiiyTfiri"iFlllll PRECIPITATION Rain, total tor week .... . .. Mean for week . . . . ' Maximum (Sunday) Minimum (Saturday) A sentence of two years in the provincial penitentiary was imposed by Judge J. S. Campbell Saturday morning upon Nelson Miracl. who pleaded guilty to charges of .iailbreak- ing and who was found guilty of re- ceiving stolen property. The same sentence was imposed on. each charge, the terms to run concurrently. The trial of Miracl lasted just 45 minutes, the evidence showing that various stolen articles' were found beneath the pedals of the organ in the defendant's home, A gold watch that had been stolen was found at the home of Miracl’s sister-in-law in Thoroid. Miracl was defended by Mr. Schiller and denied that he had stol- en the articles, stating that he pur- chased the watch ‘from Mike Clark- son for $5 and that Mike also brought the camera which had been found, into his house. In these statements Mir- acl was upheld by his wife. Nelson Miracl, the Indian jail break- er, appeared before Judge Campbell Tuesday minds leg irons, the opening of court being delayed while officers were sent to the County Jail to secure from Governor Bush the key to the irons. In opening court His Honor remarked that he was unaware on the last occasion that Miracl appeared be- fore him that leg irons were ‘in use, stating had he known this he would have ordered them removed. The judge stated that Miracl was only under' detention until sentenced, and should not have been brought into court manacled. JAIL BREAKER SENTENCED "Dave" is a busy boy this fall and stovepipe is not the cause of all his business either. Since the first of July he has installed over twenty hot air furnaces and the end is not yet in sight. goes on a long iron bar and a set of wheels run over it and fastened th'e two locked edges solidly-together. Then it has one rivet put in it. Then the one end is put through another machine and comes out: corrugated. Presto, you have a length of stove pipe in less time Lhat it takes to tell it. Cloughley is now supplying all the hardware stores in the district with stovepipe and says that they handle a lot of it. To our mind he had enough pipe on hand the other night to supply the whole county of Lin- coln, but then we may be wrong. "'Yes m'am, yard or two yards?" "h"iverinch, six-inch, seven-inch or eight-inc)?" "Yes. m'am, we have lots in stock." You have probably heard the above conversation a good many times in your lite while shopping in the local hardware stores, but you never gave a thought as to where all the stove pipe came from. Yes, that is what we are talking about. Just ordinary, every- day, common old stovepipe. ' One night last week about eleven p.x. we wandered into the upstairs workshop of David Cloghley, attracted thither by the terrible hammering and racket that was emenating therefrom. We found David and his big brother George manufacturing stovepipe by the yard. Yes, by the yard. And while we were there for a few minutes they turned out quite a few yards. There was stovepipe stacked up in all directions and more of it coming from the machines in lightning manner. . David informed us that there was no stovepipe in the district. All the stocks were cleaned out. Cold weath- er was here and fires had to be light- ed, hence the rush for stovepipe. The stove pipe when .Brokther George takes hold of it is only a flat piece of thin vsteel. He puts it through a imteJtWe-tlu,it much re- sembles a c1othiss-wrinier. Then he turns over the two edges.,' Next it STOVE PIPE BY THE YARD Detandants' counter-claimed on the ground that.the cabinets were not de- livered with sufticient rapidity, and asked $75,000 damages. Remarking that he believed that if the action were dismissed, the counter-claim would not be pressed, the judge allows the defendants to withdraw and discon- tinues it without costs of prejudice to any action they might be advised to bring later. Mr. Justice Riddell at Osgoode Hall, Toronto, on Thursday dismissed with costs the action brought by the Grims- by Steel Furniture Company against the Columbia Graphophone Company to recover $25,000 damages for alleg- ed breach of contract by which the plaintiffs were to manufacture 5,000 quarter-cut oak cabinets for defend- ants. Plaintiffs allege that defend- ants did not accept delivery.- $25,000 ACTION _ DISMISSED Yes, furnaces need stovep-ipe too Week Ending October 28, " TEMPERATURE g, si4kstiiccr",ar'w _ Nr.TW,.T. wrr , . Itil 35334“ '. G" 'Iris " - ' , l 3&2. 'is' 5 F-,' t littt , , M, L I _ _ . a Mah 1 . ' 33?? . . ' I , r Bt 'V" _' _ , - ' If, - r.- If,".' N T " _r ‘ M my; 9- 'A, '. ' _ » , 'gti)ii)s) ' . V l 'ilitjti/ 7 ta , ""6, _ much Ice- Then he Next it . _Bpother only a flat puts it 23 inches Q2 Fahr. ...46 ...68 ...27 After the ceremony a dainty_1unch- eon was served to about thirty-five guests, the bride's table being laid for fifteen. Guests were. present from Toronto, fit. Catharines, Grimsby, Ni- It is gratifying to note that in orderly progression up to the an established and permanent fact. A very pretty event took place on Tuesday, October the seventeenth, at two-thirty o'cloek, at the home of Mrs. Chas. Bailey, 15 St. David's street, Merritton, when her daughter, Fern Henrietta, was united in mar- riage to Clarence Kenneth, third son of the late Thomas A. and Mrs. Ada Pearson of Grimsby, Rev. Sheppard of Thorold officiating. The bride, who was given away by her brother, Mr. Alfred Clarke, of Toronto, looked very charming in a gown of electric blue canton crepe, beautifully embroidered in panel tyfr.. feet, and carrying a large bridal bou- quet of white roses. She was attend- ed .by her sister, Miss Ivy Clarke, dressed in brown satin crepe, who carried pink roses. The groom was attended by his brother, Mr: Orien Pearson, of Grims- by. 0:0)-(_0.(-(D0-0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.(D).(.0.0-()-(ml-’.0.“0.0.0.()-(_0.0.0-0-0.0.0-0m03 PEARwN---CLhREE agara Falls, N.Y., Niagara Falls, Ont., P""""-----------..- A very pretty event took place on and Thorolgl, th.e bnide receiving many , Tuesday, October the seventeenth, at beautiful gifts P., silver and cut glass, MOORE S THEATRE two-thirtv o‘clock. at the home of and some beautiful furniture. Should, however, demands be in excess ('iiiiy.,e, of this liberal provision," the case could be immediately dealt with by opening ati)', i.', "vhteen-inch valve from the screen chamber direct into the clear water well. _ """r:'Alicl . .- These filters give a result that is immediately' pleasing, that is the clearness of ghe wa.ter, 1n addition, the safety of the public health is taken care of by the removal of acteria. ' This storing of filtered water is essen‘tiglg’fs during periods when extra calls are madeupon supply it is unnecessary to go back. tefigfifitreated lake water. _ It is interesting to note that should a fireg';:;(_§‘~»'§1‘arge character occur, large enough to need the use of five fire streams at eighty J)i'_i)')si'jif.v.ii.m,i1i',i' pressure playing simultaneously and attached to 200 feet each of rubber-lined hoiii'i'/'sind 1% inch smooth bore nozzles it would be 12% hours before the reserve of 1'f1tet,1('illifj'ciil,letlt1) would be exhausted, that of course, pre-supposes that the filters would bgji‘njijantinuous operation. T p _ 2 The sandandgtmfl , 'e' V, 2 _ Ilr.MM)ir. 1iWlMlVr. IP-mM,'?"""",--': ,.mFhPE,m' The dirt collected by "tii"d"'"s"sd"t"id' on 'i"ii'ei?,js',,tff _i, 'ri'w,i'lli,siiai.,.1'.i'j/t- is removed as often as neces- sary by "back-washing" which consists of "t)eytirs,ii'l'ii,st,rtttt; flow and washing the water. This "back-washing" may be necessary -oi,'iciji'iji, day during periods when the lake is very turbid, and during periods ofiundi‘sturbedfljake'may run for many days, the time required for back-washing would be not more thii./ii.ieitht to ten minutes. The operator isreasnir awart"of the' titm,i/iir,i'ijjiipit,iah'the filters by the pressure ris- ing as the water finds increased difficultyin percgjating through the sand strata. The operation of cleaning is easy and simply a meclyrriiiiid operation. The capacity of the clarification plant is 75(12imperial gallons per minute, a mar- gin of 250 gallons per minute over the maxim11trt,ii,ii,iirto11t1t used at any period to date. To take card of any fluctuations in requfag'if‘e'iqts the filtered water is discharged into the clear water reservoir (the present settli)iEfiCbjvsin) which has a capacity of 100,- 000 gallons. ' " J,',?2!,/, 7.2 a perforated pipe'is evenly distributed over the parts filled, this water is forced under pressure” erous streamers at thttbottopi)'o,.:v, d from thenc' to' the clear 'twateret1sr'irts _ _ilrlfir1rl(),!lj!i-i: (,,,lC,l,'/,,1,.,s,lai,1fjanfh The co-agulent (alum) is added to the(ii,i pumped to the filters, which consist of steel srl,-,-):':'.:',;" zontal steam boilers) in these steel-shells thi/if) The type of filter secured is one which by a careful and painstaking process of elimination promises to be the most suitablefor: bur requirements“, cr'.'-": - Messrs. Westawdy, of Hamilton," are' fqrnishinsrthe, filters which consist of three horizontal steel clarifying filters, each unit eight feet in diameter by twenty feet long; also automatic coagulent feed apparattisii'nd venture/ttares turtrmanometers. The inflowing unfiltered water enters in the top of thiitank and is, filtered' through a bed of silica sand and graded gravel to a depth of between three and four: feet: The filter bed rests upon a screen system, consisting of headers, lateral pipes, and strainers, all jmbedded in concrete in the base of the filter tanks. The water on reaching the filters percolates down through the bed and out through the strainer system, leaving within the filter the balance bf the foreign matter. The strainer system is so designed that no quartz or Sand can find itsvvay through the strainers or pass out into filtered water. Underneath filters will be a clear water reservoir and into this the filtered water will flow. The cleansing of the filters is accomplished by reversing the inflowing water. The reversed flow, passing upwards into the bed, washes into the sewer the accumulated impurities and the filter is again ready for service. p _ F N By the instalation of the high pressure' have brought to a logical conclusion their effort ONE .OF THE NEW FILTER BEDS T0 $TALLED AT THE PUMP HOUSE‘ZZ I IllirF,'r"'ii,ri(lii,'i,_ _f,, ‘17 1 . '. e, x§§~¢ T WNi'ir::':% CSP-, '.' 135‘ We l; ai 'ries:).:",, it .3 "rs If- 5" ii:). ‘ . " 'S' MK") . tft] tftr"i'i 'iiliidjri,i'sjl til i' , a}; 'ii'-, 'f? _ Er, l Briefly, the method of clarification can-:15: GRIMSBY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMB§922 f? as t: ':/:'sa'?j:'ijyc?j?il. .2931: .3223 i;E‘C;'=-'::I,.;SE:;:::§:5v:-3;3~:§3:::j,i‘is “<x»< ? mm" $951‘-53345-32255:#325:5";£25553¢§§EEE‘E: ‘z,("> _ 'it" '34i:iii/z:itSig-f122222;?535323; CARD " THANKS .- Mrs. E. J. Simmon and daughters desire to express their heartfelt thanks to all neighbors and friends tor their kindly assistance and expres- sion e. cyrupathy in the recent illness and death ot Mr. Sibbon. l The young couple left, amid show- ers of! confetti, tor Buffalo, and from there for a two weeks' honeymoon to Elyria, Ohio, the bride travelling in a tailored suit ot blue poiret twill, with fur neckpiece and brown velvet hat with sash. On their return Mr. and Mrs. Pear- son wil lreside at 248 St. John street, Niagara Falls, Ont., where they will be at home to their many friends after November lst. 1 :hat all the improvements made at the lake have been made the present point where pure, clean water will shortly be Old Kent Bond Paper is good. ll md filters, the Water Commissioners along the line of water purification. I?“ 1 the screen chamber which is then! Jhe shape and appearance of horiâ€"' $3 received at the top and through with whic)rthe "boiler" is three] ' the sand and collected by _11,1/1:-i d mite lartuudischarze Dine and. bed Wed Wed., Nov. I.---'" Perfect Crime," an Alan Dwan production, and :‘No Parking," a Christie Come- dy. Sat., Nov. 4.--Mabel Normand in "Head Over Heels," and "Youth Mon., Old Kent Bond Paper is good. MOORE’S THEATRE ATTRACTIONS ' tOllOws on the Farm"; Ontario Govern- ment film and Aesdp's Fable. Nov. 6.-."Is Matrimony a Fail- ure," all-star cast, and 6th Epi- sode of Tarzan. . Nov. 8.---Norma Talmadge in "The sign on the Door," and Free and Easy," a Mermaid Comedy. and Thurs, Nov. 22 and 23, we will have 'Smilin' Through." . - M - , x; . a v MI ' ml . ', N ‘ , - , T However, this expedient has not been resorted to in St. Catharines and district as yet, although the vol- ume of American silver has been in- creasing until it has become a nuis- ance. It is recalled that not so long ago Canadian coins were not taken on board American street cars, and if a passenger slipped a Canadian tive cent piece in the fare bx he was asked to put in a real American one and re- ferred to the office to get his first de- posit in the box back. The N. S. & T. car employes have received a general order to accept no American silver in the fare boxes, while American bills are not accept- able tor change. Business houses handling American silver in increas- ing volume report that the charge for shipment across the line is consider- able, and the only way out is to re- fuse to accept American coinage. ST. KITTS FLOODED WITH AMERICAN MONEY (St. Catharines Standard) The flood of American money in this city and district is reported to be assuming the proportions of a con- siderable business inconvenience. Some mercantile houses are already discounting American bills, while in some places American silver is being refused. Superintendent Sifton is now work- ing on his annual report, which will be presented at the next session of the County Council, and in which the detailed cost of the operation of the home will be given, Mr. Sifton ex- pects that this year's cost ot operation will be lower than that of last year. However, the county provides them with care and comfort, three good meals l day and a bed to sleep upon, and en eavors as best an institution can to alleviate the heartache which has been caused by the buffeting of the world and the thoughtless treat- ment of their children. The county home is one ot the finest houses on Ontario street, St. Cath- arines, beyond the city limit. All the buildings are in excellent condition and are full of goodness for use dur- ing the coming winter. The fruit cel- lar of the house and the vegetalbe cel- lar contain a variety of fruits and eatables of which any housewife might be envious, while in the barns there is hay and grain sufficient for all the needs of the cows, pigs, horses, sheep and chickens. The farm boasts a herd ot Holstein cattle which stands high in produc- tion and 'Which will soon be given the "T.B." test. There is also a fair num- ber of excellent hogs. sateen 1rgF, she finds some thoughts ot, her earlier days. 'irc" Then there is a man whose sons care not to have him about the house, and so he too must find a home in the county home; while another inmate, fearful that when his money was gone his relatives would turn him out, ap- plied for and received admittance to the home. And thus it goes, for many and sad are the misfortunes of life which could be found at the industrial home, could the lite story of each of the inmates be secured. cause of a change in fortune, or ofl- times the thoughtlessness of their children, they have been forced to ask shelter at the home. Included among those in the tine structure on Ontario street, St. Cath- arines, 1131 woman who drove her own ru"t"iri': car and who or6aiuiiiiit now, because her childreh' The 49 inmates of the Lincoln Coun- ty Industrial Home are to be kept in comfort throughout the winter in spite of the shortage of coal, the County Council having installed a Fess oil burner. . The burner is now in "operation, and Superintendent Frank Sifton looks tor it to solve the heating problems of the home. Of! the 49 inmates, 31 are men and 18 are women. Each are housed in separate dormitories with tour to sev- en inmates using one dormitory. As one wanders through the large building in which the county house those who have no homes which they may call their own, one's thoughts go back to the days when these aged and infirm were able to care for them- selves in comfort. About 40 per cent. of the inmates at the home have seen the day when they wanted little in the way of necessities or comfort, but be- cause of! a change in fortune, or oft- times the thoughtlessness of their children, they have been forced to ask COUNTY HOME TO BURN OIL GRAPES SELL WELL AT COAST The following clipping from a Van- couver, B.C., paper of recent date will be ot interest to the grape growers of this section: "Concord grapes, shipped by the Niagara District Grape Growers, Limited, were the feature arrival ' on Water street today, a carload, shipped a week ago last Sunday, having been distributed. The fruit was well iced in transit and arrived in excellent conditon, be- ing _far superior to the Washing- ton Concords which have been .arriving lately. There are from. two to three pounds more grapes in each basket than the Washing- ton package. The price is eighty cents. Demand is keen. It is the first. Ontario grape car to reach here in ten years." The grapes referred to in the above paragraph were grown and shipped by Sylvester Russ of Beamsville. Last Saturday Manager Montgom- ery, of the Grape Growers Co., receiv- ed a wire trom another firm but would not risk shipment on account of the cold weather in the north. and west. $2.00 Per Year--5 Cents a" Copy m? Lila 'cLor- the Scales Smashed While passing through the yard ot the Dominion Canners on Wednesday morning of last week the big concrete mixer smashed through the weigh sales ot the factory. The scales are set in the roadway south of the fac- tory office and are used tor weighing fruit, but were never built to stand the weight of a massive concrete mix- er. ty t .7: " irt, ”argue , "193i: flfifl‘itfiid Riiiirii"iiiii'ri'iiiii "ti/titll, fill had ikmdiiidd as hard as a melt under the heavy traffic and the till did not settle three inches, conse- quently several inches has had to be taken out of the fill by the steam shovels. The ties and tracks for the new H., G. & B. line have been placed in posi- tion on the concrete base and are now ready for shimming up with crushed stone and the pouring of the groat between the ties. JNIne earloads of stone arrived at the G.T.R. yards after six o’clock on Saturday night and were unloaded that night and Sunday, but they arriv- ed too late to help '"Irish" out in his mad rush, for a record. "Irish" was out to he would. have, had supply hind out. I and he would hav whole section. Nine carloads of ot Andefson's hiil had previously been laid fire hall, leaving a vaea tween it and to the top five o'clock the big mix twenty feet of the fin "Irish" was out to make numuson street to the top of Ander- son's hill on the hard cement, but from the top of the hill to Moore/s theatre he ploughed his way through soft concrete, then had to back up the hill again. Driving through Grimsby over the week-end was like trying to find your way out of a coal mine in the dark. In order to get in and out or through the town a motor car driver almost had to carry a map and an expert map reader. The route was so devi- ous and mystifying that the Norton Orchestra. has written a new fox trot to commemorate the event, entitled "Detouring Thrfyugh Grimsby." It should make a big hit. For the last three days of last week all traffic both east and west had to detour around the numerous twists and cruves of the Village Inn yard to get from Mountain to Main street. On Monday morning Oak street was opened up for traffic and also that portion of Main street from Oak to Depot. Traffic now comes down Elm street from Farrow's corner to Oak, along Main to Depot. Or vice versa. Saturday it was necessary to have two traffic men on duty on the Village Inn detour and they sure had their hands full. One pin-headed driver tool on Saturday night to use the base on Main street. He C; Robinson street to Hm +nn CEMENT MIXER MAKES RECORD NEW BRITISH PREMIER gain "-iq. gun but: I tracks has been laid from town limits west to Robir The curb and gutter on is also finished. It was WW! "r,esf5/iPsNF,pyi'r t'efek ”it Wtts1 nr. BONAR LAW It” _- ..Wrqrh.p Jqu after four on Saturday an "Irish" Young and his mixer reached the brow arrow’s corner been orUeii m as hard as a traffic and the yt Down make a record and the crushed stone Ten minutes mofe T) completed the The concrete base _ laid as far as the vacant section be- top of the hill. At mixer was within finished piece. DOlt a notion the concrete , came from Jett in the as a rock d the fill 38, conse-. had to be de _ on the Mr

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy