ST FIME TO GET ACQUAINTED WITH "HE ADS THAT FILL ALL NEEDS! Ne vi an ge N Ves, right NOW--when you've so many press- i {re problems on your mind--is the best. time _ pf all to become better acquainted with the i nelpful, versatile Classified ads in the Times. # _ bazette. ? JNothing equals Classified Ads for renting, \ selling, hiring, finding, giving notice, Nothing | equals the Classified section as a market place for filling your wants. § Chances ere you've already profited from Classified Ads, either by consulting them or using them. If not, you're bound to soon. So turn to the Classified columns now, and see what an amazing number of offers. are there. And when you have some need that ao Clossified Ad con fill, just Dial RA 3-3492 for @ friendly ad-writer's assistance. 6 Times 2 5 worns Of A Heating Operation cosis can be even more important than the original price of a heating system for your home, Put in a cheap plant, or any plant not geared to keep your house comfortable, and you'll end up paying heavy fuel bills. The way your house is built is very important in making a choice of heating systems. If you have no basement, authorities advise against steam heat or gravity sys- tems. The latter depend on cool air or cool water gravitating down to the furnace while warm air or hot water is rising. If your house is not properly insulated, you may run into high | operating costs with radiant heat. Most people have definite ideas they think they'd like -- warm air, hot water, steam, or electric. And most people have their pre- ferences for the means of spread- ing those heats -- by radiation, like the sun's rays, by convection, which wafts the heat around us, or a combination of both. A GROWING DEMAND Each of those systems has iis strong points and its drawbacks. Right now because of the growing demand for year around air con- ditioning, circulating warm air is enjoying a sort of heyday. The big argument is that air | ducts already installed in a house | should make it relatively simple to | add a cooling unit for summer use | Improv ts in ling | systems seem to have refuted the lold forebodings that warm air | ducts would not be big enough to carry sufficient cool air. However, | summer cooling units are working| | on plants with ducts as small as | three and one-half inches in da- | meter, the same as used in the | high velocity warm air systems. | But one manufacturer advises placing warm air registers high up on a wall -- not at the baseboard --if summer cooling is anticipated. | Since cool air falls, higher out- |lots increase air conditioning ef- | ficiency. | GIVE SURVEY RESULTS | Long before summer cooling was {attempted on the popular. level, a | survey showed that circulating warm air systems were being Consider Operation Costs System used in 60 has largely heat. tems showed shat a forced warm air plant "is less expensive to in- stall than other equivalent sys- tems, . . . It provides even heat aistribution to all rooms. The forc- ed air movement makes it possible the house. Moisture may be added if desired. The furnace readily adapts itself to automatic con- rols . " the flow of warm air and again turns it on." The report added "this is true in all automatically controlled sys- tems but it is slightly more no- ticeably by the occupant of the room with a warm air system than with a hot water system." CAN OFFSET CHANGES Such temperature fluctuations can be offset to some extent by adjustments and by proper loca- tions of thermostats, There is no question that warm air is a quick heat with no waiting for a boiler to warm up. And with filters, it is a clean heat, removing dust from the air. Warm air also has been used for radiant panel heating. Ceilings are warmed by labyrinth circula- tion in a hollow ceiling. Floors are warmed by hollow tile or by pre- cast slabs containing channels in- stead of ducts. Small houses built on concrete cent of all homes} with central heating plants. Now § that forced circulation by blower |g superseded gravity § systems, a house does not even g need a basement to use warm air |g A study of various heating sys- : to keep clean, fresh air throughout! § The one drawback cited was "ap definite temperature drop betwen § the time she thermostat cuts off|{ THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Saturday, September 29, 1936 11 | OSHAWA HARDWARE AND ELECTRIC 62 KING W. RA 3-7624 (at Church St.) AUTHORIZED SALES -- DEALER AUTHORIZED (Coleman REPAIR and SERVICE "CALL US TO-DAY" | OSHAWA HARDWARE AND ELECTRIC 62 KING W. RA 3-7624 (at. Church St.) NORTH PILOTS ENJOY GOOD FISHING Bush pilots, flying everything | Lellan a supply run flyer, poses from big Canso seaplanes to | with three big lake trout he helicopters, have carried thou- | caught during a lull one rainy sands of tons of material for | afternoon near Knob Lake, Que. building the Mid-Canada radar | The trout, r nging from 12 to line. Unpredictable weather in |18 pounds, were hooked in the north has made their runs | shore - casting. McLellan says hazardous but it hasn't all been | there are icts more where these WE CUT KEYS hard work, as Don McLellan, of | came from. Montreal, shows here, Mec- slab without basements also have been heated by warm air in ducts embedded around the perimeter {of the floor with registers at se- {lected intervals. An interesting variation is a small duct *'air wall" system. In- stead of cool air returns being placed under windows and at other outer wall points, as is cus- tomary, the warm air is brought up at the outer walls. Difiusers instead of registers fan this air up over the wall surface. Yes, all the advantages of mod-, arn heating, both in comfort and| appearance, can be had much more easily than most people ink. Many households are still "making do' with out-dated heat- ing equipment because they are 2fraid that, if they try to do any- thing about it, they will be faced with the cost of installing a com- plete new system from basement to roof. This is entirely wrong thinking, | according to the Canadian Insti- | tute of Plumbing and Heating, CASH AT COUNTER RA 3-3492 which has been studying the prob- lem of heating renovation in Canadian homes. | In many houses, the Institute | points out the Jeating plant could at the home much more effi- ciently if the heating units in the rooms themselves were not out- dated. These old heating outlets not only deny the family she com fort of quick, adequate heating, | but their appearance is, as a rule, {out of harmony with modern fur- |nishings and decoration. | Old-style radiators may be re- | placed in all rooms at once, in a OIL & GAS HEATING UNITS |group of rooms, or in a single room at a time. In houses using warm air for | heating, registers can be replaced in much the same way, si | present day models are designed ito blend with the decor of the post-war era. If the system is Modern Heatingg For The Home Costs Less Than You Think and are up to 40 per cent more WANT ADS SERVE AS SALES STAFF AT HOME APPLIANCES (OSHAWA) LT A BEEFEATER is a mem- ber of the royal guard in England. Want Ads are your royal sales staff, telling nearly everyone in town what you have to sell, rooms you have to rent, or just about anything you can name, Dial RA 3-3492 for the aid of a Want Ad writer who'll make your ad appeal to beef- eaters or vegetarians. efficient in heat radiation than their predecessors. Combining many of the features |! {of both the radiator and the con- |vector is the recenly developed "concealed" radiator. This is a cast-iron radiator, which is de- signed to be concealed in a metal or wood cabinet with a grill at the top for air circulation. Fairly narrow in construction, it can either be installed in a shallow re- cess in the wall and so need not take up much space. Convectors are usually conceal- ed in metal cabinets with an open- ing at the bottom for air to be drawn into the unit, and an out- let grill at the top through which the warm air is discharged into the room. In recent years, something quite new has been added to the range of heating units. It is the base-| {board panel, which looks like and] {actually replaces the normal base- { |board that skirts the room joining | {floor and walls. Its main advan-| |tages are its unobtrusive appear {ance and the fact that it spreads, | |as it were, the heat source along | | the wall of a room, rather than | having it concentrated at one spot | Improved 19 '69 PRICED FROM The Coleman "HAVANA" Streamlined "Air Flow' design. Choice of beautiful light or dark finish. Take up little floor space. Super-circulates heat from floor to ceiling. 1 P to operate. e Clean, quiet, safe. ODD PET Valerie Payton, 23, Los ngeles housewife, holds | ALSO COLEMAN GAS HEATERS AVAILABLE AT being changed over at the same | time to a forced air system, ad-| vantage can be taken of the re-| A Canadian Product 9 | "Cleo", her pet eight-foot Boa constrictor which she smuggled into a hotel in Las Vegas, Nev. Ten Year Furnace Warranty "Good Cheer" leads again with the ultra-modern oil fired heating units. Newly designed ond constructed for efficient heating. Enjoy comfortable heating the easy way . . . no ashes to carry . . . no dust or dirt . . just set your thermostat and forget it. INSTALL A GOOD CHEER UNIT IN YOUR HOME LOCKWOOD 288 ARTHUR ST. Heating - Sheet Metal and Build Up Roofing OSHAWA Dial RA 3-2511 | decoration program to alter the | | position of registers to above fur-| niture level. | At the same time, new adjust- able vane-type registers can be put in These direct the warm air| |downward or to the side as de- Isired, and do not interfere in any | way with furniture arrangement. | LESS BULKY | Modern radiators are much less CZECHS HOLD TRIALS | VIENNA (AP) -- Five persons,| including a former major of the Czechoslovak Army general staff, | | Jaroslav Hajiceck, will go on trial for anti-state propaganda, Czechoslovak news agency| Heating Controls Changing designs in modern| building are sparking new ideas in home comfort, accordng to heating experts. | the ran 4 ch| where she's establishing resi- | dence to ge her divorce from | her second husband who inci- | dentally, doesn't like "Cleo". Valerie said the snake was iven to her by her first hus-| band. Hotel officials are seek- ing to oust both Valerie and | "Cleo" on the grounds that no HOME APPLIANCES (OSHAWA) LTD. 90 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH RA 5-5332 pets are allowed in the hotel. uj hme: control, say engineers, who explain that because of the] spread out. design of ranch: or| rambler style homes one section of the house may get a lot of sun| while another is sheltered. Ob-| viously, the heating needs will] vary. Changes in wind direction] and room occupancy, too, may cause variations in room temper-| |said Wednesday. [Suse | [TAILORED SYSTEM A practical solution -- and one UP 10 Esso conversion burners may also be installed in nace with $25.00 down and payments as iow as EORGE THOMSON OIL BURNER SALES AND SERVICE 125 GANT sT. OSHAWA Enjoy the finest all year round comfort with an Esso forced air furnace in your home. These units may be purchased on Esso's Easy Payment Plan with 10% Down and payments as low as $12.50 PER MONTH | zone. | According to studies made by| | one heating firm, zone control of | heating which takes advantage of | outdoor conditions to provide sen-| sitive indoor climate control takes | | the guesswork out of home heat] | regulating. Two thermostats--one| |in each of the areas affected by| | the shifting winds or sun--are bet- | ter than one and provide better as- J Shane of comfort for any house- old. The zone thermostat accurately | senses changing conditions in its | zone, including the influence of| outdoor conditions, and monitors | the heat within the home accord-| ing to the need. | WEATHER CHANGES | | Heat zoning in homes with ra. | diant panel heating is achieved with an electronic control system in each zone. This system virtual lly anticipat Fh hy | An outside thermostat or anticipa- YEARS TO PAY ur - | er before they are actually felt] 0 present fur | within the house, room therma-| 5.83 per month. | heat adjustment, Meanwhile, | within the house, room therma | stat modifies the action of this] | out-side element according to va- | riations in indoor conditions. | The problem of determining the | number of zones varies not only with the design of the house, but also with living habits of the oc- | cupants. One home may require a separate zone for the recrea- | tion room, in addition to a zone | for the balance of the house. An- | other may require a zone for the | sleeping quarters in addition to | the main living area. | Proper zoning of the home re-| sults not only in increased per- | sonal comfort, but also in fuel] Ni saving, engineers Teport, . go J RA 3-7718 with o CONROY MODEL J OIL BURNER A Canadian Product * Enjoy Comfortable Heating %* No Dust -- No Dirt | tor detects changes in the weath-|§. * Just Set the Thermostat and Forget It DEAL WITH THE OLDEST FIRM IN OSHAWA LOCKWO00 288 ARTHUR ST. OSHAWA HEATING - SHEET METAL and BUILD UP ROOFING DIAL RA 3-2511