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Village Squire, 1978-12, Page 41heat to increase sufficiently to make it bearable to get out from between the warm blankets and get into cold clothes. It's little wonder then that one of the first improvements made to farm homes. shortly after indoor bathrooms, was the installation of the modern oil furnace and the banis f the woodstove to the woods ed where a few months later the scrap dealer picked it up and broke it down. Ten years ago you couldn't sell a stove for love or money. By five years ago however. stoves were coming back into style slightly to the point where one local merchant was complaining about how hard it was to get old stoves and bemoaning the fact he'd thrown out many a stove in years gone by. The big storm of 1971 probably had a lot to do with making people in this part of the country remember the woodstove with a little more fondness. It was far more relaxing to live through the storm secure in the knowledgeihat there is a woodshed full of dry wood than to worry about which will end first. the storm or your heat. The energy crisis added a little more fuel to the fire, so to speak and the never-ending price increases for fuel oil and gas have made wood look like a good alternative after all. The result is that this fall has seen a barage of advertisements in your local weekly newspapers for various kinds of mod stoves. A few have been familiar, the pot bellied stove. the reliable old box stove andeven the Franklin. but most bear about as much resemblance to the stoves we used to know as a modern car to the model T Ford. The comparison goes deeper too. The old• familiar stoves were simple in design. They were basically a box with holes to put the wood in. holes to let air in. holes to let the smoke out and holes to get ashes out. Btit rhodern technology has been applied to the wood stove and today a vii ole new breed has come along. Remember how it seemed every time you turned around the stove needed wood? Remember all those cold mornings trying to liglit the fire? If you do then the claims of soar of the advertisements in today's nev.spaper must take you a little skeptical. "Burns 12 hours on one load." "burns 15 hours." "burns 16 hours", the ads say. To the oldtimer. it sounds impossible. But those who use the stoves claim it is true. Sonic claim they have even gotten 24 hours of good warmth from a single tilling of the stove. The freezing floor in the morning is gone. proponents of the new stoves say. You get up in the morning to warm floors. rake the ashes slightly. throw in new wood and soon have a roaring fire again. You fill the stove in the morning. again in the afternoon and then before bedtime and that's all there is to keeping v.arm. The average owner of one of these 110 stoves can be nearly guaranteed six hours of constant warmth with .the 12-14 hours easily possible with the use of proper Exeter FEATURING KAPA SHELL LAMPS IN Swags & Table Lamps Kapa Shell is a natural shell imported from the Philippines and hand designed in Canada. Available in natural, off white, or soft gold colours Operated by Ikoppo- Lt ookoy FURNITURE LTD. Ph. 235-1990 the lighting gallery December 1978, Village Squire 39