HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1953-11-26, Page 5THE TIMES-ADVQCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1953
Wash day item: There were
104,32'2,096 clothes pins made in
Canada during 1951, latest year
for which figures are available.
POPS
Taxi Service
Phones:
Exeter 357 and 545-r-3
Exeter Old Boy
Receives Medal
J, A. Christie, of Regina, for-
merly of Exeter, received a Coro
nation inedal and a communica
tion from Buckingham Palade. It
was presented to him as High
way Traffic Chairman of Saskat
chewan.
He is attending a conference in
Ottawa this week as Civil De
fence Chairman on Transporta
tion for Saskatchewan and will
conduct one of the conference
forums.
Earth
HOOPER
Page 5
Brandram
Henderson
PAINTS
Are Now Handled
In Exeter By
Fred Hatter
Full range of shades, including
Swing Satin. Popular prices, high
in quality.
• Painting and Carpentry Work
Solicited
PHONE 413-.T
Centralia Wife
Dies In London
Mrs. Jean Longworth, 27,
of F/O Roy Longworth, R.C.A.F.
Station Centralia, died November
19 at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Lon
don, where she had been a pat
ient for the past month.
F/O and Mrs. Longworth came
to Centralia from Summerside
about three years ago.
Surviving besides hex* husband
are two sons, David and Dereck.
From the Hopper-Hockey fune
ral home, the body-was taken to
Picton for funeral service and
interment on Monday, November
wife
EXETER
§
"I get more interest on my money than
if I kept it in a savings account. I can
buy a 5-year debenture for as little
as $100.00 and get
I
’’Here’s why I’m
putting my
savings into
debentures”
have been low this
the dry weather and
I
l!
interest on
St s
my money. Huron & Erie debentures
are a dependable investment."
§
Ask for
the folder
'20 Questions'
I
3
Huron&Erie
RPOR AT I ON
“Older than fnd*Ddlrninio'rj of'Canada"
■
#•*,
District Representatives Listed Below
Centralia ....
Crediton ....
Exeter ........
Exeter ........
Hensail ......
Zurich ........
Head Office
•V
Lloyd B. Hodgson
....... H. K. Eilber
.. Bell & Laughton
...... B. M. Francis
.... F. G. Bonthron
.... J. W. Haberer
.. London, Ontario
Wells
With
temperatures of the past
many farmers were keeping
fingers crossed. It takes a
deal more water for the livestock'
in the stables than it does on
pasture. They are on a drier feed
and when on pasture their morn
ing feed is dampened by the dew-
Did you ever notice that grass
cattle rarely drink before eight
or nine o’clock in the morning?
Did you ever listen in the stable
to the hissing of float valves first
thing in the morning and last
thing at night? They were mak
ing you money whether you
lized it or not.
A farm is like a ship at
You must have water. The
story of “water, water every
where and not a drop to drink”
was often proved during World
War II by sailors and airmen
adrift in rafts and lifeboats.
Medical authorities claim that a
man can live for an indefinite
period of time without food but
without water he will die in ap
proximately seven days under
certain conditions no matter how
much dry food he consumes. The
same figures are true for* live
stock and poultry.
Here in South-western Ontario
we are fortunate people. Water
is, on
rainfall
ditches
but the
running
very seldom dry. It stops running,
true, but being a spring-fed creek
does not completely fade away.
Many of the dry creeks through
out this area are, according to
conservation authorities, man -
made.
What could a drought do?
Well, the best answer to that
question we have heard or read
was an article in the /‘Farm Quarterly”. Out in Texas/where
they number their cattle on some
ranches in thousands, water or
rather the lack of it, has put the
squeeze on many ranchers. Many
of the small ones have folded
and many of the big ones were
getting rather discouraged be
fore the rains came this fall.
What can a farmer do about
water scarcity? Well to our way
of thinking
things.
1. He can
pensive)
2. Try for
be lucky)
3. Store water in dugouts.
(Messy idea)
4. Change his type of farming
to suit his present water supply
by decreasing livestock numbers
*
"AUNTY"
To The Rescue
NOW IS
TO FILL UP WITH
Co-op Anti-Freeze
and be sure to change to
Co-op Winter Oil
Exeter District
CO-OP
Phone 287 Collect Exeter, Ontario
By D. I.
Water!
Crediton East
By MRS. W. MOTZ
rea-
and Mrs.
Glanville
RESERVE
$33,000,000
H. 1. EN.MAN
President
C. SYDNEY FROST
General Manager
fall,
high
week
their
great
sea.
old
some sort
he
Richard
in Walton.
Condensed General Statement
as at 31st October, 1953
CAPITAL AUTHORIZED
$25,000,000
CAPITAL PAID-UP
$15,000,000
LIABILITIES
Note* in cireuhtion......... ............
Depoiiti........ .......................................................
Acceptance 4nd letter* of credit outstanding
Other 'liabilities.................
Capital paid-up...................................
Reserve fund.....................................,,,,,,,,,,
Dividend# declared and unpaid.........................
Balance of profit*, as per Profit and boat
Account.......................................... ......... .,
good
auto
just
most
a
an
is
the handiest and
of
can still
could be
$174,653,009
188,137,706
21,424,357
42,927,750
495,403,336
19,156,871
23,364,659
561,185
5965,628,873
Down
E
Tommy
Th® BANK of NOVA SCOTIA
• Your Partner in Helping Canada Grow
Bay
■held the
at her
present.
spent
MafySr
Every day the Bank makes funds available to
business... municipalities. s. farmers and fishermen,
lumbermen . . ♦ manufacturers *". . for the hundred
and one operations that go into making Canada the
giant of the North.
Your BNS Manager is a good man to know.
In Exeter he is H. W* Kelson*
and switching to
farming whereby
make a good living. (It
done.)
All in all, though,
water supply coupled to
matic pressure system
about
money-making proposition, on any
mixed farm.
DID YOU KNOW?
That under actual test 10 beef
cows, 300 chickens, 10 brood
sows and their pigs consumed
97,000 gallons of water in 1,2
months. (Electricity cost $10.85,)
THIS WEEK
Cut wood
Open silos
Dehorn cattle
Check sediment 'bulbs for
water x
What about the sprayer—is it
drained?
Have you thought about a
stable ventilator?
Mail those f o r e i g n-g o in g
Christmas parcels now.
e fortunate people. Water
■the average, plentiful. Our
is adequate. Some open
do dry up in summer,
Aux Sable creek branch
through Exeter is very
he can do several
drill. (Rather ex-
a better vein. (May
Report From
Edgewood
By MRS. ROY MOORE
Mrs. Wilfred 'Eedy visited a
few days with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Kingdom Springford.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Zilinski
and Stephen, of London, visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Harold West
man and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Loreen Patter
son and Jimmy visited with rela
tives in Wallacetown Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Les Long, Hyde
Park, visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Stewart Sceli and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Garrett
spent Sunday in Windsor visiting
relatives.
Little Evelyn Debra Pye has
■been visiting the past two weeks
with her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Moore.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mitchell
had as their guests Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Scott.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cook and
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Westman
and Linda, of London, visited on
Sunday with their parents, Mr,
and Mrs. Harold Westman and
family.
Marlene Macke, of Motherwell,
visited with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hudson.
Mr, Clare Dunlop has been
building a chimney at Revere
School the past few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moore, Joyce,
Marion and Jimmy visited Sun
day with Mr. and Mrs.
Pye, at Ilderton.
Mrs. Kenneth Garrett
W.M.S. Circle meeting
home with 18 members _
Mrs. Earl Middleton conducted
the meeting. Mrs. W. Cook gave
a piano solo and little Ruthie
Garrett sang during lunch hour,
Mr/ciare Dunlop and Mr,
Longixurst, who arrived home
after spending a few days oh a
hunting trip up north, brought
a deer with them.
Mr. and Mrs, Don Kenney and
daughters visited Friday after
noon in St. Marys with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Bendall and family.
Miss Olla Moore visited a few
days With her sister, Mrs. Bill
Bendall and family, St, Marys.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Sharpe
and family called on Mr. and Mrs,
R. Moore and family Oil Sunday.
Mrs. Harold Westmdn
Thursday afternoon in St,
Canada's famed Hudson
a veritable inland sea—is 595
miles wide, 800 miles long.
I
Mrs. R. Eacrette
Dies In Toronto
Funeral Services for Mrs. Mar
garet Eacrette. 84, widow of Ro
bert Eacrette, who died sudden
ly at the home of her daughter,
Mrs. Fred Hancock, of. Toronto,
were held from the Bonthron
funeral home. Hensall, on Satur
day afternoon and interment was
made in Exeter cemetery,
She had spent most of her life
in Hay township and Hensall.
Her husband died in 1936.
Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. Foster Borger and Mrs. Earl
Borger, Detroit, Mrs; F. Hancock,
Toronto, and a brother, George
Ingram, of Portland, Oregon.
If You Care Enough To Send The Very Best
SEE THE COUTTS CARDS AT THE TIMES-ADVOCATE
Mr. and Mrs. Aidwin Colling
wood, of Hamilton, spent Sunday
with their aunt and uncle, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. William Motz, and
with their aunt and uncle, Mr.
■and Mrs. William"’Horney, in Ex
eter.
Mr. and Mrs. William Motz
visited in Exeter Sunday with the
latter’s brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. William Horney.
Mr. Murray Neil is adding
three rooms to one of his cabins
and intends moving into it soon.
Miss Marilyn Hayden is spend
ing some time with
uncle, Mr.
ville.
Master
holidaying
her aunt and
Frank Glann-
Report from
your partner in
helping Canada grow
IVERY year since the founding of The Bank of
Nova Scotia, in 1832, the publication of the Bank’s
Annual Statement has provided more than a financial
picture of the growth of the Bank. It has reflected
the growth of Canada. This year again, the facts
behind the figures of the balance sheet offer new
proof that The Bank of Nova Scotia is your partner
in helping Canada grow.
Thousands of Canadians in all walks of life call
upon The Bank of Nova Scotia to help with their
personal and business affairs. Daily they use the
Bank’s services to save money, buy money orders,
safeguard their valuables, obtain foreign exchange,
transfer funds, buy travellers’ cheques.
sl ? £
The money which hundreds of thousands of
Canadians save at The Bank of Nova Scotia goes to
work in the form of investments and loans. Much of
it goes to help build highways, hospitals, airports,
welfare centres and schools; for hydro-electric
schemes, scientific research and the development of
natural resources. It also helps private industry and
commerce to expand—leading to-more employment
and a higher standard of living.
Then there are the thousands of "little” enter
prises that are the backbone of Canada’s economy.
Loans to all these mean increased production and
prosperity. In this way savings become an investment
in your own country and work to help Canada
grow.
122nd Annual Statement
THE BANK OF
NOVA SCOTIA
Established 1832
ASSETS
Gaab, dealings arid due from banka.........
Government and other public aecuritiea not
exceeding market value............... ...........,.,
Other bonds and stocks, not exceeding market
value.......................j.,
Call Ioans (secured).............
Other loans and discounts (after full provision
for bad and doubtful debts)........................
Liabilities of customers under acceptances and
letters of credit (as per contra).....................
Bank premises...........................
Othet aiicta.................>
GENERAL OFFICES: TORONTO, CANADA
liraiiehes aircss Canada and in
JAMAICA '» CUBA » PUERTO RICO
DOMIMCAX REPUBLIC
LOA'DOM, MG. MEW U.S.A.
108 Old Bread St. 3? Well St,