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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1957-07-03, Page 10.021141,00,140,M. WWWW.14.1,5.1,, *A" 1'he judges of the Centennial parade watch the pro zesapn bo' by. ',Their'S was a difficult• Wit for 'ell-WY float in the two-hour Parade was, an outstanding exiiinPie .of• ingennitY and careful` workmanship. • U a dY it I NYLON Ron A003 TO SAFETY MEASURES Master-of=eerernonies Johnny Brent; introduces • the Kerr family who came frOm ` San Fernando Pace, ;.)alifernia; to attend the Turnberry Township ben ONCE N WINNING ,FLOAT 1 UNDRE YEARS • Guide doe- organizations' certaiiill Glad not start e rumor which Keek ti,gainat their entire polio', rare is no r reason Whgtseeve .....„....-.. ttnYeitd should. bitsre: to - tiether Canadiaa-made prodlict that Made a naine for itself et sea now Is in the process of establishing Its reputation as a helpmate 00 the feria. Nylon rope Ilea been put to work at a Variety of farm jobs from hauling hay end straw tote the barn Mow, to towing stranded. Machinery and, milling brush or Por Years ropes were made from Manilla hemp. Then, because of a wartime Shortage of the plant fibres from winch these Materials were made, nylon was pressed in- to service, Singe the war it has provided anchoring and 'mooring lines for yachts; held, mountain climbers and, window washers on high Perthes; started outboard motors and ,towed ships Into port. Even cowboys' adopted nylOn lariats. although they first had to be Weighted to make them "feel" Vishermen, sailors, mountain clidibers " and window washers alike have learned to rely ea nylon rope for 'its strength. ,Now farm, ere are finding it an, Important factor in fanfa safety .programs".. Ropes :which. break under strair are accident hazards. A good, rope and an inferior one may have the same appearance. It remains• for actual service'„tp shoW the differ, ence between the' two.. The .type of service: to ;which" a roe is to, be put maygPVerti the, aircliase, but safety also is • a .consideration Eopes may fray - from abrasion against • a pulley or: rough surface. They may be weakened by mildeW or rot from' exposure to the' weath- er. They may even lase strength through absorption'. of Water and become . stiff and: 'awkward to handle. . • A .broken rope on the hay fork or hoist -at haryest time can mean more than costly delay in getting the hay safely stored in the barn loft. ft can elk mean severe rope burns, cuts and lacerations for those working nearby— A sudden jolt or shock • can part .a tow rope when machinery is being towed behind a tractor or pulled from the mud, Runaway machines not only cause property ,damage, they rilay;elallnabolrivaLsi. Both 'y tests, and field trials have :established.that nylon rope is about, twice as strong as, and absorbs shocka three to fiv.e times greater than, a.nathral fibre rope of the same- size; 'In many applications the, greater-, strength of nylon permits smaller and light- er .ropes;to heaised for farm jobs. Then, too;„ nylon .absorbs .liittle water and does -not'•fot when' ex posed to the weather for long periods.- This resistance -to rot was well demenstrated When 0. fishing trawl-line,' was. lost-,:in the ocean off Nova• Scotia. The following year the line'Was- fiShed• out of tin', water. The, sMaller hemp.: ganging lines had totted away but the nylon trawl line'yvas,"ainaffected by . ealtw months in, the• ater. -Although the initial Price of nylon rope . is ."higher than 'ordinary rope, it weart,loriger • 4ffliMM11111414MICIMMOMICOMMOWEMEMMAIMMMEMAffliffliMIUMAIWiffliIIMMifflidli4M11101141114MSWR ANKERT PRESIDENT WARNS OFFICIALS MUST HE ALERT AfentObeile, Que., June 21—In. rlablonary pressures in Canada, 'have eased to some extent in the past few months, it was stated ',here today by F. W. Nicks, PITO^ :dent of 'The Canadian Bankers' ,Association. "I' Would not wish to suggest," he told 'the annual meeting of the Aiiseeiation,"that the inflationary ;danger has Passed and that mane "tars conditions may soon ease. Tnere remain strong upward pros:- sures on costs and prices." In a general review of credit teatrietions, Mr, Nicks said a ;period had been reached when the problems of monetary management had heceme increasingly %he impact, or bite, of tight money was. ;strengthening and, its effects en'ainiag mere and more wi4e- ' Oa,called for."alertnPss ;the ;:part- of the monetary VattiVities in watching the ebang- 44,,eccinomte eurreats,q not only of 'Canada, but of the-United States, 'so. that when„ the time conies to kelax a • .. ;tight• money, the .change wvill ,be made !promptly. Looking lack to 1955, it appearedthat Can- ' 4,da,Wass slow in changing from easy' to tight money, considerably wer than 'American monetary )authorities, "It could be,” he added, more serious matter -to is t behind the :United States in the pYpot change in the other irectieri• There ,is an uneven pattern, in Panaclaa economy, some very strong elements, some weak spots ;arid ethers where demand has Tgeen easing. "Conditions change very quick- ly," he continued, "and to gauge `the turning points in advance or even at the time is not a Matter. that can `be' de termined With assikr- a'Tce, but an art requiring a sense f changing' developments and a :filth order of judgment, No central bank or -any other group of experts anywhere have yet Nand an an- awer ta this problem of timing and no full answer is possible." f.:The impact of tight money is far ft*, ,eYea; Mr. Nicks stated, and phis particularly true in Canada .)There many businesses have access sources. of fands. in the United tatea` and elsewhere, • In "addition,' he 'continued, 'Once "central banking policy works rgely through the, banking sys- 'tem and, .only -indirectly through „,ther financial institutions pro- N idix4 -.credit, some '..-sources, ;of capital •are less affected than slythera, again with, varying: impact'' different types of borrowers." r .The .result was that miracles 'ilnapid.riat ;be eXpeeted,,of.monetary ;There `were :inherent *ions and" if pressed 'thp: far ,'its Mned- could becoM e so Nneen•as -to• Create' preaSpreS ,that *Ould undermine,-its. effeetivenesa. In thP • last ,few years. the •Pen- vlum ,nai.SWung strongly to -all „Western. ,epiditries towards empha- "Xis ..monetary :policy. To ex- ilect too:, much of monetary ;,policy "hilkht •'result in disillusionment and a - swing ' the, other irectio,n AOWard emphasis on di eet controls and interference with Indiyidual:.znitative and the price system," I The Association president'said the suggestions of Governor Coyne of the Bank of Canada contained in his 1956 annual report and re- lating, to the use of savings de- posits in the ba,nks•"require serious consideration and the ' chartered banks are studying them thorough- ly and carefully." The chartered banks, he continu- ed) are "not opposed to change.. Nevertheless, they are "the cus- todians not only of the liquid funds of business but of much of the liquid savings of the Canadian people and our prime responsibility is toward our depositors, "Fundamental: changes in the banking organization` are' far more than technical, matters to be work- ed out between the'bariks and the Bank of Canada. They concern al- most everyone in this country and I am sure would not be undertaken witnout the widest possible coa- sideration of their purposes and, implications." , Mr. Nicks noted hOw the Can- adian banking system had adapted' itself to sharply changing con- ditions within the past two years without dislocation or confusion and, how the chartered banks had responded to national monetary polidy both through the machinery of central banking ' control- and through active cooperation with the' Bank Of 'Canada. " ' Indicating how the national policy of monetary restraint had affected the chartered- banks, he said that total. Canadian bank de- posits — the main element in the supply, of money — increased less than 'one per cent. from May 1956, to May, 1957 and current accounts -, largely ;business deposits - -actually declined• in amount over' the same period.. Credit restraint' 'can take full effect only over a'considerable period, of time and by June, 1956, seven to nine months after re- straining measures had been talreh by the Bank. Canada,, the in- crease in general' loans came to d halt. Since then the total has ;been comparatiVely stable with some tendency to' rise' in recent weeks, CIGARETTE STRIPS WILL NOT BUY one of the most Persiatent ghosts hi the hislairy,Of wart' for the Wind wears .a red band around its mid^ tIlP—one of the red strip train cigarette packages. P74f ,Ohlansioalell o a life-time rises ghost the calMtrYt. MahiMr. lite ViSerable forsioi :14109:7 itw ho has wolbUr.glciughhke)Pto;atile;. Oldie to many well-Meaning people — many 4lainnd4 fo'dlIcIsa4,11PI°t Inist:nar t ent * p,ugth° that has taken on the proportions of a hoax. ' " `All over -Canada friendly people twhhe° 4r want td frienddQs e'so°14reVtilngtihe ufagar- la`ss little rnel strips that 'go around' cigarette packages, or theY amass even; more. tiaeledS '.'cia'ar 'bonds, or in iet:•:lif:::1:hkefllyi citP1,e,'QetWdt enough4 they caa-tradelbern fez, guide ' CanadianNational jUstitute for kh6.porla, i the'• 'Sole"' clearing 'Abuse probleMs, pertaining to blindness •'-has,; for two decades tried to-coriVined-Peeple that tirere is e na ;truth ::tO" this rumor, guide dogs cannot ;be'obtained through any box.tepe, cigarette strips. Bow the)ruinor -ever got started ndliody".knows., 1..ditding ,tobacco manufacturers who have been cir- culs.rized%ivit insist, they never promised guide.' dogs to ' anyone. The Canadian National Institut'e for the Blind feels that it a rumor; an- evil rumor, fit only to rouge false hopes in the minds of blind people, a 'thoughtless false rumor that MO grown into the' propor. tiona of a cruel boat can Spread Yend spread, until it causes unha*-, pineA to many, then -a good rur4r or, the truth,, can be -spread jilt `as effectively, This would • do,' t greet service to' • Canada's 24,0 sightless citiZens,that is, p?:01,75 I ea everybody who• is 'intereste stopping miscor, cepti ab hlindrress helps, Meanwhile if any of yon '11a4 itiound0 of red cigarette stria saved up, like the dear lady" vylin saved 45,000 Of them, nurn, thein•• and. Spend your time' acquirhig I more true information about tiv capabilities of the blind theinaelvOS. CNIB in every 'Major Canadian centre Will supply Information n guide dogs and hoW they' may obtained. 4 ',floe 'Milk in Siberia 1 In parts et Siberia the tempera- , tore drops to more than fifty do-, ,grUes below sera in winter, and this 'means that the supply of milk there has its problem- When the milk leaves the cow- shed it freezes immediately, but is taken to warm barns where . it thaws out and is poured Intl) con. ' tainers and allowed to freeze ()nee More, When a customer calls for the milk it is merely 'wrapped in 'paper and carried away—lost like a loaf of bread, 'I News of another way, of deliver- i.;:n;* railk—in paper bags--eomes fi•c.rea New Zealand. This procedure may become the j accepted method of shipping milk powder from New Zealand , to- Britain, ) Over the past two Years small I experimental shipments of ;Intik- !powder in special paper •bags have been made ,and not only is this type of container cheaper than the .standard carton used at present, but it is also prefprred ' to the i hessian sack• which was formerly: tised,—'rlie War Cry. } : with. Polledting alnythinp; .t' get 4A. dog for a Wind friend, The -Cana.' 3EFINfilYE '006 d ial, National Institute for the Slim) la 'prepared to .assist in any blind person who wishes to use a guide dog, ..ONIB, American agencies, for the blind, and the tobacco indtletrY, fikee now ma-icing' one mM, eancenttot- 0 effort to kill this useless, consuming•and silly Boar, They. are asking everyone in the nation to help quell a ghost wbieh..apparehtr ly-refuses to die-, s • All Canadian Twine - Made in Kitchener APPROXIMATELY 250 FEET PER. POUND !VIE ARE "NOW BUYING ,CHICKEN .AND ,,COWL FIVE DAYS A WEEK ..Ccontagi one' of : our Cream Drivers or call 971, Nktinghain,and make ,arrangements to 'Market:your poultry at top prices. , • WINONA' PR DU,cjS- 10 Niumsit. sic UTTERS! The Wingham Branch of the Canadian I,.eg,ion was placed first with Bluevale W.I. 'as the'be t representa- tive floats in the parade on Monday There were almost ninety entrici of Various kinds in the Parade. Correct feeding and management practices' have a lot td do, with the arrival of consistently large litters. ilhen it's mighty important to you 19 wean big, strong, healthy litters . . . and wean every pig farrowed. At the SHUR-GAIN Demonstration Farm, this spring, under actual farm conditions, an average of 10 pigs per litter• were weaned. What a difference between 5 or 6 per litter, and ten! The difference is often the difference between proper and inadequate feeding of the nursing sow, The difference to you in extra pigs weaned is the difference between no profit and hi satisfactory `profits. The nursing sow should have the best of care and the hest of feed while growing her litter. The best of feed, the best of insurance, for a high average of weanlings is SHUR-GAIN 16% NURSING SOW RATION. 0 Spend a few 'minutes with us ,and let us outline the new SHUR-GAIN 5 ,STEP HOG FEEDING PROGRAM. We've a copy of the SHUR-GAIN Bog ,Feeding and Manaaernent handbook for you too, Ltd VVINGH AM 1100010111.11111101111111111******11491111111.iiiiiiiillitillitilliffillit11601110**1111 . • Ike Centennial: was it family affair. It wai a time of reunion !arid a 'time or friendodiii5 mid fan. %lilt together 611,4otelihfiia $4teet biOlt 010004 ,• :Mtritatute gratid$taild for a teat imolai YlaW the 1)1i.thde .pbotef f :11 THURSDAY, JULY 7.30 pan':2 'I at the Glan*orth Sales' Aren'a between e . Glanwoith and, St. Thomas on • the Wellington Rd. ACcreditei Blood Tested Vaccinated I #1! Selling ,the entire Purebred, R.6.P, herd owned by Howard II:Stewart, Chatham, Consisting of 21. cows, 3 bred ,heifers, 10 open heifers, and, 3 • heifer calves. As this it• a milk shipper's !lira, there cowis and heifers freshening every rR month of 'the year, Many have records from 13,000 lbs. to 16,000 lbs.. of milk and 500 to over 600 of fat.f wit h 2 Yr, ldrecor s from12;000 lbs. ▪ over 15,000 lbs. High record bulls have been 't iisedo the present sire.fronn an "Excellent" cow • with a high rebord: -Be sure to attend this sale -if you want big, good type cows in good condition with plenty of proAticton. • 4 a Wei 'Managers ‘, CANADA PAC SHORE HOLSTEINS LTD. Cattle Financed H OLSTEIN