Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 13 Jun 1952, p. 7

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

There was considerable discusâ€" big,er ones took up the quest for sion regarding property the club surface food as it got later. wishes to obtain to build a club _ If we hadn‘t fished all day, 1 house, and this took up a MajOo wouldn‘t have minded staying for part of the business period. ‘a while after it got dark to see if Herb Greyerbi.,. elected chairâ€"‘the trout really did go on a feedâ€" man of the Field Committee at|ing spree. Then too the mosquiâ€" the April meeting, resigned, as loes were getting J"‘e“’ bad, so he is leaving to lake up residence We decided we had enough trout in the West. Cammy Shantz who for one day and came home. was elected treasurer at the April| * * ® " * meeting, asked to be released _ Ott Hoffman took six nice trout from the treasurer‘s job so that he on Monday of this week. I think might take over as Field Commitâ€" Ott is starting to think that it tee chairman. Cammy should might be smart to sneak up on make a very excellent man for these fish during the week rather this position. than go fish'mg_on Jthe weekâ€"end, Fishing was nothing to brag about over the weekâ€"end. Tommy Jackson an yours truly took anâ€" there was a very good attendance Sorry we couldn‘t be there felâ€" lows, but we are nursing a sumâ€" mer cold and feel as miserable as a wet dog on a cold night. Walter Denton was made treasâ€" urer of the club. .c "The Grand River" SPORTING, FISH & GAME NEWS #A CEMTIURY of PROGRESS Waterloo County SEE . 11 MUSIC June 18, 1962 CARLINGS THE CARLING BREWERIES LIMITED WATERLOO â€" TORONTO â€"â€" WINDSOR COLORFUL Conside ri®&! prooky on the fact that it\ to have the was _ a _ Very| anchor its warm night, brush. Ne and â€" that lhe(,.me, fran fishing season 1s] off, break in â€" full sWinE| small hook LORFUL â€" SPECTACULAR IN SUPPORT OF WATERLOO COUNTY HOSPITALS TRAIL of the CONESTOGA " . . . that you should not pick the Trillium, our provincial Roral emblem. Since its three leaves are near the top of the stem, they usually get picked with the blossom. And as the leaves feed the root, the whole plant dies of starvation. Protect the Trillium . . . it is part of your outdoor enjoyment, © DRAMA © THE BALLET Based on Dr. Mabe!l Dunhem‘s Move! old reliable Goiden m’ and then muxa added a dark dropper. .Several trout seemed to like the appearance of the dropâ€" per bouncing m the surface and we have L at numerous times that two files will work other crack at the brookies, but \vmu-ecc_u.ht.ourbâ€"fl up the frying pan, it certainly to have the tail fy flip around and anchor itself firmly in a &o! brush. Needless to say ite rather frantic efforts, the trout m off, breaking the point off small hook. Just as it was get%dulk. there were three distinct hatches of flles come on over the water. Small trout were feeding heavily when we left and probably the when one will not. We finally hung a good sized Ott Hoffman took six nice trout on Monday of this week. I think Ott is starting to think that it might be smart to sneak up on these fish during the week rather than go fishing on the weekâ€"end, like everyone else does. He might have something there too. Think we‘li try it one of these days, before the fish find out what is happening. fl:lu.'. Told through In ( I £ j WATERLOO PARK JUNE 30 â€" JULY 5 blacks, mallard, canvasback, pinâ€" tails, etc. There were even 65 wood ducks wintering heer and one Whistling Swan. How our children need to learn how to work! Years ago we were insistent that each member of a family do his or her fair share of work connected with the home. Members of what is now our most senior generation learned how to work and work hard. They {ounded this Canada of ours not only on sound princirles but by putting these principles into acâ€" tion by the sweat of their brows. They missed out, however on learning how to play. Some of them never knew anything but work and many <passed away f" cent of the continent‘s waterâ€" owl population winter here, by actual count a total of 833,000 birds of more than twentyâ€"fve mies. Of these there were 1,302 ada Geese, the rest were comâ€" prised of practically all the well Intended . to br“;f,, hunting li~ cense fees more in line with presâ€" ent day dollar values, a recent amendment to the Game and Fisheries Act, passed at the last session of the Ontario Legislature, lists the following changes, which are now in effect: trhed of pncuclllx' all the well nown breeds of ducks such as Farmer‘s deer licence raised to $2 from $1. This license is availâ€" able only to a farmer actually But what should children learn| while they play? Well, some of, the learnings we listed were sharing, coâ€"operation with playâ€" mates and leaders, how to lose, how to win, tidiness and cleanliâ€"‘ ness, skills in games and crafts‘ and how to work. Yes, how to work, how to stick to a task, beâ€"; gun perhaps as 'fll\ay and later beâ€". come tedious. ey should learn| to stick to the job until it is truly| and thoroughly finished. _ _ | nlaverounds. _ _ _ _ _______ The next generation got right play g“rou.ndsflh,- of Piayground to work to prove that all "work You did know, of course, that: ‘"'dl no play. m”k"";;l“l‘"i These, the function of playgrounds is not NO ‘°5% sparing on themse‘ves, are unly to keep chgldi'e‘n out of mis.| NOW dying by the hundreds with chief, although they must do that; their noses to the %Pdstoqe in & ur to relieve parents of the neces. fnancially competifive existence sity of inventing amusements for WNich, in spite of its dedication their children all through the to slavery, bids fair to leave few summer holidays, and the playâ€" if any of the sound foundations grounds program must do that‘ characteristic of the labors of too. The summer playgrounds their forefpthers, The difference program must go farther than|S%°®S to lie in the fact that our gither of these ends if it is to war. PF°sent day adults have dedicated rant the support of Civic Adminiâ€" their efforts to materialistic rather stration. Playgrounds supervisors| !h2" sPiritual gods. The end must be leaders, teachers, direcâ€"| AChieved must therefore be maâ€" tors of energies and ideas. In.‘ terialistic and we shall, someâ€" deed, if supervisors are not all of, Where along the line, have to pick these they become mere watchers| UP where we omitted to observe of swings, handersâ€"out of game‘ these spiritual values. equipment and joeâ€"boys, needing Learn to Play | no initiative or imagination. Suâ€", And what about today‘s chilâ€" pervisors need both t*iesequalitiu’dren.’_ They are in danger of to a high defree if they are to be learning only to play for playing‘s in the foreâ€"front of the children sake. Some of their parents come they lead. { right out and say that they do not Learn How to Work want their children to have to But what should children learn| work as they did. Fathers get into while they play? Well, some of, the ratâ€"race while the children the learnings we listed were|‘earn to be drones. There is every sharing, coâ€"operation with playâ€"|indication that with the decreased mates and leaders, how to lose, home duties of urban living, At a recent session of the Playâ€" grounds Supervisors‘ Training Course we were talking about what children should learn at playgrounds. _ Function of Piayground _ Playgrounds â€" â€" A Means to an End KECREATION NOTRES By DON McLAREN Recreation Director at $ a‘cleck Resident deer licences are raised to $5 from $4; resident moose licences to $10 from §6; camp deer licences (one for each four holders of individual deer licences) raised to $5, formerly $4. Vernon Bauman & Son living upon and tillin& his land and is valid only in the county or district in which he resides. ‘ong before the{'t'o'uld even enjoy the fruits of their labors. They enunciated but never practiced that "all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." 2 Noses to Grindstones coopfYEaAR ‘The Canadian Rockies wouldn‘t be the Canadian Rockies to visitors unless they saw a scarletâ€"coated Royal Canadian Mounted Policeman and his And LifeGuards are reâ€"usable â€"good for 100,000 miles or more of blowoutâ€"safe drivingâ€"outâ€" last 3 sets of tires! Figure the savings yourself! See us today for horse. Here is one of the "Mounties" who is stationed -i-'“jv;’a National Park with his horse "Blackie" and in the background is multiâ€"colored Pyramid Mountain across the Athabaska Valley from Jasper Park Lodge. a village of log bungalows, operated by the Canadian National Railways Blending with the mountain scenery, the Lodge offers tourists all 1! rodern facilities of a city hotel. Nonâ€"resident hunting licences LIFEGUARD SAFETY TUBES BIG TRADEâ€"IN ALLOWANCE Phone 5â€"5075 tor your old tubes Caftle Rustling 1. What group of industrial workâ€" ers receive highest weekly earâ€" nings? 2. Wherg is the source of the St. Lawrence River? 3. Our foreign trade last fear was greatest with which of these 5 countries: France, New Zealand, Brazil, Japan, Sweden? 4. Who, born in 1948, holds, among other titles, that of Great Steward of Scotland? 5.Ottawa‘s social security taxes (for family allowances, penâ€" sions, etc.) amount to how much per week? ANSWERS: 5. About $20,000,000 a week:-‘_:i. Braz_il; 1. Pulp and paâ€" to hunt bear, fox, game birds, rabbits, raccoon, squirrel and wolf, formerly $15.50 are now $21. Nonâ€" resident humingblicences for deer, bear, fox, game birds, rabbits, racâ€" coon, squirrel and wolf, which were $25.75, are now $36. Nonâ€" resident hunting licences to hunt moose, der, bear, fox, game birds rabbits, raccoon, squirrel and wolf are raised from $75. to $101. A few hours later the animals wolere located at a Listowel stock sale. Kitchener Man _ Join the Canadian Army Active Force Now MB Charged With $ enmmmmmnmenmmmnmonerntor mt mm o hi i T oo mm mm omm ,, Provincial Police report two Kitchener men have been charged in connection with theft of seven calves from Conestogo districtf farms. George Crummel, 24, of King: St. East, and Percy Stoutenberg,_‘ 24, of Borden Ave., have been] charged with cattle theft, Cpl. Louis Needham said. | The officer reported six calves from the farm of Norman Bauâ€" man, two miles north of Conesâ€" togo, and one from the farm of‘ Wes. Snyder, 1% miles north otf Conestogo, were discovered missâ€"| ing early Thursday of last week. pw' mill en;flo'yeu; 4. Prince CBarles, the Heir Apparent; 2. In the State of Minnesota. Arkadi Svobodin served as Joâ€" seph Stalin‘s personal nurse. Svoâ€" bodin, escaped from Russia, proâ€" vides the first detailed account of the Red Dictator‘s intimate life to reach the Western World. Read "I was Stalin‘s Nurse", starting in this Sunday‘s (June 15) issue of NEW Color Gravure American Weeklg', exclusively with The Deâ€" troit Sunday Times. The from man, togo, . Supervisors Can llelJ; So let‘s teach the children in our care how to work, how to siay and when to do both. The Waterioo Recreation Supervisors zan help materially by the direcâ€" tion they give to this end. They have a right to count on every ‘ast parent to help. Can we eount on your assistance? This is why all leaders must teach the satisfaction of a job well done; that play is a reaction to work, a recreative power so that the real thing, work, may be done the better; that a person‘s life‘s work is the thing which makes life worth the living and that it is such a fine art that it takes mInfl a iifetime to develop it to its fu! glory; that without work we beâ€" come duil, without the sweat of the browe can not fully appreâ€" viate play. Work keeps us h‘[:gy and mentally healthy. Play is the celief from but never the substiâ€" tute for work. These things we need sorely to teach our children if they are to be balanced, happy successful people in their day and age. _ children will not learn that one must work to eat and that duties must be shared. "I WAS STALIN‘S NURSE" QUICK CANADIAN QUIZ Â¥ _ Want to relieve them District Cub News. L. M. Heipel It was my privile%;a some time ago to visit the 5th Waterloo Cub Pack and invest Mrs. Durnan as an Assistant Cubmaster. Although I wrote an article about the inâ€" vestiture shortly afterwards it NOTICE | *‘ s4T., JUNE 14 tE WY ATER LO O BOWLING LANES Ltd. WE WILL REâ€"OPEN ON AUG. 18 FOR BOTH SNACKS, MEALS AND BOWLING High school graduates MAKE SATU_DAY JUNE 14 YOUR LAST BOWLING PARTYNIGHT OF THE SEASON Durimflu summer it is necessary to repaint and sand our equipment. it is therefore impossible during xon operations to keep our restaurant Young men recently graduated from High School with Junior Matricuâ€" lation or equivalent educational standard, may become officers in the Canadian Army Active Force. > If accepted you begin training at Camp Borden as an Officer Cadet to qualify as a Second Licutenant in the Active Force. You will receive Second Lieutenant‘s pay while in training. When you are granted a commission you will then serve for periods of 3, 4 or 5 years as you choose under the Short Service Comâ€" mission Plan. At the end of this service you may apply for a permaâ€" YOU CAN BE AN OFFICER CLOSED 14 Princess St. W. _ â€" WILL BE & SNACK BAR series of incidents. Therefore I am taking this oportunity to apoloâ€" gize to Mrs. Durnan and also offer my con{ratulations‘ Mrs, Durnan is keenly interested in Cubbing and I feel certain she will be an asset to the Pack. ver didâ€"appear in print due to a Artillery rfi'&mm Ont. $6 Rahmind Sngor Wasl Thrane On *‘ ppmime fatig~ 230 M:';Yr::w' tays Bay, Ont. Army Recruiting Centre, James St. Armoury, To qualify you must be: â€"Single â€" Physically fitâ€" Between 18 and 25 years of age and have a Junior Matriculation or Equivailent Educaâ€" Apply today to the Recruiting Office nearest your home. No. 13 Personnel Depot, Wallis House, Rideay & Charlotte Sts., Ottawa, Ont. Last Tuesday, ist Waterloo and 1st Bridgeport Packs met at Cenâ€" tral School for the final schedule game in the Cub Softball League. Bridgeport chalked up their 4th consecutive win by a score of 50â€" 14. The Ist Waterloo boys made a good showing considering they hadn‘t played tocether as a team before and displayed some fine sportsmansl;i(p under the direction of Charles Kayes. Although Bridgeport finished the schedule at the top of the league they know that some tough opposition awaits them in the finals especially with fellows like Dave Britnell, of 11th Kitchâ€" ener, who recently pitched a noâ€" hit noâ€"run game. See you in the playoffs.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy