M y imun®" V en ns 4 y Sss 0 5, ~ o tmitce o y n, 27 e o o 8.A in .. s 4n 1X 0 u. 29 /f €% ? i *€5 ï¬â€˜l ~,h‘; h .’;‘; is : Je u»‘k: c\’ :‘hf‘{ \‘o:r "Ae4 }:*- 140 s 1 ‘ "‘ ', C w -M'ï¬"â€ï¬ Whoa s h ‘ i‘,,;;.f. ® " '-“ #14%. wZ \ 5s P s heciie ~ol cqnon raiaiaannt aie CA + O “‘ 3 A w" c And school is nearly over. And the most beautiful marriages ever â€" conceived are in the offing. It is a month when surely every Canadian should be shouting, ‘"Praise the Lord", or ‘"Let joy be unconfined", or at least, "Wow! This is the greatest!" But a benevolent Proviâ€" dence, in its wisdom, must remind man that every rose has a thorn, that every light contains its darkness, that every good has a balancing evil. It‘s probably just as well. If there were no bad smells, we wouldn‘t appreciate the painting and repairing and launching. The golfers are having their finest hour beâ€" fore the silly summer dufâ€" fers swarm onto the courses. Our trees have forgotten their groaning and cracking in the teeth of winter; they bow and whisper like ladies at a garden party while the squirrels scamper saucily about their legs and the birds twitter among their ample bosoms and verdant kick up their heels and butt their mothers on one side, then on the udder. June is one of the happiest months of the year in Canâ€" ada. Or it should be. _ In other countries they have spring. In this country, we have a bleak month beâ€" fore the last snow goes, and June bursts forth in all her lush, soft splendour. Grass is startling green and the cattle fill their belâ€" lies with the juicy sweetness after a long winter of conâ€" finement and dull fodder. 110 King S. Waterloo June is full of anticipaâ€" on. The boat owners are Young ones of all species PICTORIAL STAMPS for collectors JOHNSTON PHARMACY TOPICAL World Wide Waterloo 141 King St. South 742â€"3 112 ALL SALE STOCK 50% OFF 2 For 1 Sale LEASE EXPIRED and Beginning Friday, June 4th It‘s even worse for the student. There is that oaf talking about poetry when the greatest poetry in the world is taking place outside that stifling rectangular prisâ€" on. The blood stirs, the limbs go languorous, the eyes go glassy and that reâ€" tarded adult up front might as well be talking to himself in Swahili. _ To be sure, school is nearâ€" ly out. But June is pure hell for both teacher and student. For the teacher it is a scramble of final reviews, an avalanche of evaluation, a surfeit of statistics. Fair enough. He‘s paid for it. But he might as well be teachâ€" ing a couple of cords of wood. The bodies are there, but the minds and spirits have fled through the open windows into the musky June air. _As for those beautiful marriages, conceived in heaven, and timeâ€"tabled for June. If I had any statistics, I‘d say that statistics show that 50 percent of them will end in a life of quiet desperaâ€" tion, 30 percent of them will be unbearable, 10 perâ€" cent will be impossible, five percent unspeakable. The rest will wind up having their 60th anniversary picâ€" tures in the local paper. There‘s all that fuxuriant grass. But the damn stuff is up to your knees before you get your lawnmower overhauled. And there‘s all that young life. June was a happy month for my mother, more years ago than it is decent to talk about. She proudly bore her third son, me. But what she got was a sickly whelp who cried for two years without stopping and barely surviv< ed every infant‘s ailment there was in those days. There‘s all that anticipaâ€" tion. But the boat owner discovers that the rats have been at his sails, or the terâ€" mites at his hull, or his moâ€" tor has developed a perforaâ€" ted ulcer. And the golfer swings too hard on his first day out, slips a disc and is out for the summer. blackflies just waiting to reâ€" vel in turning you into a swollen porpoise or a stripâ€" There‘s all that glorious nature, jjust waiting to be there‘s another turn of the wheel, another side of the good ones. If we never felt pain or iliness, we wouldn‘t kh Akiree.. ieA .t : > z> dihrpre + . * 3l..: > m t i ~ _ People who live on warm ° pork (loin, "tenderioin _ or islands<in the Pacific and shoulder) =~ in countries touched:by its â€" ~â€"1/4 cup vegetable oil * ‘ western shores seem to have ~ 2 cloves of garlic; chopâ€" a special way with pork. ped C . â€". _ They roast whole pigs over _ Sailt and pepper wer felt OPeD fires for ceremonial 2 mediumâ€"size tomatoes wouldn‘t Occasions or cook it luauâ€" â€" 1 mediumâ€"size cucumber, style in a pit dug in the peeled andsliced =~ â€" in life,; Sand. They also have a host 1 _ mediumâ€"size . onion, i of the Of everyday pork recipes _ thinly sliced : of the that can seem quite exotic °_ 1 mediumâ€"size green pepâ€" to us, yet most are easy to per, cut in half inch squarâ€" glorious Prepare. es 2 g to be In Thailand they call their 1/2 cup sugar ere are favorite sweet and sour 1/2 cup cider vinegar es andâ€" pork recipe, Mu Priu Wan. 2 tablespoons soya sauce ig to reâ€" â€" Thin strips of lean pork are 1/2 teaspoon salt into a browned and then cooked Cut meat into thin strins onion and green pepper in a sweetened vinegar sauce that does something very special for the pork. Me Priu Wan (Sweet and Sour Pork) For those who do not have a good picnic cooler, food specialists at the Food Council, Ontario departâ€" ment of agriculture and If the only care given a lawn is to keep it cut, it is probably best to leave the clippings to decompose and contribute to soil fertility, says the lawn expert. But where lawns are â€" fertilized, _ watered and kept in good condition, the cuttings should be raked up and removed. Whether grass clippings should be raked up after mowing or not depends on how you look after your lawn, says W.E. Cordukes, a turf specialist with the Canada department of agâ€" riculture‘s Plant Research Institute at Ottawa. through the warm weather. Unfortunately, sandwiches do not. travelâ€"well in warm weather unless they are kept well chilled. Special care must be taken with _ sandwiches made with meat, poultry, fish and eggs. These fillâ€" ings may cause food poiâ€" soning if not kept properly chilled. Picnic coolers and ice are the two best ways to keep food cool Lawn clippings _4.GL «/ 021?& ~CM Picnics and sandwiches » hand in hand all ‘Z?f{dé%rnzzn I y CUHAVE Limp lunch no picnic OTTAWA ST. PLAZA 578â€"7350 KITCHENER Open ‘Til 2 A.M. Every Night WE DELIVER @ PIZZA â€" All Varieties ®© SPAGHETTI e LASAGNA & RAVIOLI! ®@ TAGLIATELLE e SUB MARINES 3 pork .(loin, tenderloinâ€"or remove from pan.â€" â€" â€"~ * ~1/4 cup vegetable oil * remove skins; * 2 cloves of garlie; chop d:;iï¬h.mbm ""Tast andpeppét * ond greeg %, pepper â€" â€" . greena pepper; stirâ€"fry 2 mediumâ€"size tomatoes for three minutes then re â€"_ _ 1 mediumâ€"size cucumber, _ turn meat to pan. 1 â€" mediumâ€"size onion, ~dients and add to meat and thinly sliced vegetables; simmer for 1 mediumâ€"size green pep three minutes. Then dis per, cut in half inch squarâ€" solve one teaspoon cornâ€" es 2 starch in a â€"little cold water 1/2 cup sugar and add to pan; cook and 1/2 cup cider vinegar stir until mixture boils: 2 tablespoons soya sauce Serve at once with hot 1/2 teaspoon salt rice. Makes about six Servâ€" Cut meat into thin strips â€" ings.. s Tem st in 2 lage T hers threeâ€"quar ;" mhequ â€"® _ lkiï¬lllet; a:l:.'glrliclldlaute eac : l until go! then remove garlic pieces. Add meat to name s ate pan and cook until nicely Clare Hossack of Galt has browned and well done; seaâ€" b¢en elected president of food suggest the following ways to keepâ€" sandwiches cool and safe. Sandwiches will keep well Don‘t spoil a beautiful day with a limp lunch and possible food poisoning. Freezing unopened cans of fruit juice is another RESTAURANT way to keep picnic sandâ€" wiches cold. This has the added benefit of providâ€" ing a very cold refreshing picnic _ beverage when thawed. bread. This has several advantages besides keepâ€" ing the sandwich filling even â€" lettuce son with salt and pepper; sale â€" butler is easier to spread because the bread doesn‘t crumble and tear, the chill in the bread keeps tains the characteristic texture of fresh bread when it thaws. 579â€"1520 with 466 ALBERT WATERLOO they â€" are _Mr. Murray, activities diâ€" rector at the Waterloo school, has been named exeâ€" cutiveâ€"secretary for district 24, a newlyâ€"created partâ€" time post. County Secondary Teachers‘ Federation succeeding Al Clare Hossack of Galt has been elected president of district 24 of the Waterloo Murray of Laurel vocation starch in a little cold water and add to pan; cook and Serve at once with hot rice. Makes about six servâ€" WwESTMOUNT PLACE Westmount Jewellers From the manufacturer at substantial savings. Sturdy conâ€" struction. Upholstered and finished by expert craftsmen, usâ€" ing the finest materials. Storage compartment under seats. 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