Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 26 Aug 1971, p. 6

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DEAR ANXIOUS â€" Have your parents got the jitters about teenage friendships? It doesn‘t give you much of a chance to clue them in if they even refuse to meet him. Doing chores for them shows the right spirit. They let me talk to him twice. I could only talk 10 minutes and I had to have all the doors opened in order for them to hear what we were saying. (My mother never talks less than one hour) They won‘t even let me join the skating in town because they know he will be there. They say I‘m too young to have him over on Sunday afternoons so he could meet the family. I even stay home to do chores while they go out thinking that I might be able to do the same, but it‘s alâ€" ways the same ‘"No". DEAR DORIS â€" I will be 16 in January. My parents think I am not old enough to go with my boyfriend when we go to town. They have even said that I was not to answer the phone when he phones me. Prepare enough of his special dishes for two or three meals at one time ; and never even consider giving the others the same food. The doctor, and the hospital, are your best friends and will go into great detail to guide you when you find you need this. Is there anywhere I could get some booklets on mealâ€" planning for him? Will his diet upset my older children (two and four)? Years ago, celiac was incurâ€" able. Now, with care, it can be classified as a minor childhood disease of the diâ€" gestive tract. The whole ansâ€" wer is a rigid diet. DEAR DORIS â€" I am the _ Perhaps when you do turn mother of three small boys, 16 they will realize a mileâ€" one of which is two months Stone has been passed. old. It has just been discovâ€" Would they consider a ered that he has celiac diss birthday party with boys ease and is on a glutenâ€"free, and girls? noâ€"grain, noâ€"starch, and _ Teenagers need encourâ€" noâ€"milk diet. Being so young, agement more than they I find it hard to plan meals néed spying on. Show Mom for him as well as the rest and Dad this column. #4 L 6 _ Waterioo Chronicle, Thursday, August 26, 1971 DEAR â€" STUNNED Doris Clark The â€" aggressive â€" ones may appear to be having a heyday, but even they have their selfdoubts. They just show them differentâ€" ly. Keep on with the inviâ€" tations, and in games at home éncourage her to take the lead. She participates in school activities and seems to have a pleasing personâ€" ality. She continuously inâ€" vites friends over, but they seldom return the invitaâ€" tion. At recess time it seems that all of her friends are asked to join in and play games where she is left standing alone. Puzzled DEAR PUZZLED â€" Beâ€" ing 11 has its problems. Your girl stands between childhood _ and _ teenâ€"age years. She struggles for a spot in the sun and agonizes over her failures. If the probabilities are Fair and Warmer, go ahead: ask him. _ DEAR INTERESTED â€" Just how aggressive was said male in welcoming each opportunity for talk? Did he offer the ride because you looked forlorn, he felt forâ€" lorn, or he was eager for your company? This is permitted by the guest house, provided they are given notice. Both of the parties in question are DEAR DORIS â€" How do I go about helping my l1â€"year â€" old to become more likeable with the children in her class? troduced to a gentleman, and upon meeting him again on a couple of different ocâ€" casions and being given a house, would it be proper to invite him back some evenâ€" ing for dinner? Would they consider a birthday party with boys and girls? Teenagers need encourâ€" agement more than they need spying on. Show Mom and Dad this column. DEAR DORIS â€" When on vacation, after being inâ€" Interested and a bouquet of flowers was delivered to her in the Sick Children‘s Hospital in Toronto by Ralph Mitchell, trainer of the Panthers, on behalf of the club. The boost was no doubt a help to her recovery and Darcy is now convalescing at her home where she will This, as well as an autoâ€" graphed color photograph their successes and failures. Panther playing manager Bob McKillop heard about her interest from Prof. K.D. Fryer and had club memâ€" bers autograph a ball for her. ster, she whiled away the time by following the luck of the Kitchener Panthers Drive discovered there‘s a lot of kindness left in the world when she was confinâ€" ed to hospital to await a Fan gets flowers of 114 *4 Mrs. Harold Pflug, proâ€" prietor of Creative Crafts in Waterloo Square, and Mrs. Lester Timm of 235 Lourdes St., came third to two Kitâ€" chener teams. The consolâ€" ation prize went to a Presâ€" ton rink. since until both women met at the Hospital for Sick was a patient there. Whizzes on the greens Two Waterloo lawnbowl!â€" ers placed third in competiâ€" tions for the Gordon trophy at the Rockway Lawn Bowlâ€" ing Greens in Kitchener. whom she had met in hosâ€" be encazsed in a body cast for another three months. MADELEINE â€"Goodâ€" QUALITY CLOTHING Surrounded By In this store you are for Westmount Place Waterloo Children‘s Boutique e o es on t OoPEN Tues. â€" Sat. 9 :30 â€"6:00 Thurs. â€" Fri. till â€" 9.30 734â€"1981 at ___ _ AT A and B we SPECiALIZE N m $7.95â€" ©10.50 ANY SHAPE s "PROTECT YOUR INVESTMENT" 36 Guelph St. â€" Bridgeport â€" 742â€"6003 After 6:00 p.m. Residence 578â€"6011 SIMONIZING THESIS STEREO SHOP ANY SIZE L "y

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