& ADVERTISING RATES / On application. Advertising copy must reach the office not later than Monday noon to insure insertion. The wisdom of building up an adequate reserve, a practice which has been followed by y companies, is indicated in a time of deâ€" Bnnion such as is being experienced at the present time when conditions have resulted in a reduced volume of business with sources of income to a more or less extent curtailed. The Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Comâ€" pany, which has followed this commendable policy, is in a mest favourable position as is indicated in the annual reports submitted at the annual meeting on Saturday. This outâ€" standing and Solidly established company closed the year 1932 with cash assets, including acâ€" crued interest, of $1,545,458. In the Directors‘ Report attention was called to the abnormal losses on farm business which were again heavy the past year. The Company will continue its policy of making a careful inspection of all farm risks in order to correct many physical defects which in the past have been the cause of serious losses by fire. That the Waterloo Mutual continues to maintain its commanding position among the fire companies of the Dominion will be a source of much satisfaction to its many policyholders. ~__ The new move on war debts by presidentâ€" elect Franklin D. Roosevelt in inviting Sir Ronald Lindsay. British Ambassador to the United States, to a conference at Warm Springs, Georgia, is of great interest to Engâ€" land and other nations. The interview was held in preparation for the British ambassador‘s departure for England this week. The interâ€" view with President Roosevelt will doubtless enable Sir Renald Lindsay to inform the British government what Britain‘s representaâ€" tives may expect when they come to Washingâ€" ton after President Roosevelt officially takes office next month. , The suggestion is made that strong finanâ€" cial interests in the United States are bringing pressure to bear with a view to securing a radical change of front on the part of the government. Big business men in the United States have been fully aware for a long time that their country has been taking great losses by its insistence on debt collection. They are now said to be demanding sweeping concessions to debtor nations as a means of reâ€"establishing international trade and restoration of prosâ€" perity. During the past few weeks heads of leadâ€" ing Canadian insurance companies, in their reâ€" ports at annual meeting‘s, have stressed the need of lower tarifls among the nations of the world in order to secure a return of economic progress. The building of high tarif walls in past years has had the effect of destroying commerce. No measure is more pressingly needed at the present time than a sweeping reciprocal reduction in the tariffs of all the principal trading countries. Sir Robert Borden, a former Premier of Canada, in his address at the Crown Life, said: "While a erying need of nations suffering from depregsion transcending all experience is for the interchange of products and for removal of restrictions that impede it, many governâ€" ments seem obsessed with a determination to divide the world into tradeâ€"tight compartments. To do so is to stop the circulation of prosperity‘s lifeâ€"blood and eventually to destroy its vitality." Many of the bank presidents in their anâ€" nual addresses have stressed the need of lower tariffs and regretted that the world had perâ€" mitted itself to drift into a state of economic warfare more destructive than the great war. It is hoped that leadership develops at the world economic conference and that nations will be prepared to participate in a general tariff disâ€" armament to end this economic warfare. south of the city boundary line. Perce Hunt, the owner, was attendâ€" ing Mount Hamilton Church, and Mrs. Hunt was ill. With no hel& available, _ the brothers ran to the burning strucâ€" ture and braved thick emoke to reach the imgrhomd cattle. The released all but one heifer, whiri :!fl-d, and then drove the horses to a field. '{ this time th smoke and em of fiames had aroused Mre, 1 wnd neighbors and ï¬o had rescued from a burning barn, Michael and Fred Kozloff of Barton township, near Hamilton, had a narrow escape on Sunday afternoon. With the infuriated animal close on their heels, the boys crossed a field and cleared a fence to reach safety. ‘Others who were attracted by the blaze were held at bay by the animal, but it was finally herded inâ€" to a field with 20 head of catile. Prompt action by the Kozloff brothers saved the livestock. The boys were on their way by Burkâ€" hoider United Sunday School when they saw clouds of amoke issuing from the tog portion of a lnrï¬e barn on the Burkholder farm, a mile BOYS SAVE CATTLE IN BARN FIRE; ATTACKED BY BULL ity fAremen were summoned. The many of the loss is several thousand dollars. organization Attacked by a bul.l. wl_wivh they _. _ ~~ "~Waterice, Ontarie. SUBSCRIPTION RATES In United States, per year ... CONFER ON WAR DEBT PROBLEM LOWER TARIFFS MUST COME THE WATERLOO MUTUAL PW No WEEERP ENE RARRITE by David Bean & Sons, Lid,| |â€"_ _ THE RAILWAY OUTSTANDING CANADIAN CHURCHMAN IS DEAD Rev. Samuel Dwight Chown, LL.D., D.D., outstanding Canadian churechman _ and _ former mnl superintendent of the M int Church of Canada, died on Monday night at his home, 43 Dug#gan Ave. Toronto, in his m-r. He ha‘ been ill since N r. Leader of the Church Union fhey were not out of the bank 30 seconds when M. M. MacKenzie, manager, dashed into the street shouting: "Stop that car." O. B. Heisey stoppccr the mnrufer and asked what was wrong. Within anâ€" other _ minute _ MacKenzie â€" and Heisey were in the latter‘s car burning up the road in pursuit of the bandit‘s car. movement since 1908, occupant of many of the M‘iut offices o, church organization _ in _ Canada, _ able A â€" police â€" dragnet has â€" been dropped over the province to preâ€" vent the escape of two gunmen who held up the Markham branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce on Monday afternoon, herded the staff into t{e vault, snatched $2,000 from the teller‘s cage, and made a laughing getâ€"away. ooo BANDITS ROB BANK OF $2.000 ‘ The Canadian people are being awakened by the gravity of the railway problem. Both the Governmentâ€"and the Opposition have adâ€" mitted that the burden placed upon the public treasury, through the~Canadian National, is a heavy one. _ Recently ludin{bunineu\gn and others closely connected with railway miatters have made the statement that changing conditions must bring about closer coâ€"operation between the two railway companies with a view to eliminating a great part of the duplication in lines and keen competition which is costing the; taxpayers a million dollars a week. It is estiâ€" mated that this year‘s deficit, including capital outlays, will be close to seventy million dollars.i What the country needs is such a coâ€" ordination of the railways as will drastically cut the cost of management and at the same time divide any profits that are realized beâ€" tween the privatelyâ€"owned and publiclyâ€"owned railways on an equitable basis. The public will welcome such an amalgamation for operating purposes as would be fair to both the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National Railways. For some time Communists in Canada have told about the advantages which Soviet Russia has over Canada but they decline to go there even when the Canadian government offers to provide their travelling expenses. There is a reason. They doubtless know that conditions in Russia are not what they claim it to be. Their propaganda is doubtless paid for. Those people who have any doubt about living conâ€" ditions in Russia may be interested in a letter signed "Student‘" which appeared in a recent issue of the New York Times. The quotations in a portion of articles given below are taken from Pravda, official Communist paper in Mosâ€" cow "At the factory Manuilov, in Kharkov, the workâ€" ers get, ‘first, water with old stale cereal and, second, cereal without water.‘ In Vladimir, at the factory Gladishev, ‘day after day the first and second courses: consist of cereal.‘ At the factory in Novosibkov, ‘the dinner is, of course, without meat, and consists of borshtch (beet soup), which resembles the stuff one feeds to cattle, and apple jelly which is like mucilage. Sometimes the muddy mixture is replaced by mushed potatoes and fifty grams (two ounces) of bread.‘ At the flax factory in Serpukhov ‘the portion of bread is forty grams.‘ In the coal region, Makeef, ‘during the last 15 or 20 days, the workers have been fed on sauerkraut‘ (Pravda, Oct. 3). At the works in Voronez the food is so ‘disgusting‘ that the journal does not mention what it consists of, but the ‘dining room is indescribably dirty and there are no dishes.‘ When a worker asks for a glass he is told: ‘Since when have you become a lord? Take a spoon and drink.‘ In the Shtcherbinsk coal region, writes a worker to the Pravda of November 13, ‘the cereal period has been followed by a period of cabbage. First cabbage with water and then cabbage without water.‘ "At the dining room Lenin in the Ukraine, ‘conâ€" tinually the dinner consists of stale cereal. At the factory Smutchka in the Moscow region, because of the shortage of food, the dining room was closed and ‘the workers receive only bread.‘ Sugar and other provisions they have not received for two months (Light Industry, November 23).° At the factory Dzerâ€" thinsky in Leningrad the daily food is water with cabbage and cereal. On August 9 a great sensation was created when the supply trust sent them 220 kilos of fresh fish. ‘The workers were overjoyed. Toâ€"morrow we shall eat fish. But their joy was premature. The director of the dining room refused to accept the fish, declaring "there is no place to keep it. 1 have no ice."" ‘The workers,‘ writes the Moscow Light Inâ€" dustry, ‘are compelled daily ‘to spend three to four hours in line waiting for bread, and the black bread which they receive is so poorly baked that it is raw and has practically no crust.‘" Government expenditures have exceeded inâ€" come, and that means debt. People generally have heen on the same spree. 1f, as the authoritiee have from time to time insisted, the Communists have tried to convert school children in this country to a belief in their doctrines, any such activities will assuredly receive a serious setâ€"back by the latest news from Moscow, to the effect that certain Russian citizens have been sentenced to death for stealing jam. . The consensus of opinion is opposed to the wide open prize list for fall fairs. Conditions have changed and fall fair rules should step up with the times. CONDITIONS IN RUSSIA EDITORIAL NOTES Bev. Karam Guergle, formerly pastor of the United Chyrch in Herâ€" bert, Sask., taking apeclgl studies at Knox College, Toronto, the past few monthe was a guest with A. C. Kolb, Scott etreet, Kitchener, and C. R. Phelps, Brubacher «treet, Kitâ€" chener. He left Saturday for his rew pastorate at Blythe, Ont., Rev. Mr. Guergis ie a native of Syria but has been in Canada many yeare and is a graduate of McGill University. He addressed the Mennonite Bible School Friday morning. _"Yes, every time he writes home u'-.u. same atory abont how ahort he is." Son: "Pa, what‘s a garden plot?" Pa: ‘"That‘s when the buge and worms work out a scheme to eat up the atuff in your garden." writer ?" speaker, able writer, internationally known as a fearless and untiring worker, Dr. Chown had been one of the most dominant flmur(-s in reâ€" ligious activities of this century. For more than 50 years, since his entrance into the ministry, until illâ€" ness overtook him, his life had been one of unceasing effort for social and moral reform. SYRIAN MINISTER "So your boy ie a short story ASSUMES PASTORATE bing dipmerlt rommtst The Farmors‘ Advocate makes Furnizhed by the Ontario the following editorial comment reâ€" Department of Agricuiture .&w much discussed Russian .:no political -nun... has beet boiling again over Current Events transacion involving mm Feb. 1â€"Ontario Plowtnen‘s Assoâ€"|tle and Russian oil. The discussion ciation, Toronto. is now countryâ€"wide, and all shades Feb. 2â€"Ontarid Fielid Crop and |of opinions are volced, but theâ€"actual Seed Growers‘ Association, Toronto.|facts of the case are usually un r.:l.zudlâ€"o:mmmoemu- known or ignored. The Dominion of Fuire and Exbibitions. Government, and Right Honourable Feb. 7â€"Ontario Vegetable Growâ€"| Mr. Bennett particularly. are some ers, Toronto. t‘mes censured for obstructing the Feb. 9â€"Holstein#Friesiin Associâ€"|the deal and preventing this trade ationâ€" Annual, Toronto. with the Russian Soviet. In other Fb. #10â€"Ontario Horticultural| words, politics is intruding itself Association, Toronto. into the consideration of a question P‘nl. 2 and 3â€"Ontario Association of re and Exhibitions. Feb. 7â€"Ontario Vegetable Growâ€" ers, Toronto. Agricultural authorities are beâ€" coming concerned about Stewart‘s Disease of Corn. This disease, so far, is most serious in the Southern States, though it has penetrated as {ar north as Ontario. Damage of one million dollare annually has been reported from Ohic A field may be attacked any time between germination and tasseling aud . badly dameged plant wilts, turns yellowish, ‘becomes stunted and either there are no cobs or these are shrivelled. "Growers who have not selected seed for plantings noxt . epring should not lose any tims in doing so, as the supply may be limited by that time. Time to Purchase Seed "The quality of the 1933 potato crop," said J. T. Cassin of the De partment, "will depend to a large cxtent, on the quality of seed plantâ€" ed "At present, the supply of Irish Cobblers is small. There is conâ€" siderable quantity of Rural New Yorkers (Dooley) variety. It should be remembered, however, that much of the certified Dooley crop is being marketed for table stock." Hog Quality Improves Hog grading statistics show an increase of 41,759 select bacon hogs is produced in Caneada in the year 1931 Hogs as marketed throughâ€" out the Dominion showed considerâ€" uble improvement over any previous year. Not only was there an inâ€" crease in the number of select bacon hogs produced, but there was in adâ€" dition an increase in bacon hogs and 2 lower percentage of butchers. The butcher grade, as graded, showed the refining influence of bacon breeding in a large percentage of hogs. The average weight of all hogs,was approximately four pounds heavier than the previous year. The percentage of lights was reduced from 9.42 per cent to 5.34 per cent. The percentage of heavies and extra heavies was only 3.49 showing that farmere are marketing the great maâ€" jority of their hogs within the deâ€" sired weights. Club Work Effective Five points which receive special attention in connection with Boys‘ and Girls‘ Swine Club work in the carrying out of which the federal and provincial Departments of Agriâ€" culture coâ€"operate, are detailed as follows : â€" The leadership training school of the Canada Conference held at the Waterloo Evangelical Church conâ€" cluded on Friday. Twentyâ€"seven atuâ€" denta receilved their certificates of graduation at the pablic recognition service held Friday night. The chairman was A. L. Breithaupt while the gueat apeaker was Rev. N. H. Reiblinz of Campden. Others who assisted in the services were Rev. G. G Barthel of Zion Church, Rev. H. A. Kellerman of Emmanue! Church, A. K. Creeaman and members of the Roard of Religtons Rducation and M. F. Zurbrigg of Listowel. C Rev. J. B. Dengia, partor of the Calvary Memorial church, Kitchenâ€" or, dean of the achool, and Rev. J. G. 14tt of Waterloo, ragistrar. presentâ€" ed the certificates. 1. The location and distribution to club members of young pigs of good bacon type and breeding. Of these many of the best females are kept over for breeding purposes. 2. The giving of practical instrucâ€" tion to club members at their homes or through lectures at club meetings. 3. The distribution of printed or mimeographed information | regardâ€" ing the breeding, feeding, manageâ€" ment, judging and marketing of ewine z 4. The arrangement and conduct of judging and other forms of demâ€" onstrationa. Experimental Work At the recent 54th annual meetâ€" ing of the Ontario Agricultural and Experimental Union at the O.A.C. Guelph, W. J. Squirrell, professor of Field Husbandry and Secretary of the Union, announced that 2,500 regulated coopzatlve experiments involving the distribution of 10,000 lots of â€" eeeds, . were _ conducted throughout Onterio in 1932, and the percentage of good results received was the highest in the history of the Association. "The distribution and the propagation of the best seed of the most suitable varieties is fundaâ€" mental to successful egriculture," Prof. Squirrell declared. "No liveâ€" ctock or markets improvement proâ€" gram can reach ultimate euccess unâ€" lee« we not only maintain but conâ€" tinue to improve the yieid per acre and the quality of crops we grow." Dr. R. Harcourt, Profeesor of Chem:â€" i6try at O.A.C., briefly out"!ned some experimental work with fertilizers which has been conducted over the last four yeare. during which time nearly a thousand farmers have coâ€" operated and demonstretion tests have been conducted on nearly 4,000 blocks of land. Prof. W. J. Bell then dealt in detail with the results of experimental testa with 15 leading crope. One of the chief points estabâ€" lished was that high phosphate, high potash fertilizers have given best reâ€" culte on alfalfa on both light and heavy soils. _ With potatoes the average increase from fertlizers for the past four years las been 51.3 bushels per acre. In 1932 a 4â€"8â€"10 ferâ€" tilizer, at a cost of $7.82 an acre, ave an increase of 578 bushele. The next highest increaso was made with an 0â€"12â€"10 fertilizer. Gains with turnips were made at a cost from 5 to 4% cents per bushel. Interestâ€" ing data was aleo given concerning mangele, corn and other crope. EV ANGELICAL TRAINING SCHOOL COURSE PROVES 5. The securing of good bacon type boars for club districta. Stewart‘s Disease of Corn EXCELLENT SUCCESS that rightfully embraces not domesâ€" tic politics, oil, trade, and above all ample security and adequate guar antecs." ‘"The Farmer‘s Advocate" can see | o reason in the world why Canade should not sell 100,000 head of cattle to Russia (if we have that ll.nyl cattle to spare) and take crude oll in exchauge. The real difficulty, howâ€"| ever, is Anancing the deal, paying farmers for their cattle, tramsportâ€" ing the cattle and taking care of the expenditures incident to the transâ€" action. Russia, apparently, is not prepared to put up sattsfactory se curity, and the task then devolves upon the Canadian Government.. Orâ€" dinarily trade between ‘nations can be negotiated quite conveniently through banks and exchanges, but with Russia at present the situation is somewhet different ard the Govâ€" ernment at Ottawa hesitates to finâ€" ance the trapsaction for fear it will be left holding the bag. â€" | This has left the agricultural soâ€" ciety with the one task, namely, to manage a fair. Economic conditions now demand that the agricultural society buey itself with egricultural probleme in its constituency and | thus save the expense of having the Government do something for us , that we could just as well do for ourâ€" celvtes.â€"Farmer‘s Advocate. So far as we can learn the Governâ€" ment has not denied Canadian farâ€" mers the right to sell caltle to Rusâ€" «ia. Ottawa hesitates to finance the trans@ction until assured that the deal will be consummated and Rusâ€" sian oil or coal will be delivered at > Canadian port. The ouly point left open to argument is whether the Caâ€" nadian Government shonld take the chance. The conditions under which fall fairs were inaugurated and managed 25 and 50 years ago no longer exist. The fairs are serving communities that have been developei and imâ€" proved, and the primitive rules of the fair boards should row be reâ€" vised so the fairs may serve their clientele as they did in â€"the early vears. AN OPPORTUNITY Practices have grown up that are morally and legally right. but they are abuses just the same and can be remedied only by new policles and by new rules. A wide open show is no longer in the best interests of the local comâ€" munity or of the show iteelf. Correâ€" pondents in this issue have pointed out how competition is discouraged, and the fair iteelf injured by a wide open prize list. Abuses creep into the grain and seed department at most fall fairs, and there is urgent need for change in this eection of the fall fair. R Mr. and Mre. Boyd Hammond and son Douglas spent a couple of days lost ~week with friends at Woodâ€" stock. * C In the early days the agricultural society functioned as such, but in later years the duties of an agriculâ€" tural society have been largely handâ€" ad over to paid departmental offiâ€" clals. _ Miss Cara Yutzi of near St. Agatha «pent a day at her home here. Death caimed one of our highly esteemed clffzens on Thursday, Jan. 18th, whe Christian Kennel, was called t after a lingering illness. The al was held on Sunday afternoon to the Mapleview A. M. cemetery. The sincere aym: pathy of the community is extended i0 the bereaved widow and relatives. â€" Mr. Erle Corbett of Fordwich, visited at the home of hi« uncle, Mr. Jas. B. Hammond. e Esteemed Citizen Passes. \H;s .if-‘ï¬lié spent the weekâ€"end at her home near Mount Forest. _ â€" Mr. -G;:ï¬â€˜g; Atchison, of Guelph, visited at Mr. Jas. Hammond‘s. _ _ Misa Katherine Yost epent a few weeks with friends in North Eastâ€" hope WH'TCH FACE IS YOURS? The frown which reflects pain from fatigue and Khyslcal ailments . . . . or the attractive smile that marks you as the y possessor of Perfect Health? If the former, CHIROPRACTIC can h:gapyou. This wonderful science treats entlul{ with adjustments of the nerve system in the spinal columnâ€"the sourte of most human ailments. Come and let us explain just how it will restore you to perfect health again. PHONE 768w FOR APPOINTMENT KINGWOOD FOR FAIR BOARDS 44 WILLIAM 8T. WEST Frown or Smile Chiropractor Misses Eve Jutrl and Eimina Qingerich sepent Sunday with Mr. and Mre. Joseph Brenneman. . _ Mre. Alvin Steinman is spending a few days at the home of her parâ€" ents, Mr. and Mré. C. L. Erb, Wellesâ€" Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Schwartzenâ€" truber and «on of Petersburg were recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chr. Herner. ley Master Beland and Bobbie and Miss Mary Honderich spent Sunday at the home of Mr. Ab. Honderich. Mre Bollini, who died i1 Kitchener last week was well and favorably known here, in particular by the older residents of the town, who reâ€" member her faithfuinees to her Church at St. Agatha, five miles away where she walked every Sunâ€" aay. The family have the sympathy of their many Baden friends. The Pollini family were residents of Baâ€" den up until about 10 years ago. _ Mr. and Mre. J. K. Schwartzenâ€" truber of Pine Hill were recent visiâ€" tors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Wagler. Miss Loretta Huff and Mr. Norman Forbes of Kitchener spent the weekâ€" end at the home of the latter‘s parâ€" ents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Forbes. Mr. and Mre. Noah Gingerich of Wilmot Centre visited with Mr. and Mre. David Boshart. * The annual meeting of the Wilâ€" mot Municipal Telephone System was held last Thursday afternoon in the Baden township hall A large crowd was present for the occasion. It was decided to lower the telephone rate for the subscribers by $6 and for the renters $3. confined to her bed, is able to be up again which her many friends will be pleased to hear. 0_ â€" Mrs. Alex Forbes was a visitor in Kitchener last Thursday. Mr. Owen Otto of New Hamburg was a visitor in town on Thursday afternoon. Mr. Robert Eichler epent Saturâ€" day evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Forbes. Mr. Bert Diebel and Miss Pearl Miller spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mre. Hubert Schmidt . Bornâ€"To Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Honâ€" derich, Jan. 30th, a eon. Congratuleâ€" tions‘! Miss [rene Berg left on an extendâ€" ed visit with friends in Michigan. Mr. C. L. Ritchie was a recent visitor in New Dundee. Lower Phone Rates. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lichti (nee Beatrice Jantzi) _ have . returned home from their honeymoon. Mre. Lichti has again resumed her duâ€" ties In Kitchener, where ehe will be engaged for another month, when Mrs. S. M. Roth who has been Phone 3390 KITCHENER 13 Queen St. N. New 1933 Walipapers at . .. _ VANNIER‘S HOME FURNISHING SHOP Congoleum Rugs 9‘ x 12 BADEN New Low Prices FRY NEW PATTERNS ~ ~ sll.w All sizes at 66°,.... _ Many friends of the late John Tabbert in this section were shocked | to hear of his sudden death, and atâ€" tended his funeral on Monday. Mr. | Tabbert, who was a native of this vicinity, was well and favorably ! known. _ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mcliroy of ‘Kitchener were Sunday guests with the former‘s brother, Mr. REdward Mcliroy and Mrs. Mcliroy. Mrs. John Logel and son Austin, cpent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Pat Doherty of Heseon. Several of. the subscrivers of the Wellesley Municipal Telephone Syeâ€" tem, attended the annual meeting, held last Monday in the township hall, Crosshill. The commissioners are to be congratulated on the satie factory report. Mrs. Lloyd Grosz of Kitchener visited the past week with her parâ€" ents. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Legse. Mr. Byron Armstrong was a busiâ€" ness visitor in Elmira laet Wednesâ€" Cay. Misses Elsie Schmidt epent Grace Knechtel Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Devitt and Master Homer Devitt and Misses Ruth Devitt and Ella Eckert motorâ€" ed to Toronto on Sunday. Mr. Clarence Logel was a business visitor in Elmira last Thureday. Mr. Clayton Logel was a business visitor in Linwood last Monday. Miss Helen Hallman was a guest of Miss Myrtle Weber on Sunday. . Mr. Reiph Harlock, near Potersâ€" burg spent Sunday with Mr. Sanford Ierael. the young couple expect to take up reaidence in Baden. We wish them a long and happy journey together through life. Mr. Hunter M. Coote and sister, Miss A. E. Coote spent Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. F Macâ€" Kay of Linwood. * " Mesare. Jos. MacTavish and Wm. R. Newton spent Saturday afternoon in Kitchener. Mr. Harvey Rohr called at the home of Mr. and Mre. Albert Kurt. Miss Nellie Bachert spent several days with friends at Kitchener. Mr. and Mre. W. N. Allingham spent last Saturday aftermoon in Wellesley. Miss Alice Milne epent Sunday with Miss Ethel Schmidt, Nine Pines. Mr. Clifford Knechtel visited with Mr. Wilfred Schmidt at Nine Pines. WATERLOO MANNHEIM DORKING Bachert and Reta Sunday with Miss