Christie, president of the Ontario|Year, because ef the fact that, with Agricultural College, that the week the buildings formerly occupied hy Plan Farm From June 11 to 15 Six and sevenâ€"piece dinette suites in oak, walâ€" nut, and red maple. These are just the thing for the small home or apartment. These sturdy little suites give assurance of endless service and pleasure of ownership. Singles 9 piece dining room suites in ook, walnut and mahogany. These suites are strongly constructed and well finished. The china cabinets permit glass doors while the buffets are designed to permit all possible space. The chairs have upholstered seats which assures comfort. Terms can be arranged according to Wartime Prices and Trade Board Regulations. A few only bookcases in mahogany or walnut. These cases permit glass doors and four shelves: They measure 12% x 25%% x 46. The exceptional construction and finish muke these pieces very desirable 2995 Exce&ionally large stock of odd beds in both full size and singles. These beds are in wood amf are beautifully finished and well constructed Full size Yieuttes firee. Lisstrad) Tradeâ€"in Store â€" 90 Ontario St. S. Phone 7â€"7305 â€"â€" Elevater Service â€" Ask» About Our Parking Facilities It was announced by Dr. G. I BULLAS "Spring house-cleanmg\\q re!" With it comes time for dlmace- ments. Replacements brin"a&nind the new chesterfields of different style and color. We have new duit:‘s“on the floor now in bm. cheerful, figured, striped and plain fabrics. Suites built by rel firms who are not afraid to use honest workmanship and materials ‘These suites are reasonably priced at Collapsible all steel strollers. These strollers are sturdy, I?ht weight, and casily propelled at the same time, allowing baby every comfortâ€" Chesterfields Studio couches of cxceptional value both in ~ material and construction. . These couches are made by Simmons and are the finest line c{ thi ir kind on the market. For many years of comfortable, troubleâ€" free service see these couchesâ€" Basy STtroLLucrs Trade In Your Used> On New: Opp Beps DINETTE SUITES New Stock March 88, 1946 Stubio BOOKCASES â€" 1495 Diningroom Suites ‘"‘Our Location Saves You Money‘ (Builas Broe. Limited) 75â€" Oak 0J 27.50 up 16.75 up CoucnHnEs 119.50 A large selection of occasional chairs upâ€" holstered in bright, cheerful materials which will give many years of wear while adding to the appearance of the roomâ€" Leatherette hassocks in a variety of sizes, shapes and colotsâ€" OccasionaLl CnHairs Odd dressers in walnut or mahogany, beautifully finished and strongly constructed in both walnut and m-hovny. Just what you have been lookâ€" ing forâ€" 4595 m -’ The eventâ€"will take on a iden the scope:of the activities coâ€" significance when it is held this Wipcident=with :this annual .event year, because ef the fact that, with| which has comente mean so much OLJ;III‘ l:nt‘o 15 has been set t arm Home Weckhdasâ€"# and all depertments of the zol Opp Dressers Waronoucs HASSOCKS Large stock of cribs in both steel and wood. These cribs especially in steel are a variety of sizes. The wooden cribs in highly polished natural finish touched up with transfers. The steel cribs are finished in rich brown walnut enamel. 1150 * 1095 ~"~ 17.00 3~9., _15 has been set 1 huï¬"ï¬'* Aaxr 1 will take on a iden the vhen it is held this iden tot ef the fact thak, with | which has § oo e e d 200 Breakfast sets in walnut finish or the popular natural finish designed to give all possible space and every possible service while in use. Trimâ€" med in any color desired _ Just arrived, a small consignment of rocking chairs. These chairs are upholstered in beautiâ€" ful velour, have high backs and spring seats embodying comfort at its bestâ€" Tomiorrow‘s furniture arrived today and it realâ€" ly deserves your earnest consideration when it comes to chesterfields. These suites permit a large variety of amï¬erï¬&ig of the J&)\;d;u] pieces. They are practical, comfortable and here to stay. _ _ Priced according to the number of picces BABY CRIBS SECTIONAL CHESTERFIELOS * Mahogany BREAKFAST SETS ROCKING CHAIRS Bedroom suites in liï¬t or dark walâ€" nut or limed oak. ese suites are of ‘\‘r)e;eyd gie‘;'ir;g delsign andl are ui clear gleaming plateâ€" ;1:- mirrors. They are styled to permit all possible drawer space Furniture Store 56 Joseph St. 54.50 Wardrobes in wood with or without mirror doors. Just the thing to help that overloaded clothes closet. They are in single or double sizes. A real piece of useful furniture. to the farmers of @ntario.; 18.2 BEDROOM loyal Canadian Air Force now med to the College and availâ€" Sjor use, it will be possible to 206.50 20.50 up .... 46.00 THB WATERLOO (Ontarto) CHRONICLE \ Mr. and Mrs. Conley Amos, Pntx and Barbara spent Sunda'; wi !Mr. and Mrs Art Brown, Palmerâ€" Owing to ill health, Mr. Jesse M. Weber is temporarily relaxing from strenuous farm labor, and his brother Daniel M. Weber will work this handy historical old "Blackâ€" well Farm" this year. On March 31st, Jesse is having a farm sale of su:c.l_t Jand implements only. _ Friday, March 16th, is reported 'tjo ha;e beenhthe warmest Mareh! ay during the past century. It also featured an oldtime flood in our local Conestogo, inundating all its river flats and submerging the roadway between the bridge and Weber‘s hill. It was an iceless flood of heaving, murky, murmurous waters that lent a thrilling charm to the whispering, southern zeâ€" phyrs of the warm and peaceful mid-M_grcl! day. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Gingr Florence, Pauline and Clifford the Fourth of Peel were Sunc visitors with Mr and Mrs. Jos Gingrich Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Schmidt and Giladys of North Woolwich visited Mr. and Mrs Ear) Miler, Sunday. â€" Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Neeb of Hampstead were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Capling. Messrs Emanuei Bowman of Preston and Martin Bowman of St. Jacobs spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Owen Bowman. en Oe n n s anool o+ 1867, by the late Jacob B. Oswald. The office was closed on December Ist, 1803, and was reâ€"opened on the Ist of June, 1884. During this inâ€" terval our mail was obtained from the Hawkesville post office in the back ofâ€"the busy gencral store of Mr. Robert Morrison, popular merâ€" chant and postmaster, who, in later years, set up in business in Boiseâ€" vain, Man. Rural free mail delivâ€" ery was inaugurated in the Walâ€" lenstein district in February, 1916, and its three rural routes cover apâ€" proximately sixty miles in the picâ€" turesque townships of Peel and Wellesley. _ ie Sn ol o ty t Mild cases of chickenâ€"pox have recently _ manifested _ themselves among some of the pupils of the Bricker School here. â€"_ In 1907, a collection of Miss Weâ€" therald‘s finest poems was pubâ€" ‘lished, and it evoked warm enconiâ€" ums by reviewers and lovers of ‘poetry; Earl Grey, then Governorâ€" â€"General of Canada, writing a letâ€" ter of personal appreciation to the ‘tulcnlui author, and purchasing {several copies of the first edition |for distribution among his friends. St. Patrick‘s Day staged heavier rainfall and much more thunder than occurred during our first thunderstorm. on the preceding Thursday night. Its morning east winds shifted to strong westerly winds towards eventide. In celeâ€" bration of this "shamrock" day, tfrogs were initially singing â€" in woodland ponds, redâ€"winged blackâ€" birds, purple grackles, songsparâ€" rows, killdeers, meadowlarks and mourningâ€"doves having _ arrived carlier in the week. Mr. Josiah M. Martin of Hawkesâ€" ville is moving to his boyhood bome on the John Wailter‘s farm: Mr. and Mrs. Sidney M. Martin are moving from the Donald farm, south of Redhill School, to the Siâ€" mon Schadewitz home in Yatton; and Mr. and Mrs. Orval M. Martin of South Salem are moving to the Donald farm at Redhill. The foreâ€" going three brothers are sons of Mr. Aaron W. Martin of Hawkesâ€" ville, and his three other sons, Alâ€" son, Oliver, and David also reside in the Redhil] section. Misses Elsic Brubacker of St. Jaâ€" cobs and Evelyn Fretz of Vineland spent the wreekâ€"end with Mr. and Mrs. Seranus Martin. _ _For many years this lovely weaâ€" ver of sparkling rhymes resided ‘near Fenwick in Welland County. )Horo. like a bird, she had a nest ‘cunnmgly contrived in a large willow tree by a natureâ€"loving broâ€" ther on the old homestead farm. Here, amidst the inspiration of a large orchard and many other rusâ€" tic charms, she‘revelled in sweet ’visions and crystallized them into living songs of rare, harmonious melody. Newsy Notes. Wallenstein Post Office was esâ€" tablished on the Ist of January, cake d se uies _ Len ues 4d Agnes Ethelwyn Wetherald, the daughter of Englishâ€"Quaker parâ€" érts, was born at Rockwood, Ont., on April 26th, 1857. Her earlier education ‘was received from her father, the late Rev. William Weâ€" therald, founder of the Rockwood Academy, and its principal for seyâ€" eral years. She received additionâ€" il cducation at the Friends‘ Boardâ€" ing School of Union Springs, N.Y., and at Pickering College, Ont. the pen of Ethelwyn Wetherald, who, in the imitative harmony of its Oâ€"keâ€"lee refrain, has found the magic memoryâ€"key to every naâ€" tureâ€"loving Canadian heart, and it thrillingly appealed to us again for the first time this spring last Wedâ€" nesday morning, March 14th. And the night is tenderly ‘black, _ The morning eagerly bright, For the old, old spring is blossomâ€" ing In the soul and in the sight The redâ€"winged blackbirds bring My lost youth back to me, When J hear in the swale, from a gray fence rail, Oâ€"keâ€"lee, oâ€"keâ€"lee, oâ€"keâ€"lee! Perennial freshhness and charm pervade this exquisite poem from Aid the bliss that ne‘er can fiee Fromh that exquisite call, with its its sweet, sweet fallâ€" Oâ€"keâ€"lee, oâ€"keâ€"lee, oâ€"keâ€"lee‘ | Long ago as a child From the bough of a blossoming quince, That melqdy came to thrill my The springâ€"soft blue of the sky A"dpn‘:g sprigâ€"bright bloom of of the tree Are a part of the strainâ€"ah, hear Ragishing, liquid, low; Ang ts on mP Oe L2 t sune Black th as the 4 Jl“';. r'iw.; a ..0‘2?.,, glow, it again! â€" â€" Oâ€"keâ€"lee, oâ€"keâ€"ice, oâ€"keâ€"lee! And whenever I‘ve caught it FLORADALE lg Mre. Gertrude Bowman (Chronicle Correspondent) Cld oo en o oo o uie + Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Liï¬r spent Saturday evening with . and Mrs. Alozo Hahn at Heidelberg. Miss Linda Ruggle and Mr. Geo. Grosz of Waterloo spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Reichert. _\ Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Seyler and Norman visited with Mrs. Otto Kress at Bamberg on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hinschberâ€" ger of Erbsville and Mr. and Mrs. John Miller and family of Bamâ€" berg spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hinschberger. Sna agss gOll Di en EC 81L . .000 LOrne AERRIC Spent ‘ und Mrs. Joseph Dietrich and Shei-}evening with Mr. and Mrs. ia, Mr. Valentine Strauss, Mrs. Jeâ€" |Glaister in Linwood. rome Freiburger and son Kenneth, : â€"â€"â€"â€"____â€"__ Miss Katherine Fritz, Miss Laurine , . Siemier, Mr, _ fHarold _ Freiburger, . Th , chirping note, of .t Mr. Claude Freiburger all o;u&a- cricket is produced by th {terloo and Mr. and Mrs Leon|Y«iSing its brown leather IHaflma of Kitchener. covers above its body and i _ Mr. i?ld Mrs. John Kropf visited en mc cce | with Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Lies at ) + wollobies on apnder m Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hackbart , :lpcm %:nday wi;.‘h Mr.k and Mn.' \V' ‘ l enry Maurer at Rostock. * Ir..nmn-ml?ad, l:irsscéol-:dnn' inner 0 and: Angelaâ€"Dichold, a ward Weber and Mrs. Albert Strub ol’ Mere Miss Vera Hackbart of Waterloo, Miss Helen Hackbart of Kitchener and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hackbart of Crosshill spent Sunday with Mr. ard Mrs. Edwin Hackbart. WPV oilihat flnb deard Astcbi Mr. and Mrs. John Heinrich of near St. Clements gnt Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. ward Plauâ€" shinat. Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hinschberger were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brenner and son Douglas, Mr. Raymond Hinschâ€" berger and Mr. Joseph Boegel of Kitchener. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Schmidt and Gordon of Berlet‘s Corner spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mx_-i Ar:grew_'_Ligs_. Kitchener spent Sunday at home of Mr. Louis Freiburger. By Miss Laurine Dammeler (Chronicle Correspondent) ’ The St. John‘s Luther League held their March meeting at the Thome of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Seyâ€" lee on Thursday evening. The meeting opened with a hymn and prayer. "Lent" was the subject of an interesting discussion. Dainty iefreshments were served by the hostess. s Sunday visitors with Mr. and j M Mrs. Herbert Freiburger were Mr. 3 s. stedier of New Hamburg, Mrs. E. Dietrich of Josephsburg, Mr. and Mr:.u S};léeflxl;‘ ulfmot:&;d and family of St + Mra. Leo &ebolt and sons Jerome and Edward and Cletus Kittel Mr. Sam M. Roth of Baden was a visitor in the village on Tuesday Sunday visitoreâ€"with Mrs L. M. Schaete:n:m: Mrs. William D:-;‘ meier ters, Learine and son onign. es ep Seyler and son Norman of Hessen Road and Mrs. Eldon Kress of Waâ€"~ Visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Kieswetter on Tuesday were: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Runâ€" proved in health. were visitors to the Twin City on Mr. W. G. Heiwig of Kitchener was a business visitor here on Wedâ€" HESSEN ROAD "Twin City‘s Busiest Cleaners For Over 10 Years" FOR QUICK SERVICR JUST TRLEPHONE 8â€"8833 . . . . NOW! Twin City Laundry clothes in today ZLook Your Best Eastery when it comes to having clothes cleaned these days Avoid the last minute holiday rush by bringing your Waiting until the last minute can be disastrous FRRZ _ |with Mr. and Mrs. George Richard» ater son on Sunday. * hsamhnow'ni(l:l.m%blgl'ech Rouy' tenneth and ie t, j l“?“;:: Hahn and Lorne Rennie attended :Le.l Sey. the hockey game between Toronto 7i | St Michaels and Galt Red Wings ;‘n-m and | in Galt Saturday night. ubject of â€" John L. Hammond, Edgar and _ Dainty Jean visited with Mr. and Mrs. 1 by me"l‘homas Birmingham and Donna in $ Linwcod Sunday. | Mr. and; Mrs. R. Foster, Laura, Mr. and. Cleaners and Dyers imâ€" BRING CLOTHES IN EARLY The chirping note of the fleld‘m cricket is proguced by the lnsect' . raising its brown leathery wing|them one against the other in a covers above its body and rubbing quick sawing motion. Able Seaman Elwood Squire of the East Coast visited at the home of his brother, George, and called on friends. Mr. and Mrs Maurice McKee and family of Millbank visited ._Campbell Shantz attended a fire insurance convention held in Torâ€" by his mother, who had been visitâ€" ing relatives there for several weeks REX WHEAT GERM OIL 1.23 HOT WATER BOTTLE Lornc LRt_‘Einvici 'srg;e;rii ï¬_euâ€"h; Winner of February $5.00 FREE Merchandise Draw MARIE PEGELO, 19 Euclid Ave. Did you get your FREE ticket for March draw ? THERMOS BOTTLE CROSSHILL _ By M lCl’nnj For better breeding live:tock and cattle. Two Quart Size Help The W Guaranteed Genuine (Ygna Peterson. 257 Bridgeport Rd Phone 2â€"2672 Opp. Post Office â€" Waterioo BEDFORD Drug Store T 2A Mr and Mra Jerome W Herringer 108 Aletandra Ava Kills Moths 1 lb Dedicated io Botter Viston" 10 Froderick St. Phene $â€"9018 HEAVY MINERAL OIL One Pint, special, 3%¢ Guaranteed Cough Syrup * pint ... 50e DEXTRIâ€" MALTOSE _Baby Food â€" resulte from fauity eyes L‘q overworked in poer light. ‘0‘“‘ eyes plus READY ioQUIT? good light equals greater t:\ ESIGHT SERVICE < Pmioemuedloy\ eyestrain, and cyestrain BRONCHIDA PARACIDE 5 lbs. .... $3.00 59e !b. tin PAGE #IVRD : t