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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 23 May 1952, p. 4

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The Allâ€"Star Player â€" â€" And the Allâ€"Star Team Take our Hockey Peeâ€"Wees, for instance. The lads are youn‘r:lnd show promise as players. ey have learned at a very tender age some very valuable lessons on team plndv. the idea of giveâ€"andâ€" take, individual contribution to team efficiency and many other matters which brought them through as winners lfnimt all comers in a small world of hocâ€" key. They also learned to follow I‘m not quite sure whether or not I‘m for or against the all starâ€" player and the all star team. Deâ€" pends very much on the leader and what results he gets. â€" I‘ve seen allâ€"star players that were pains in the neck. Success had gone to their heads and,â€" while thevy were useful on the allâ€"star team, they were complete flops when it came to earninf a living, all of which showed that they had learned practically nothing. â€" DON‘T MISS THESE "THRILLERS" . GET your en en mers TICKETS NOW I Tee 20e +veth Tast, Tht> * chres torg * GALT TERRIERS SEASON "OPENERS" AT WATERLOO PARK SPORTING, FISH & GAME NEWS FRIDAY NIGHT at 8 By DON McLAREN Learn Team PIQ‘J our Hockey Peeâ€"W Again This Year FOLLOW the WATERLOO TIGERS!! Sr. "A" 1950 Ontario Champions Ad 1950 Interâ€"County Champions 1949 Interâ€"County Finalists 1948 Interâ€"County Finalists o 1941 Interâ€"County Champions The only Twin City club that has ever won an Ontario Sr. "A" titleâ€"a team which has a glorious record . . . a team which always assures you of spirited action. Col. K. R. Marshall PRESTDENT Vs, WATERLOO the direction of their adult leader, Albert McCormick and Albert, no nrofessional social leader, did a first rate job with them as a hockey team. I wr:gett that his leldenhig.wem farther than that He must have shown them how to meet stiff opposition how to beâ€" have as strangers in a strange town and, on the whole, to use reâ€" straint. I say this because I have seen Albert McCormick at work with children and I know how they react to his kind of leaderâ€" Depends on Leader Yes, it all depends on the leadâ€" er, and there are not too many leaders who, without preaching, wield the right kind of influence among children. And just what kind of influence do we want leaders to exert on our young people? Well, first here are some things we wish they would met do. 1. Develop the skill of a child in one line to the exclusion of evâ€" ery other part of his natural George C. Hendrie MAN.~DIR. Now here are some of the dw sirable ends for a leader to achieve. 1. Be a bridie of understanding between the parent and the child so that the truth as told by the parent will be the same truth emphasized by the leader. 2. Instill a deeg respect for a balâ€" ance in work, ?lay and all the other facets of a child‘s life while developing skills to which the child may be particularly adapted. ‘ 3. Sanely and imrersonally corâ€" rect evident faults. ‘ 4. Teach them to eventually make their own decisions, to shnre‘ their knowledge with others and, in their turn, become leaâ€" ders. 5. Use the team, the group, the ganf and the game or other skill as a means of developing worthy adults and for no other purrose than acquiring the skills of living since this is the‘ greatest skill of all. 1 repeat that there are not too many intelligent, unselfish leadâ€" ers who have the long vision and who are willing to set aside the adulation that comes to the leadâ€" er of an allâ€"star team or an ull-‘ star performer for the developâ€" ment of allâ€"star personalities. ‘ Applies to All Come to think of it this applies not only to leaders of boys and girls but right down the line from the aldermen in the City Council. Let‘s not get to thinking that this whole job of leadership is exerted to any materialistic end be it allâ€" star teams or any other such thing. Let‘s remember the imâ€" Kortant element. People and what a‘wens to them and their Eeraon- alties as a result of any kind of program we promote. And this one thing more we want from leaders. s«:luse we live in ‘a Godly community, or say we do, we want, or should want our leaders to be Godâ€"led. Anything less betrays what we are or pretend to be. 5. Do their thinking for them There are more. develogl.ncm. 2. Win their loyalty away from their homes, their schools and even from their ordinary playâ€" mates. . 3. Teach them to win at all costs. 4. Play them up so that thag beâ€" come little gods and with the idea that the world owes them Two wellâ€"known baseball personalities from the U.S. hold an informal talk with two interested listeners at the Waterloo ’l‘lgn' ‘‘meetâ€"theâ€"ballâ€"club dinner" last week at Rosslyn Grove. Left to m& are Greg Mulleavy, Brooklyn Dodger scout for Western N.Y., Pennsylvania and , George (Specs) Toporcer, former major league second baseâ€" man who is recognized in the hall of fame as Rochester‘s best second baseman, F. W. Hogg of Waterloo and Albert SATURDAY NIGHT at 8 LONDON MAJORS Desirable Traits PUB WaTSHHLOO (Qaimb) CHRONICLE Baill Club Speakers Hold Informal Chat YVs, "Ab" Reinhardt of Kitchener. A Watorloo lad, Edward Monâ€" tag, stood up to orate two comâ€" bined clauses which read someâ€" thin& like this: "Although black is e predominant color, all BLACK bears are not black." Laughter followed as the instrucâ€" Black May Be Brown and Visa Versa â€" â€" Says Here! an art lesson for %‘upih of KCI. recently when teacher Frank Penâ€" dergast attempted to describe senâ€" tence construction to a Grade 10 Commercial Class. | Anyone havings cars please call at the Hacienda between 7 and 7:30 â€"_ for passengers. Lunch and refreshments will be supplied. LETS HAVE A GOOD TURNOUT:! Movies on sport produced by Les Hancock of Carling Brewâ€" eries will be shown. WATERLOO An English period turned into ATTENTION Waterloo Rod and Gun Club Members: A SOCIAL STAG Will be held at KOPPERSON‘S COTTAGE On FRIDAY NIGHT MAY 30 Black Not Black Our only living exâ€"President sees a bright future for America â€"if we remember the lessons of the past. Read "We Have Just Begun to Dream", by former Preâ€" sident Hoover in this coming Sunday‘s (May 25) issue of the NEW Color. Gravure American Weekly, exclusively with Detroit Sunday Times! The jovial episode subsided only after it was finally admitted that whit bears could be either brown or black when they got dirty. HERBERT HOOVER plaining that "all BLACK bears are not black; a BLACK bear may be brown while a BROWN bear could be black." The mirth reached its peak when a redâ€"faced pupil, Jack Brown, attempted to argue the point. Explained the harassed tuâ€" tor: "You‘re Brown, but right now you‘re Fed." tor tried to restore order by exâ€" *"Testâ€"Drive e PC Mow! Testâ€"Drive the best drivesYOU . 236 KING ST. RPAST FORDOMATIECE FORECASTS FUTURE CORONET MOTORS LTD. ~Gne; FORO DEALER tic drive on the road todayâ€"for noâ€"gearâ€" shift, noâ€"clutchâ€"pedal driving. It comfineo the best of all other drivesâ€"the fuidâ€" cushioned smoothness of a torque con:â€" verter plus the . "getâ€"upâ€"andâ€"go" and control of automatic gears. l":r your best automatic driveâ€"Testâ€"Drive Fordoâ€" matic. Optional at extra cost. Finally we brushed the crumbs off our chests and crawled down the rock face to the boat. Picking my spinning rod out of the toat, 1 made a tentative cast out to the deep water along the face of the rock. 1 had hardly turned the handle when a trout smashed at the little wabbler I was using. The trout was about fourteen ihches long, not a big one for this area. However, he was extremeâ€" ly active, and it was several minâ€" utes before the light rod took the fight out of him and he allowed me to draw him towards the rock. Here he seemed to gain a fresh lease on life and churned the waâ€" It wasn‘t a long row, but after| after fishing for a little while, we decided we would crawl up on une ol the Lig rock faces and eat| our lunch. It was so comfortable| here, that toth of us nearly !ell’ asleep. arrived in the lee of a couile of islands. Here we drifted back and forth casting the shoréline and really en%oyed the sun, which did throw a little heat when you were out of the wind. Jack hooked into a nice trout shortly but it manâ€" aged to tear off before he could bring it to the boat. Then a little further down the shore, I manâ€" nfed to sink the hook in one and alter a few ininutes bring it to the net. The wind gradually | swung|strike. around from the north to the westk Jack changed to a sinall yellow and we were no longer sheltered fAatfish and using his ,pmnm{ by the islands. The thing to do,/tackle, flipped the little bait out we decided was to row across the/past where we had seen the blfi‘ lake and get in the lee shore. trout. I made several casts wit Jack and I got away to a fairâ€" .l‘;;‘mly start the next morning. e weather hadn‘t chun“o,d much. Fair, windy and cool. We were unIns Ltm a little tired of it and would have preferred even rain to the heavy winds. Jack and yours truly ;IBJMâ€"E back to the speckled trout lake the morning, while Len was goâ€" ing to stay and fish for lakers with the fly rod. Finally nrrivml at the lake we rowed across and down until we YOUR FORD â€" MONARCH DEALER KITCHENER the finest Automaâ€" Bigger in SIZE...Bigger in BEAUTY...Bigger in POWER T2 PRRD offers YOUR CENOICK OPF ALlLL TWARK > Try them allâ€"then "Testâ€"Drive" the big ‘52 Ford with your choice of three great drivesâ€"Fordomatic Drive, Overdrive or Synchroâ€"Silent %lenih. Whichever drive gx choose, you‘ll find the big, completelyâ€"new Ford‘oyym 1 driveâ€"for perâ€" formanceâ€"for comfortâ€"for value. You‘ll want it for keepor We arose early and by 6 a.m. had loaded scattergun and fishing equinment in the car. By the time the sun came up, we were well on the way. driving at a very slow gait for us and watching for crows. About h-li-wug to the stream, a pair of the black boys flew past where we had seen the b‘fi trout. I made several casts wit the wabbler, and then crossed over to the coat to change to something else. Hardly had I cut the leader, when Jack hollered and I looked up just in time to see the big trout swirl to the surâ€" face and spit out the yellow flat-‘ tish. Knowing the trout must have felt the hooks, I knew that‘ our chances of catching him now were reduced to minus zero. , Fishing last Saturday was not as good as it has been althonl.z‘h the probabilities are that the â€" ing was not at fault. Feverishly we pulled him out of the net and while Jack placed him on the strin’cr with the other trout, I wrestled with the landln“ net trying to unu‘rll.gle the hooks of my wabbler. en we both started casting in the rather faint hope of getting the big trout to dom. Just as Jack was reaching for him with the hndimnfl. & h~=e speckle, mouth w open, The size of this fish practically paralyzed both Jack and nynlz and only the fact that the smaller fish was securely hooked enabled us to land him. dom h~se speckle, mutfi’iflc'fi rushed the trout I was play ter in a spirited break for freeâ€" WORKING WiTH CANADIANS in EvERY wais of smooth, quiet, gasâ€"saving driving. A Ford feature thegie ownerâ€"proved and ownerâ€"tested with millions of miles of driving, it automatically cuts engine speed whenmmvd.overz'lmfleopetzouloun.uud engine wear. Optional at extra cost. standard and Ford‘s new Powerâ€"Pivot Clutch Pedal makes shifting easier than wo And with the m‘;nsl::::;-sfl'iidi; â€"8 Engine, it‘s a thrilling experience to drive the Big ‘52 Ford. $ For smooth, cas o‘clock and then feeling slee'p), crawled into the car for a few minutes snooze. Two hours and fifteen minutes later, 1 woke up It took me another hour to conâ€" vince myself that I shouldn‘t my leader risht in the middle and departed, and no amount of cussâ€" ing made him come back. f ate my lunch about ome ter hurried us and the little fily rod, line and leader went together in short order. The trout did not seem to apâ€" grecinte our offerings at first and y noon we had hung only one real good fish. He had snapped my leader right in the middle and we walked away a hundred yards and started to call. Crows this time of the year are tough to move, but this pair must have been newcomers for they came sailing right in to me. There were shot cut feathers uo.m‘x":round for about ten minâ€" utes r the -boow and both birds hit mddenl‘z‘ without a futter. Despite racket of the 12â€"gauge, the old hf‘ock partridge never ctopped M‘ Maybe he realized we were doln‘ him a good turn. We Jumped one more crow beâ€" fore arriving at the stream. While we had not been in any rush to get there, sight of the waâ€" ter hurried us and the little fy ammmu:l". We watched him strut up and down the hollow log and marvelled at the .otlngh:oeu he was able to produce. promâ€" ising we would try and keep an mthoro.:h!m&(uu a bush. car, we eased the owm out of its x. grabbed nl?:ugtulol‘dh our crow ca mmo the bush. S%hm of us a big cock started (Continued on Page T) PMONE 7â€"7303 LIP8 SINCE 1007 4B

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