Miss Etta Bowman was a busiâ€" ness visitor in Galt on Thursday. When the Doon Public School reâ€"opened en Tuesday, Sept. 2nd, there were 14 beginners and four new students enrolled. Victor MacLennan, principal}, and Mrs. L. Miller, have returned to their classrooms. _ Miss Sherrie Tilt beélln her teaching duties at the Klizabeth Ziegler School, Wateriloo. Miss Ethel and Jane Ayres and Rose Nemeroski srent a week‘s vacation at Port Elgin. Donald Fisher was a business vil'i‘tqr; in Kitchener on Saturday. George Ayres was visiting at Po:g Elfg_in on Saturday. _ _ R Miss Dianne Drager, whose marriage takes place Sept. 20th to Herb Lisso, was rleasantly surâ€" priged at a miscellaneous shower at the home of Mrs. A. Aves on Wednesday evening. Miss Drager received many nice gifts Games were played after which a very delicious lunch was served by the hostess assisted by Annette Aves and Doreen Gibbons. Miss Jane King has returned to her home in Markdale after sï¬uending the summer months at the home of Mrs. Ross Hamilton. held in October, each member to make articles for the next meetâ€" ing. Mrs. Charles Tilt read a letâ€" ter she received from India. Enâ€" closed were beautiful handâ€"made lace doilies which was on display at the meeting. Mrs. Georges Ayres, secretaryâ€"treasurer, read the minutes of the previous meetâ€" ing and also presented bills for reâ€"decorating the church and a new carpet. _ h Sund;i\;cSchool rooms. Plans were also discussed for a bazaar to be Galt, will be guest speaker. The Doon United Church congregation are asked to join in this service. *The Ladies‘ Aid of the Presbyâ€" terian Church held their Septem:â€" ber meeting on Wednesday evenâ€" ing at the home of Mrs. Ernest Plumtree. Mrs. Charles Tilt, president, was in the chair and opened the meeting with prayer. Plans were made to clean the Sunday School rooms. Plans were On Sunday next, Sept. l4th, a rededication service will be held at the Presbyterian Church at 3 o‘clock in the afternoon. The choir of the Knox Presbyterian Church, Preston, will lead in the singing of hymns and Dr. Cowdy of Central Presbyterian Church, Rev. H. J. McAvoy was in charge of the service at the Doon United Church on Sunday mornâ€" Rev. H. G. Cleghorn of Preston conducted the service at the Presâ€" byterian Church on Sunday afterâ€" noon. While it is too much to expect that all people can be made into safe drivers, the construction of sater cars would help reduce the present slaughter on our highways. Noting that stunt and racing drivers repeatedly crash their cars at such speeds, the engineers have started to frequent the race tracks for ideas on building safer ears. Despite comtentions by the Department of Highways that speedâ€" ing is the main cause of accidents and deaths on the highways, engiâ€" neers point out that more than 60% of fatal automobile accidents occur at impact speeds of less than 40 miles per hour. Waterloo Township should definitely have legal grounds by which they can force Kitchener to clean up this mess. Then they should go after the Department of Health for allowing it to exist so long. Thg "steel shortage" was just a different type of stall from those coming from the Department of Health for the past ten years or so. The evident indifference of the Health Department to the stench and unsanitary conditions plaguing this ares is something to wonder at. Raw sewage can carry a multitude of diseases and chilâ€" dren play where they like. .__ Probably more property has changed hands in this area because of the smell coming from the sewage polluted Grand River, than for any other reason. A wag even remarked that the vegetables all grew to tops instead of developing the way they were supposed to. . Editorial Comment A letter from county council to Dr. A. E. Berry, chief sanitation Officer of the Department of Health, has brought the rather childish reply that "the steel shortage still delays the enlargement or buildâ€" ing of a second treatment plant." He thought it would be only a "ghort while" before this difficulty was overcome. He also stated that it was difficult to determine whether Kitchener or Waterloo was the offender, although the Waterloo plant has been operating satisfactorily for several years. Present debate on action to be taken against Kitchener by Waâ€" terloo Township regarding the sewage and stench from the Kitchâ€" ener sewage plants located in the Township, is something that should have been done long dgo. Waterloo, a former offender, was finally forced by threatened ection from the county, to construct a new sewage plant and Kitchâ€" ener should be dealt with in a like manner. Ray Kenmir and son Alien of 61 King St. N., Waterioo E Offers the following services: L Professional Eye Examination and Vimai Analysis Glasses Prescribed and Fitted (Chronicle Your Waterloo Optometrist mm“b~“¢~(~¢1 Waterico and Waterice County, is published at 373 King St. NMorth, Watesioo, every Friday. !hubq mesber of the Canadian Weeky! Newspapers Association and of the Qntarioâ€"Quebes NMewspaper Association. | Authorized as second class mail, P.0. Dept, Ottaws. THE BEAN PRINTING & PUBLISHING CO Owners and Publishers THE WATERLOO Always Some Excuse ce Hours: 9.30 A.M. â€" 5.30 PM. (Evenings by appointment) Safer Cars GM‘s Central Parts Distribution warehouse at Oshawa, Ont., stocks large quantities of 86,000 individâ€" ual parts and ships an estimated 50 millien pounds of parts and accessories in the course of a single year to GM regional wareâ€" houses in Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Regina, Saskatoon, Winâ€" nipeg, London, Montreal and Moneton Roy Gibbons of Clappisons spent a few days at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hown(d Gib&.mo. % Mrs. Ross Hamilton and chilâ€" dren Richard and Claudia were Sunday visitors at the home of the former‘s mother, Mrs. W. Heist of Waterloo. Visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jones were Mr. and Mrs. Homer Daniels, Mr. Harvey Pope of Preston, Mr. Jack Wiiâ€" liamson and son Don of Galt. Mr. and Mrs. Weskey Pearcy and daughter Sandra were visitâ€" ing at the home of the formet‘s g:rems. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas arcy of Rockton. Friends of Leonard Pfeiffer will be glad to hear he is up and around again after being confined to his bed through illness Pauline Eschleman on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Nichol of Durham spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Charles Reader. Alf Baker of Millcreek spent Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wes Pearcy. _ _ Mrs. Buchanan of Preston was visiting at the homes of Miss Etâ€" ta Bowman and Misses Susie and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gibbons and children Murray, Roy and Doreen spent Saturday with reâ€" latives in Southampton where they attended the funeral of the former‘s mother, Mrs. W. Kearns. home in Simcoe two months at the Doon Schoo of Fine Arts. Mrs. Ivan Battler and son Brian Battler were visiting in Kitchâ€" ener on Saturday, _ _ _ Mr. and Mrs. Alf. Pfeiffer spent a week‘s vacation at Dalrymple. Miss Patricia Ewen of Gonesâ€" togo was a visitor Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. the home of Mrs. R. Kenmir. _ _ Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Hamer and daughter Mirium of St. Catharâ€" ines visited Saturday at the home of Miss Alma Thoms. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Warnock and dauihter of Timmins spent a week at the home of Mrs. R. Hamilton. Miss Aima Thoms spent Thursâ€" day at the home of her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Lichty of Kitchener. Rod Brooks has returned to his Fort Erie spent the weekâ€"end at sleeping, times which a mother can c:}f‘net own. Relax she must it she would capably perform all other duties. Love Is Ensential And that‘s not all. Love, that very essence of motherhood, love All these are the more demandâ€" ing duties, and there are the houseieeï¬ing duties besides. Maâ€" ?e’;d.l mot c’r must leel‘l lhnlt. nfit:r ng, â€" clo/ and cleaning her family, llx'ludnflut includes her husband and frequently some imâ€" portunate other close relative she has no remaining phylknf energy, let alone the mentail strength to accompany them farâ€" ther. And yet, the best of mothâ€" ers do all this and more. Can there be more? Oh, yes, there‘s the plannlng of the fnenl future trend for her chitdren and the particular thing that she would do on her own once they are "on their own". That takes 3¢udÂ¥. reading Hictaning â€" "Pham shaed. rndlnï¬, listening. Then there‘s recreative relaxation other than in;gr.oom floor, surrounded by the debris of the baby‘s blocks and the remnants of a woman‘s magaâ€" zine you (hought you had well and carefully hidden. This goes on and on, and it‘s more or less unavoidable in the growingâ€"up process, interrupted only by ocâ€" casional, very occasional moments of _ complete â€" accord _ usually brought about by loudiy superâ€" imposed authority, father for inâ€" stance, the serving of iceâ€"cream for dessert or, most effective of all, sleep. To plnghrue Tennyâ€" son for mothers, "O sleep it is a blessed thing beloved from pole to mle. To Mother Queen the gn be given; she sends the lessed sleep from heaven that sinks into their soul." It‘s the diâ€" plomacy, the care of "how the sprig is being bent", the training in personal habits, in social relaâ€" tionships, in all matters that will hexr the young to grow gracefulâ€" ly in "wisdem and stature and in favor with God and man." ‘ Many Others Well, that‘s one mother. There must be many, many more. The baby gets hamâ€"strung in his highâ€" chair and you‘d swear he‘s being slowly decapitated although,{our reason tells you that he couldn‘t raise such a how! minus a head. Your two eidest, big sister of twelve and that squirming thin they call a boy, seven years ohf tangle over nothing at all and end up in a snarling heap on the livâ€" k But I was struck most forcibly by the duties performed by that ; mother over the weekâ€"end. Usuâ€" ally one thinks of the ordinary jobs of housekeeping when reâ€"‘ (erring to the duties of a houseâ€"| wife and mother. While such were her lot, the cleaning, a huge washing after two weeks at a° rented summer cottage, ‘buying ; and preparing food for the seven of us and all the other duties, the ‘ thought, planning, worrying and other energyâ€"expending elements behind all these undoubtedly‘ made deeper inroads on her phyâ€"‘ sical and nervous endurance. As| she herself put it: "Sometimes beâ€" 1 ing a mother and a housekeeper | in the daytime and trying to be | the next thing to a ‘glamor girl in the evening just about floors a | person. Somehow, though, I genâ€"| erally come out on top." She is an accomplished pianist, still in | demand for professional appearâ€" 3 Was Weekâ€"end Guest _ Recently 1 was a weekâ€"end guest in a home commned of faâ€" ther, mother, three children and a grandmother. They are middleâ€" class people, own their own home in a suburb of Toronto, drive a "47" car, shop at a sugermarkel, have plenty to eat and live runâ€" ofâ€"theâ€"mill family and community lives. Both father and mother are above average in ability and have a high sense of moral and spiritâ€" ual values. They are church members and their religious relaâ€" tionships are dear to them. They are practising Christians. This is seen most easily in their attitude toward their neéighbors, friends and in the family circle. Comes Out on Top by & fair amount of selfishness. And naturally so, since every moâ€" ther, by nature, is a giving human be'm:. the result being that her children are on the receiving side. Now, as an adult, 1 can see things in a different light. Never having been a mother, I feel that I can speak with authoriâ€" ty as an observer. I suppose that, as chfldreni we observe our moâ€" thers actually very little and that what qbpervï¬u we do is colored ‘All About Being a Mother‘ RECREATION NOTES By DON School Has} Two Young Kings as Puplis f |_ Five head were from Rosafe ‘Farms, Brampton, Ont., two each from J. J. E. McCague, Alliston, "Ont. and Hays Ltd., Oakville, | Ont., and one each from G. Leslie ‘Peer & Son, Milton, Ont. and Butâ€" |terfly Farms, Mexico, N.Y. One ’of the Hays animals was Pomona | Sovereign Papoose the Junior 2Champion at the C.N.E. This aniâ€" mal was bred by Bert Thornton & Son, Thamesford, Ont. The Roâ€" safe bulls included a son of ABC Reflection Sovereign, Allâ€"Canadiâ€" an Aged Bull for 1951 and two of his grandsons. Both McCague bulls were double grandsons of the six times Allâ€"Canadian, Montâ€" vic Rag Apple Marksman. Ingrid Bergman tells her side of the story ... discusses with surprising frankness her marriâ€" age to Dr. Peter Lindstrom and her romance with Roberto Rosselâ€" lini Be sure to read "Bergman Speaks Her Mind", starting in this Sunday‘s (Sept. 14) issue of the NEW Color Gravure American Weekly, exclusively with The Deâ€" troit Sunday Times. INGRID BERGMAN P8â€"10 The eleven bulls included ong from the U.S.A. and were purâ€" chased for the Institute of Interâ€" American Relations by Ismael Jordan of Santiago Assisting in making the selections was Dr. Guillermo Gomex, Head of the Animal Husbandry Dept. of the Chilean Ministry of Agriculture. The Aight marked the first time that a Chilean plane either comâ€" mercial or military had ever visitâ€" ed Canada. In fact it is the first South American com mercial plane to pick up a cargo at Malâ€" ton for several years. The first shipment of Canadian cattle to leave for South America since the footl and mouth outâ€" break last February took to the air at Maiton Airport Sept. tth. It consisted of eleven richfy ‘bred Holstein bulls including the Juâ€" nior Champion at the recent All this have I observed first in my own mother and repeatedâ€" ly in the mothers of the boys and girls to whom I have given some measure of leadership throush the years. On the whole there are that cherishes, chastizes, critiâ€" cizes and nurtures, so that each child may have the warmth of personality that is so necessary to happy living, this love has its source in motherhood. One must learn how to love, and most of us learned it first from our mothers. ‘"Though I were hanged from the highest tree I know whose love would follow me." The Civistion Science Monitor One, Norway St., Boston 15, Moss , U.S A. Please send me on introductory Moniâ€" tor exbscriptionâ€"76 issues. | enclose $3. Beseess +s HOLSTEIN BULLS C newspaperman‘s newsâ€" paper" the MONITOR covers the world with a network of News Burequs and correspondents. Often referred to as "a .TEHB WATEELOO (Cakd) CHRONICLE SPEAKS HER MIND FLY TO CHILE se e d e d e e n e na an 6 9 {stote) |_ Mr. and Mrs. Joe Faulkner and |Mrs. Dave Faulkner, Moorefeld visited with Mrs. R. Ogram and | Ethel. Many from this vicinity attend> ed the Christian Workers‘ Conâ€" ference of the Mennonite Church held at the Pavilion near Kitch ener on Sunday and Monday. Mrs. Groff wore anavy blue ‘Sahri" the native costume of the Indian woman. Since India is inâ€" dependent she is no longer interâ€" ested in western modes of dress, preferring that the missionaries should adopt her form of cosâ€" tume. A college principal and writer who has travelled in many lands has described the "Sahri" as the most beautiful type of woman‘s dress he has ever seen. The task of the sewingâ€"circles there is not only to sew but to teach the women to be good home builders and discussions are held in the circles on the problems of home life. A combined meeting of the Seâ€" nior and Helping Hand Mission circles was held at the home of Mrs. Delton Schmitt on Thursday evening. There was an attendâ€" ance of 31. Sewing Was done on a comfortâ€" er and quilt patches were cut. Mrs. Weyburn Groff, Gatula, India, was the guest aker. Mrs. Groff reporh?' that there were ten congregations and ten sewing circles in their section of India. Mr. and Mrs. George Johnston, Winnipef. Man., and Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Wright, Dorking, were guests with Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Ameng, Monday night. _ â€" _ Mrs. Peter Hotg. Landis, Sask., is visiting with Mrs. George Glaister. County Scholarship {;nd. Mrs. Wm. Richardson will the hosâ€" tess for October with Mrs. Dunâ€" can MacPherson, Elmira, guest speaker. Program by the grandâ€" mothers. A social period followed when refreshments were served. nesday of this week. As the W.L.| convention will be held in Kitchâ€" : ener on Oct. 7â€"8, the October| meeting of the Institute will be | held on Wednesday night, Oct. 15. | Mrs. F. H. Schummer was apâ€" pointed delegate to the convenâ€", tion with Mrs. Wm. Richardson as | alternate. Twenty dollars was voted to the Verna Bambridge County Scholarship fund. Mrs. Mannheim : Mrs. (Dr.) Wildfong, Mooreâ€" field, was the guest speaker last Wednesday night for the October meeting of the Women‘s Institute, with Mrs. Lorne Rennie, Crossâ€" hill, as hostess. Mrs. Wildfong ilâ€" lustrated her talk with colored pictures of a trip she took with her husband and family. They travelled through the Muskoka district to North Bay, down Otâ€" tawa River to Ottawa and Hull, Queebc City and Montreal, along the St. Lawrence River and the Gaspe ePninsula, _A vote of thanks was extended to the r.gea- ker by Miss Ethel Ogram. Visiâ€" tors as well as members enjoyed the pictures. s We "God couldn‘t be everywhere so he made mothers." And who on earth is more God like than a Godly mother! comparatively few unworthy moâ€" thers. There are a number who fail because the task was beyond their strensth, usually not beâ€" cause they didn‘t try hard to fulâ€" fil the role. What wonderful Keo- ?le they have to be! Truly there s no profession more exacting. Let us by no means condemn when, for any reason, we find them too humanly frail in meetâ€" ing the full demand of their duâ€" ties. Linwood : Miss Verna Haliman (Chronicle Correspondent) By Miso Jetret Manser (Chroniele Correspondent) | think _ again. _ "If | would confine itself ‘work that properly i |. . . and spend less ti |up new activities f | was not designed it ably find that it has ‘its job and do it well & On the report that athletes from both sides of the Iron Curâ€" tain got together and had nice, friendly time at the Helsinki Olympic Games, the Brooks, Alta., Bulletin comments: "The truth is that the people of the world, irrespective of race, meetâ€" ing on common ground are friendâ€" ly to each other. International hatreds are generated by a few at the top. The peoples of the world # The sports days is actually a reunion, declares the Shaunavon (Sask.) Standard, "a gathering as important to the wellâ€"being of the community as the meeting of the house in the capital. They form an integral part of community life, without which it would lose much in the way of sociability and understanding that has been the mark of the countryside for the past half century or so." MEN WMHO THINK OF TOMORROW PRACTISE MODERATION TODA JUE honey. . . B.C. Beef Cattle Growâ€" ers at a meeting decided to invesâ€" tigate conversion of wasteâ€"wood into woodâ€"molasses as a feed waâ€" plement for livestock. . . Mrs. M. bees were clustered over his uï¬ shoulder and back, he w ;lrmbomcwhmï¬nygotluw ve, and the whole operation was sccomplished without a single sting; settled they have already brought him in 50 los. of clover over his head while working in :ullcld; umr‘:: had followed it a mile, began settiing dovnonNnnlenmflc while court it was cruel to tise a bear t:‘uuul.dl.nnhdm thout food or Schwartz of id, Manitoba, BDy Jimn Greenblat CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED â€" MONTREAL it dou‘:otm:nvo as mnt,r:c triends provincial fl!u e tures and in Parliament as it had when 40 or 50 or 60 per cent of .tf:.. gopuhï¬on worked on the The follow are the Class l_‘-!-_-hla.hmm Dusl Purpose Shorthorns for the month of August, 1962. NEEP CASH? Did you know ... The only gold medal won by Canada in the 1952 Olympics in Finland was for trap shooting and was won with Câ€"lâ€"L Ammunition. LiTTLE GIRL is fooling . .. knows she‘s no dunce to be wearing a blouse and socks made of nylon. She‘ll always win a prize for neatness! Mother gets top marks for knowing nylon leads to easier living â€" washes wonderâ€" fully, lasts so fong. JUNIOR is happy to inherit big brother‘s schoolâ€"books when they‘re" the sort that have been kept in good condition by "Fabrikoid" covers. Children‘s books are resistant to scuffing and other damage when protected by these versatile chemicat products. lly Worcester, H. A. Hewilt & Sons, Picture News â€"from Câ€"ILâ€"L umn.fl.m,mzoo,mn.u,ml-: WATERLOO, ONT. TH E HOUSE O F 6 EAGR A M Got‘SOnsquoigg,h,l.m I-thuuoplndwflu.u;. .-Yd!uhovmhndlyounu‘.l“uuj mmmwflomoflym I.lohupth-o-hhnp-y. USEHOLD FINANCE T§ reat s 1191 3i3 Caneda‘s laryest and Buneca (E5BCâ€"AD & ) o[tmï¬m\j GROWING better crops isn‘t all done on the farm. The research chemist helps the farmer by developing improvements in fertilizers and pesticides which result in higher yieids and betâ€" ter quality. 4â€"Year 3 Yesr Helcam Red Ruby and Polly Worcester, H. * A. Hewitt & Sons, York, Ount. ........_._._. Braerob Worcester Â¥Friduy, September 12, 1968 «m p tâ€" 10,019