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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 29 May 1953, p. 12

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Wc nousenou riNance Proud Mixers Domine 199588 Grand Champion Ontario Bull Sale 1952 by Ringwood De} Zento 5th by Del Zento ist. from C K. Clementine l6th by C. K. Challenger D 85th Ringwood Crusty Bth. 264227 S. R. Domino Mischiet 33rd. (Polied) 311656 by Del Zento 29th by Beau Zento 54th. from P. H R Lady Mixer lith by Painter Mixer Ist ling_yood Del Rupert 5th 306325 Ringwood Del Zote 300128 Jackson Hill Polled Domina 2nd. (Polied) 217383 by J.LR. Domino Mischief 22nd. E)T’Hffi i"."lr)'ome:tic Misâ€" | chief 1st from Miss Adrain 2nd. P.M.F. by H. P. Royal Rupert 16th Mernvale Det Zento 10th 277350 NEW FOR SERYVICE CALL COLLECT â€" WATERLOO 2â€"8397 84 King St. N 16 King St. S Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association LIPHARDT HARDWARE] TEERKOTT‘S R. J. Heiser, Manager 32 King St. South, suite 200, second fleor, phone 5â€"5280 WATERLOO, ONT. Week days 7:30 to IO:“ a.ms. _ Sundays and holidays _ 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. Any cows noticed in heat later than times stated above will be more likely to conceive if bred the following day. es for ALl. BREEDS are: Bull Sale 1953 â€" by C K. Cruiser D 34th from C K. Kansas Belle 55th by W. H. R Proud Mixer from Rilda Domino C.F. Sire of Hill Dunbar‘s Queen‘s Guineas Steer :mwh Also Grand Champion and top selling Hereford, nultln! saea Reserve Champion at Ontario Bull Sale 1952 by Ringwood Del Zento 17th by Del Zento Ist. from Miss Advance A. Domino by Advance Domino 16ist by Polied Cyress Boy by Poll?PVdVDVOIV!;I;\vO-Qi"\.' from Nancy Belle by Jarvis Domino Lad 54th S Spe Service from the TRADE For the BEST BUY and the BEST SELECTION Come to TEERKOTT‘S GARAGE BUSINESS IS SOLICITED €ral HILLMAN _ MINX SALES & SERVICE EVINRUDE OUTBOARD MOTORS We are featuring the Herefords in this ad. They are as fotlows: irmer ‘Where Better Bulls Are Garage 1953 AUSTIN SEDAN 1952 HILLMAN SEDAN 1950 HILLMAN SEDAN 1950 AUSTIN SEDAN 1947 BUICK COACH non profit, coâ€"operative organization, ed und operated by farmers. the best buils available in all breeds, taken to in Waterloo WATERLOO Phone 2â€"3321 have top sires of all breeds TERMS See them wWATERLOO at service." "In reality, it is the most luxuâ€" rious, the most costly, and in my !mmml, the most poorly organâ€" _of all branches of the health Uniess the situation chlnftd he said, the clamor for socialized medicine will gain. _ "Hospital care has become the focal point of all medical service and as such it is regarded as the epitome of medical care. "As we all know, this would be the wrong thing," he added Addressing the Detroit Econoâ€" mic Club Tue-g;z he said an avâ€" erage $10,000, hospital costs $5,000,000 a year to maintain. Claims Hospitals ‘Monuments of Inefficiency" DETROIT.â€"Hospitals are "moâ€" numents of costly ineflclenc{”. according to Dr. Robert Collier Page, general medical director of the Standard Oil Co. Equality of medical service is not available to the rank and file, he said. What‘s a picture without a background? What is life without experience? What is hhtol% withâ€" out the years behind it? hat is the present without the gut? Truth is that we have missed out | But what will you be doing when you‘re seventy? Will you ‘allow yourself to be relegated by your immediate junior generation to the obscure background? Oh, I don‘t mean that you may be pushed into some an!i:unted old people‘s home to gradually deâ€" generate in a colorless environâ€" ment to a state of pallid skin and bones ultimately to meet the fate of all mortal creatures, I mean that what you say, your attitude toward manners, morals and manâ€" kind will not be thought worthy of consideration, your presence as of a ghost, without substance or meaning, a life in death. That is the case with so many of the peoâ€" ple who have reached their threeâ€" score and ten. They didn‘t want it that way but their sons, daugh- ters, neEhews and nieces, graduâ€" ally, subtly and, often intentionâ€" ally pushed them out of life‘s picâ€" ture until they form not even the background of it. “ What will you be doing when you‘re seventy? It‘s no use askâ€" uns this of a teenâ€"ager or even the ordinary young adult. There may even be some middleâ€"aged people ’who are coasting along with neâ€" ver a thought, much less a plan, ’lor the Golden Age of their lives. They‘re busy and, if they‘re doâ€" ing t.hini‘ with a purpose I, for ‘one, would commend them for letâ€" tlnf the morrow take care of itâ€" self. It has a way of doing just thatâ€"under certain quite definite circumstances. They Don‘t Need to Be "On the Shelf" The merehant. well aware that counci! is making an attempt to stop contractors from do same thl&ull«l Mayor Don Roberts and All}. Waldon Ewald, Here we see them lustily brooms. question: is can the Works Department afford such highâ€"priced help? weun i=~ .m s P _ City workmen recently left a litter of dirt on the sidewalk in front of an Erb St. West store GORDON‘s GOOD GLASSES By DON McLAREN ~ THEH WATERLOO (Ontah) CHRONICLE M SWING THAT BROOM j _ And how do I know? Well, for one thing 1 have spent a little of ‘my time with the Jolly Oldsters. I have watched them at tasks, at play, as they laughed, sang and talked and while they joined in remembrance ceremonies for deâ€" garted members of their group. I ave heard them tell about themâ€" selves and some of their personal circumstances and experiences. To me they are the salt that has not lost its savour. They repreâ€" sent the real past without which the real present loses much of its punch and meaning. And what have 1â€"learned? Well here are a few things: ® 1. That their happiness depends on them having a place in the sun (a sun that is still quite high in the heavens), just like you and me. 2. That they are naturally hap[)y people and are in the quest for happiness. So are the rest of us. 3. That they are capable of more physical, mental and spiritual effort than are many of their juniors in whose hands the afâ€" fairs of the world are someâ€" times placed. 4. That some of them are experiâ€" enced experts in many lines of economical, social and spiritual endeavour. We would save both money and effort if we had the will and the faith to hitch their experience to the vim, viâ€" gor, vitality and precarious caâ€" pital of younger men and woâ€" Your own optical prescripâ€" tion in a scientifically tinted pair of sunglasses lets you drive, read and play in comfort and safety. SUNGLASSES on much of the rich meaning of life by pampering, cajoling and ignoring our overâ€"sixties and seyâ€" enties. Our private and corporate lives have been that much the poorer. Prescription Mere‘s just the opportunity you‘ve been waiting forâ€"a delightful °C mme 26 day mp io Sney cutlome win ugmmeny of to ooy~ â€" ndlo W Colorado Springs, Cave of the Winds, Grand Canyon, Los Angeles, Hollywood and a side trip south of the border to Tia Juvana. Homeward bound, you visit Santa Borbore and Monterey, enjoy ROUND YRIP PARGE a thrilling stop in San Francisco and then return via Reno, Sait Lake PROM TORONTO Merrnuadne «sZP, Ark your Agort for more detaik of this and ?.” mony other PMeceure Manned Veeabioms. t o reem) *=CAUFORNNM and the Golden West were thick _ _ o Did primal passions rage. They had a method, sure and "quick â€" â€" To cure the blight of age. If one‘s native youth had fled And time had sapped his vim After having written what is above I received, coincidentally, in the mail, the following rhyme. Dr. W. G. Seott, Employment Adâ€" visor, Ontario Region, N.E.S., beâ€" iz:)n a recent speech with it at St. uis, Missouri. "In heathen times, when skulls Some day we shall surely apâ€" preciate the value of preserving the contributions of our older peoâ€" ple. When? Probably when we see someone else doing so or when it becomes the popular, spectacuâ€" lar thing to do. Relegating them to the shelf is sheer waste of laâ€" tent power, so willing to be used. n.en in any of these fields. 5. That working and directing oldâ€" sters is the most satisfying part of my whole work for the least investment of time, money and energy. ; In the meantime we do a bit here and there. In our midst are a few older people consigned to looking at the four drab walls of a room, day in and day out. I‘m sure that you‘ll agree that what happens to them shouldn‘t hapâ€" pen to a dog. 171 King South Gauke! & Joseph Ste. Phone 2â€"4469 KITCHENER BUS TERMINAL Koward R. Boob FUNERAL HOME ing Waterloo New Appointment For S. Europe liam M. Fechteler has been apâ€" pointed commanderâ€"inâ€"chief of Allied forces in Southern Europe. The announcement was made Monday by Gen. Matthew B. Ridgeway. rage T On methods crude and tough. So when our man grows old and grey And bent and short of breath, We simply take his job away And let him starve to death." C‘ That was the last of him. But in this, our enlightened age, We‘re made of finer stuff. And so we look with righteous They simply popped him on the 220 WASHINGTON.â€"Admiral Wilâ€" T use 222. CGOU FRESHNESS is a must * FRESH LAKE FISH â€" SEA FOODSs * ‘‘You‘ve had the rest . . . . GET THE BEST" 2/)12) 21 KING ST. N. 44 WATERLOO Will meet at the summer home of the Misser Koots MacDougall Ave., on JUNE 1 ot 3:00 P.M. s All Members are Invited to Attend Cars provided at Clinic Room ot 2:30 P.M. ALL FISH CLEANED AND BONED To Your Specifications FREE OF CHARGE IN FISH AND SEA FOODS WATERLOO BRANCH # Telephone 3â€"3631 King & Queen Sts â€" Kitch« V. Q. N. (Filleted) LEANEY‘S FISH MARKET For Prompt Efficient Fâ€"Râ€"Eâ€"E

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