.gw.mv.1~ , What I have to say is this: It's a lot of bunk, this talk about the until mouth bu; being pound for pound the best tUhting fish of them all, In fact in so much bunk. we are inclined to believe that the individual who original- ed it sud made it suck all these years. ttshed tor has: alone or else but and catfish. We have clught our share of small mouths and will admit that he has a fair amount of ththt In him, BUT he doesn't even run a that has just not come to miiUt when doing thir column, to it bu never been written. SPORTING, FISH & CAME NEWS Call Us Today 6-6401 ttiagitllll8lt THE BEAN, 'Ill!.!'?!.?,,,.,! PUBLISHING WATERLOO lot KING BT. WEST moan“ EYES EXAMINED Ls,, dFP/IW onIcnu. . . . Printing is more than paper and ink. It's an ancient craft that offers a rewarding prize . '. a favorable impression that speaks well of you in your absence. Let your letter carry two messages. Ianocodo' "st-tes In mmAt of o Mould-moo, Orion-H: 1tltrttm'trorrtotkh.wietshonrtootttrsoiiowsstu-rmr,ttt. 'omett'ihroormtuemmrto.o'ere-tttrkmdta. I have um!- ed to write INA little "pin." for ION mun. Why I haven’t] um not "at, hit 5 am in- cme to a what I than! r t" x a rhdleu of w sat Invent, However. it has b e e n u n e of those th i 1139 CARLING'S ll PTO m ETRIST manna mun M mum mm I.†'.a8-o-mt--.r-q-- nhononnly.orleoldwm runabout trout at to: - a! Mum. a lair-dud bunk trout In fact can a mil 5% can 00mm and outlast . Input): ot mural: the. lt you trunk he bu Manna. like I small lake trout on . ay. A null mouth pup will give up when tho later In just aettting do“ to Mm. A mushy is tar mom apoc- uculn even in cedar!“ poundue. A salmon ot . an will outaump nod oul-lut I bun. Frankly the old 2,e,',ttrt', tutr" tog upplled to the anal mouth has. " a laugh when other - Mb are compared to him. H, POI APPOINTIM PHONE 2-1030 OPTICAL REPADRS Craftsmanship in Type print anything" _ on ituiia" G "M in - w ed'.", itU for or mum bl“. II. Waterloo Rod and Gun Club will hold their maul crow shooting coma! min this yen, but the dug will be at later. Gummy sum: " "ld oom- mittee chairman will have the netting ot the date, and he hun't defldgd deBnitely I; y_et. In former ye-ra, the date wu so late that many of the crows had left for the loath or were work. mg their way in that direction. Then too, it always came the last day ot the open trout season. when most tUhermen liked to have one last crack at the speckled beauties. Boon as Cam let's us know, we will plan the date on to you. Better get your gum oiled and the cobwebl out of the old crow call. Now (hit j,i.i2yifeeiji,itiiiset game birds-what is your Home mmtront of the gun and on the ta e, Reforms indicate that the duck popu alien is holding its own fairly well. Cenmataken claim there is not quite as large an in- crease as last year, but that uv- eral species including the well hkgd black duck, has mere-led. Now that we have that um. and. on our chat. we no basta- ning to be! better. We know there will be a tot a! spartan“: who will not - with what we have written, but there will Ibo be, A lot who have never and mm‘ the old b.“ +en. _ you In": the old b.“ noun. Ut', Ire! P we». we'll ye s to "The Two Talent Pmoerhmoe" â€mam-m $.71... 1'tthegt twulatmdoommm t.ttg,iat,tN',tutntti Mm. bum-“who -etaetaur m baki- be. tutLitwever, be I. "ttee than thy-mu! mouth. than tram - id. u, the on [and you human- uhnk m. I lop-notch". I but “I! ONTARIO Ill] Peunkk of the Witmot Rod and Gun Club has “ken his “In"? into the no“? country to do I nu. IUhirtg on ought to be I good an: nary or two what he come. home. They all m that game birds is the wild goose. A young one u tops " a table bird, and they are warsy enough to glean any hunter, hootind them mually the climax to a lot of hard work and patient waiting. Even then it is not alwalxa easy, for despite their bulk, " are deceptively fast and the very fact that they are tat often fool. you into firing be ore they are In good gun range. The wild goose is makin‘ a bit comeback and reports indicate t at there u a tar greater increase in wild - than in wild ducks, The: are our pet game bird: and how we on them. You dil- "reet Good, drop'un a line and let's sun I good argument We'll print your opinion and Ice how the other hunger: feet [bout it. have a cut habit, when Bred upon, ot letting go all holds Ind drop- ping to the ground. only to take " Main w en you have your not: buried in a clump of long gnu looking for them. Probably the Wines! of all the game birds is the wild goose. A 'ou.nCone u tops " I table bird. ot letting to ping to the 1 " Main w no“ buried nymg, you are never sure when you pull the trigger whether he is going to be where he is supposed to be, or not. Many an otherwise sane individual has [one tearing lhmu’h the bush after Bring at one 0 these long billed moisten, under the mistaken imrrmion that he has scored I til. They have a cut habit, when Bred noon fl] "Aâ€ILOO htule I think partridge are the tinert game mm ot the lot. both on the table and In the tur, my wnte lavors the ma gaudy ring- necu pheasant as the choicest ta- ole mm. Certainly he is the easiest turd ot the tut to knock out ot the air. Whether you col- tect tum or nut depends on whe- mer you mined tum stone dead, on u nut, am you have a good re- tnever. A good dog not only flntts more turas tor you to moot at. but also cuts your tosses m wounded and unmarked birds to almost nu. Granting the pheasant is good on the table no that he has has own cunning when hunted, we sun think he is easier to hit than a ten-ton truck in low 'ear-un- less, at course, someone else has put tum up and he is coming down hul with his throttle open. That's ditterent. our li hug] one of the smartest birds of the bunch is the old black duck. He tan bounce right straight into the air when Irlgntened and with a moderate tail wind can make real time. It takes a fair amount of lead to knock him down and I good dog to find him if he iln't dead. He is also a choice moral on the table. A green winged teal is I lot harder to hit, especi- ally if he has the wind to help, but one or two pellets will often like him out of the air. He isn't as good on the table " the black and there is a lot less of him. Inc umu of 51x birds, each in their own “the pool ot JUICE ano melted butter. anappenred like a nun, Inc pumplun pie and whipped cream were packed In on Lop ot tnem, nut u was the and: mu made the tug names- non. us untu we were soaked to the “In and so cold We could hardly move.- Lven we hardy tell-levers were curled up m mlseraole wet Dam on me hour ot the blinda. unally we deemed that we had Hansen enuugn ot a beating, Ind gathered up our lull. decoys and guns and neaaed tor me cottage. never. n l lwe to be a hundred, wul 1 ever target the wondertul ooour that met us as we opened‘ the door ot the cottage. Mother' mud burnt about a weetr's supply, at my wood, but the cottage was steaming hot and the moutn wat- erme amen ot partridge med Mt nutter was almost more than we could bear. Ron u the way u all than 'tateg,eNti,','euhopl,. m coma . Jam“... Put upbyluodblr dogiittteavy cover, there n 'rat".'", tum He u tut and " and an "the! T he III-kn leaving the ground in . bit Manama; even to “and with. aumnn. no " “so town-um: land, with» mu Mt this respect in at [out our opinion. Both at u had taken our limit ot the elusive brown bombers. In those days 1 had neither wife not (army, to I had lent the birds some wan my friend and told him The neat day, Saturday. wu everything a duck afghan“ now been. Cold and windy, tt alternately snowed and tamed on A gunning triend and myself had concluded a very “when â€(fridge hm; new Netball Friday mun, my mother, bro- ther Ana and came out to the cot- tage where l mu noun; alter a nervous mow-up winch prenat- ed me With my ptesem wnne top. Dad, the (Home: and I were tt nng duck shooting the next " and mower said we would hive me partridge cooked for our evepmg meal. chi-Mun.“ 1L'.'ergg=i.iiih2u25t dis-doubt lobe-o- triyPt.f9ttteVituli6ii% 1thMtttrtlfAigiii2sik and“ 'tet-ardent" B,r.tit.irruiiiiiihTitraiL aiB-dtt-trkoituaitTatiia Itr*eetttirahiiiéiia. Ironhy About the "eo-taudit nu with otugt't'ttgttti'd VI†I u demands. .that up“. Ut'a In: a clear The teed of putrid“ l unem- ber beat came actually u a aequei to a duck hunt. to nave my mother cook iheiii, That was on a Thursday. m at him. M" Ta in???) givthipry we to: not being I 5mitriiia iiiE -ifrioia ..- KEG; Mme of the maze I and only to%ie a have your ump of lone, target, a game, of tag partly way of --. .-. -"""> - .w. - Cam Shun. who mum Frur dy thin pan week-0nd. said that while our white-haired boy in cor utnly Arttorirtg " holiday, he isn't Mimi-l, ',ttthdlg ttatt population Marhe in m thu way. In“! Behling, Frank Wyuyn. ski, Hank Rnyski and Clay: Schmehl, on I tUhing trip 1m week which took them within 160 miles of Jame. Bay, report a ttne catch of speckled trout, the size of which merited entering them in the Rod and Gun Club contest, My Shank Ipendi his \‘uulon at “lei-he, in 1:: tah. m. his "tting too uriounly and in mung! "yirtaf 10.091 mug. Mr. and Mrs, Charles Lira and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fe Ibaum have Just returned from MacGre- cor Bay with I met “Och of pike and but, Bob lost the biggest ttsh of the trip when it chewed (Mouth his leader aim being bran; t right to the bout, " and u open ur petty. Tl ti-polluti, This mac Waterloo Waterloo. Members are talking another pier Mes-hen of the Wiln are talking seriously 0: another picnic in the nu Seems those present had darn good time at the In Bill is carrying n whc those poisonous stogic with him-the same Is guide the boys out of on the last fishing trip, he doean't forget hir light one in the house o The bureau's index of industri- ul employment stood at 1881. That represented a 2.5 per cent increase over May and a 3.1 per cen_t increase qver June, 1952. AVERAGE WEEKlY PAY CHEOUE HITS NEW RECORD -V... "w.--“ vvcl aunt, unit. The index for manufacturing industry employment rose to 202.4, some six r cent above the corresponding gun a year ago. Weekly earmngs in manufactur- ing averaged $59.48. compared with 856.10 a year ago, But we are Important enough to earn the "well done" only if we are faithful and take seriously the investment of our two talents. I wonder how many of us so do. I wonder what changes for good would be made in our city if more of us stopped acting like one-tal- ent people and realized the poten- tial of our two talents. We could orI'AWA.--The Bureau ot Sta- tistics reported last week that in- dustrial employment hit a new peak for June and the average week] pay cheque climbed to a regain! $57.70. When it comes to voting we are the people who determine' the di- rection of the election tide. The leaders are tttTe,', people too but they wou dn't be anywhere without us. Ours is a great and grave responsibility. try, We, two-talent people, are the main body of almost any group you can name. We are important people. There could be no pro- gress, no work, no production it it wggg not for ul. Seems to me that most of us. two-talent people. miss the joy of faithful service either because we envy the tIve-ttMentors of whom there are comparatively tew in the world, or we emulate the one- talent people of whom also there argue comparative few. ( Moreover, both these men were bruised and called "faithful" not ecelet1s succeuiul hut laith~ tul. Makes you think, doesn't it? Was it Browning who wrote, "All service ranks the some with God?" It wan Milton who said "that one talent which is dug to hide lodged with me me! " Wise men It? to have recognized the waste o buried talent: and of vieing for favor with the giver of talents. And now came the time of tech- tming. lurk what wan aid to the Bve-Utent wizard: “Well done, good and faithful urvnnt. Thou has been faithful over a few things; I shall make thee ruler over may things. Enter thou in- to "the. joy of thy Lord." And what was slid to the two- talent man? Exactly the - minis. The words are Menace! Ind prawne the intonation did not charge a whit. The signin- cant wot a. "Well done," "good", "faithful", show that the mom of our two-ultra man were up prod-ted to the Jame degree " wet! than ot Mr. tive-tateht. tare would player. he had faith in human. in the In with whom ha dealt and In t'l mm- in which be lived. He must have had him or he would have sub tered the same mven tear " did hit cage-talent comrade. tnit"tiiu"iikT'i iGU"irT - "that, I. "ytebriiiFi' MI no! -9Jee.ditsittiiuikdii Another point about this Isrdin- â€! man ir that he " willing to work to were“ his money. In 'el only 'pet hope tltat9iy yen- "II. I. -- iiliiTiAiiSllr.lll"rl'lTl 'r'l','lil1tfl',trtdltpgttt1t qbWqt.ttrtgaaGau'Ciaiaiii"il *-uAeinttioFkiririiuia 'dt,rtt',attrJileieiLiiCtlit macaw.“ coo-Ill- out an when. a. could tsavrbunrdtttrtwouuiitktiGiG 'nrtttandr-dttsinuLuit 10-910 [map But he didnt He probably manned [in this: "Ut'a In. two that. Nice u and: u the our“! fellow, Not too much but f"rT.t"t'tad', 1 Invest it and I've at tried Bad I won't as hard as It. Ive talent“ two talent: wilt not be lo hard to double." my death than he did. 1t,titr.et-r-rragr. Heart It meetim and Gun Teeti n. will take th it meeting at There wiO ll [Hon megqn. ling will Be held Legion Hall, Reg ot the Waterloo lub will be Aug. , the form of an 1 a! the club pro- " also be In an- I whole ataxia} Wilmot )gie: around Is he med to of the bush p, Let's hope himself and e or car. mmot Club r of having near future. and a pretty In! one. held at Regina Lira and Fe Ibaum "ICC!!- 2h 9! pike A"! the sr, " of AUG. 10 ' Family Man BUSINESS MAN Vote . for NORMAN Labour Friend LIBERAL BUSINESS JOB NORTH wnmuoo LIBERAL ASSOCIATION VOTE IS IT TIME FOR A CHANGE WHEN WE HAVE ts IT TIME FOR A CHANGE WHEN WE HAVE .FAMILY ALLOWANCE. . OLD ACE PENSIONS. WITHOUT IS IT TIME FOR A CHANGE WHEN IS " TIME FOR A CHANGE WHEN IS IT TIME FOR A CHANGE WHEN IS IT TIME FOR A CHANGE WHEN IS IT TIME FOR A CHANGE WHEN HIGHEST IN HISTORY MORE PEOPLE OWN THEIR OWN CAR MORE FAMILIES OWN THEIR OWN HOME FOREIGN TRADE PROSPERITY TIME mrr FOR WHAT CHANGE LARGEST IN THE WORLD PER CAPITA WAGES WERE NEVER HIGHER A MEANS TEST EMPLOYMENT WAS NEVER GREATER PROMISES IS AT THE NOT PM}! 1“