Mfen who think of tomorrotw practice moderation today No team likes to play without some support. How about you giving yours? Even though we sugâ€" gest it, you‘re not giving charity. The game you see will convince you that you have been missing a great deal by not following this team through the whole season. Several have said that people are becoming so tomfort concious that they feel the Waterloo arena is not as warm as it might be and the seats uncomâ€" fortable. Possibly if the spectator wanted to sit in his shirt sleeves and watch the game, then the Waterloo rink would be a little cool. So far as the seats are concerned, wood is wood and even when soft, its hard. ‘The Waterloo team is now in the _ midst _of its playoffs. With proper support frop.the.f2ns, there is no doubt they will make a good showing. Quality of the team is good and the brand of hockey they furnish, excellent,. â€" o Many of these same people will travel to Kitâ€" thener, watch an inferior brand of hockey, and cheer for a team in which they have little or no interest. It just doesn‘t add up. This team has always managed to furnish an excellent brand of hockey, yet the Waterloo fans have stayed home. There must be a reason why Waâ€" terloo residents, ordinarily proud of everything perâ€" taining in the least degree to their city, will not come out and watch a better brand of hockey, played by their own team. Support For Siskins For the past several years at this time, the mskins, Waterloo‘s Junior "B" hockey team has managed to get itself into the playoffs with a good chance of going to the top of the hockey ladder, if they had proper support. While there is more traffic on the roads than the side streets carry, still the same cars must travel both. To what avail is a safe main street if the motorist cannot get off the street he lives on, all in one piece? . While we realize that clearing a city of ice and Wlow is a big job, a little planning and extra work Wwould clean up the sidestreets within hours of the main street. Accidents would be cut down and the lvhcuuge car owner could let his ulcers rest for a. ' .- 4 Many side streets in Kitchener have icy ruts !up enough to trap and swing the heaviest car. e of the streets in Waterioo are not much better. Traffic is heavy in both cities. Taxes are paid the side streets just as much as they are the Elin drag. Yet the very streets which are normally e most dangerous because of the narrowness, are left to the last to have anything done, or they are ignored entirely. â€" The 7'lousc m of Scagram Why The Main Streets? Conditions of side streets in Waterloo is not ood. Some streets in Kitchener are even worse. Why is it, that with thousands of dollars worth snow removal equipnrent, the works departments both cities seem to feel the need only to clear main streets. smw%mï¬ï¬ Editor‘s Opinion ives it charm. only mesdâ€"ration Authorized as second class mail, P.O. Dept. THWD WATERLOO CHRONICLE Arindads mur Jcan Paul Richter Tell me, how can it be otherwise? Can the one who has not worked for and earned an amenity really appreciate its worth? Is this not why stolen fruit is said to be sweetâ€" er than that of the tree in one‘s own back yard? Can old heads full of trial and error experience be put on young shoulders? And does not famâ€" iliarity with dollars breed conâ€" tempt for dimes? Is this matâ€" ter not simply a case of deâ€" gree? When I was a child I heard my grandfather remark to my mother that her childâ€" ren were not as obcdient to their elders as his had been to him. I think he confused subâ€". serviance for obedience, for he was a very stern man whose love for his ckildren was sucâ€" cessfully covered by an unâ€" smiling if not frowning counâ€" tenance. 1 haven‘t been able to trace the underlying â€" reason. The best I can do is to take two or three guesses. Here they are. BENDING THE TWIG In comparison with such a Make 10] wonderfil [M» CE resea Fanesw P EARL CLEANERS â€" LAUNDRY â€" WE DYE 80 QUEEN ST. S. Phone 4â€"4735 KITCHENER BEAUTIFULLY DYED â€" TUMBLE DRIED CHENILLE BEDSPREADS LOOP TWIST MATS y PEARL LAUNDRY LIMITED It is unkindly to a child to overâ€"protect. to overâ€"indulge and to overâ€"rate. The world is, if anything, hard in this respect; and since our children shall have to make their way in a world that changes in many other ways but not in this one, it is a more kindly thing to prepare X)r the cirâ€" cumstances they must meet outside. Love is a cushion that softens the blow and it should never become a feather bed of easy living if the child is to grow selfâ€"dependent, resâ€" pectful of the rights of others and wellâ€"equipped to stand tall among his fellows. To be a pal to anyone and still preserve that individuality which makes a pal attractive to a pal, requires more thought than merely to lay down unâ€" deviating laws to meet any and _ all circumstances. The reaction to such rigid discipâ€" line was the determination of the next generation to allow more freedoms to their own offâ€"spring. Out of this there developed the idea of being a pal to your child, and the backward swing of the penduâ€" lum had begun. Just now there are many parents and more leaders of youth who deplore the extreme reactionary swing of the rearing pendulum. All are suffering from the misâ€" management _ of _ wellâ€"intenâ€" tioned but illâ€"advised leaders of youth. tramples more or less at will. He is, therefore, no pal at all but merely a plaything subject to misuse and abuse. straightâ€"jacket attitude, that ol_thnnntu_lnlw The pal parent is in grave danger of unbending to the point at which he becomes a o onP fhi Children of thoughtful, maâ€" ture, rational parents do not have things too easy either. This growing up is a tough and fullâ€"time" _ occupation with school, music, play, social relaâ€" tions, homeâ€"helping duties and all the adult meanings of things to be learned These children however, have a stepâ€" pingâ€"stone from which to spring intelligently into their own world and generally, they are a credit to their forbears. They are the world‘s ieadersâ€" inâ€"training _ and _ toâ€"morrow they make their places worthâ€" ily. Not many of these really fail; not around here any how, tnd I can furnish living proof n the matter. I‘m for the children â€" and most of their parents. Children do not have things too easy these days. The chil«â€" ren of thoughtless, immature, irrational parents have things very hard. They are in conâ€" stant â€" conflict with â€" school authorities, _ civic authorities and any other active repreâ€" sentatives of law, order and the social order. And the end is not yet, Short of a miracle these children, in their late teens, are in for more troubleâ€" some times. As young adults precipitated into marriage by devious routes the water is hotter than ever and the esâ€" capes more and more ditfl-‘ cult and inglorious. | good judgment as they can. I hear too that Johnny and Mary are "on their own" in matters that challenge them to become capable, lixeable people in their own right. 1 know some neighbourhoods in which a majority of perents are thinkâ€" ing their way through this maze of methodically rearing their childrenu. in such areas it is a pleasure to werk with both _ parents â€" and â€" children. There are other areas in which workinp with the parents andâ€" or the shildren is almost imâ€" possible. In these sreas coâ€" uperatic1, observance of reaâ€" sonable rules and â€" anything more thin grudging assistance for any public project are alâ€" most nonâ€"existent. In one area there is love with foresight; in the other the parental love in almost totally blind. ,I hear mose and more from parents that they are willing to gulide¢, protect and stimulate their children with as much RKONICt® as kind as the editor. Someâ€" times she‘s quite tart. She‘s in a particularly cflls? mood right now about Ned Tutley and his family. It seems the "social workâ€" | ers" _ have been â€" swarming | around the Tutley household. | Aunt Maude doesn‘t like socia! workers anyhow, so I discount what she says by about 40% The other 60% seems, to make "You remember Ned Tutley. You used to play pool with him. Probably licked you, too. Ned plays good pool, I‘m told â€"and he ought to do. Spends enough time at it. "Well, Ned used to get on not bad â€" mostly because Sarah ran the house carefully, and Ned made good money in harvest time, and did odd jobs around town, if you could get him to do a job. Ned always "Well," she wrote, *‘those social workers I told you about are still fussing around Ned Tutley‘s place like hens in a rainstorm. . Makes a person sick. . I get news from home two ways. 1 read the hometown paper â€" and i get letters from Aunt Maude. Aunt Maude iso‘t OF MANY PHINGS Membership in the ASSOCIATED FUNERAL DIRECTORS SEAVICE qualifies us to take immediate charge when death eccurs at a distent point. Every duty isâ€"performed by competent, professional members of the Association. Reasonable fees, estahlished by agreement beâ€" tween members result in a saving to the families we serve. = TORONTO â€"DOMINION BANK "Wwh e o pave e j s‘ Jnc e sb + + o psâ€" with The Torontoâ€"Dominion Bank‘s imâ€" print will be introduced later. 1!".'! cheques made out on Bank of oronto or Dominion Bank cheque forms continue to be valid? De I continue to use my same chequeâ€" book, passâ€"book and other bank forms? Yes. ' Qmï¬m&i you may ash about... | : Torontoâ€"Dominion Banx UNITED IN COASTâ€"TO.COAST SERVICE for the time being. New cheque l,pl.»booh-:r:ana-hnklom TNE agsot in RBariNn®G 88Aviee now oneâ€"The Torontoâ€"Dominion Bank! With a network of 452 branches, operated by 5,600 employees; _ , Torontoâ€"Dominion offers Canadians outstanding banking service. With offices in New York and London, plus worldâ€"wide connections, the bank has excellent overseas banking facilities. With assets of over one billion one hundred millien dollars, and more than one billion dollars in will affect their connections with the individual institutions, We bope the following may be helpful. The Bank of Toronto and The Domtnion Bank are deposits, Torontoâ€"Dominion ranks as one of Canada‘s large banks, serving a million Canadians, Many customers may be wondering how the amaigamation ( family wasa‘t too bad off. Young Harry turned out to be a worker, and he got started delivering groceries for Alex Fairburn‘s Grocery. Molly got a job, too, waiting on tables at Grace White‘s Coffee Shop. Both youngsters gave most of their pay to Sarash and were quite willing to keep doing it until the younger children got old enough to dig in and help too. They were a happyâ€"goâ€" lucky family, and if I was to be honest, I might even say I envied them a bit â€" they had more fun than lots of folks do. ‘Instead _ of being _ half ashamed of his laziness, like he used to be, Ned Tutley‘s proud as a rooster. Figures this town has been doing him dirty, not kirking through with more good things for him. Molly and young Harry were jJust sick about it â€" at first. But now they‘ve quit their jobs, too, and pretty soon the Tutley family will be just as of work gave him a bad case of rheumaties. any other thing that smelled feow hours, except at harvestâ€" ing. l!g liked harvesting, but Thoumlmt!on will not in'nl'.: m 8 .I 7 P same number? Yos. Will my arrangements for business leane FM my Savings Account retein the omm« +m The new poit will combine the job of city clerk and city, manager. It will mark the first time Woodst»ck hos had a city manager. It is unders:ood in his new positlion Mr. G.ven will be solely responsiz‘e to council. Me and the ci; engineer E. E. W. Oke weâ€" coâ€"administers of the city hali in Waterloo and ‘ointly resporsitle +o council The Waterion clerk If acâ€" cepting this oew position will probably assume his new positâ€" i0n in a couple of monthss. If Mr. Given accepts the apâ€" pointment it is understood he will receive a larger salary. Mr. Given «us also secretâ€" ~ry to the Waterlo> arena comâ€" mission and Waterloo poliss o~mmission, as weil as his other rtles as clerk, treasurer and ‘vchasing agent. of 1800 5t. Catherine St., W. MONTREAL, Quebes (Continued from Page 1)