â€"~Ieo The < Mn sctare 4 N gz. 'nl.lvlu.i:&;: Many of these are e#pért woodsmen and know What is needéd to preserve both themselves and theis d§fort. Far too many are openly cynic@! of the worth iipfészented by forests, streams and lakes. Répolls from the north, indicate that much of w countwy is now bare of snow and tinder dry. is ah yet, no tush green growth to discourage :md a fire from a cigarette but or a camp s i been left unattended. Béad végétetion from last year will burn like ï¬du_'in a careless moment you can destroy the possibilities of sport in your favourite lake or stream, for the rest of your lifetimé. Wood ash from a burnâ€" #1 Memarrd Rous 4E L Iwe ue PBR SE Pm e e i 0 ing forest wigpés out ?h judt as surély as it does the 1 forest and the wildlife. The water is poisoned and &lnkï¬. to the boftom of l&ke or stream, soon eveh the spawning beds. All this, the forests, the lakes, the streams and the wildlife are yours . . . personally yours. It beâ€" longs just as muth to you as it does to any other Canadian citisen. Would you run the risk of fire in your own home through peglect and carelessness? Â¥Yet the outdoors and all it represents is equally as important to your personal welfare. Resolve this season to be more careful with your cigarette buts, with your gampfire. Remember, s house can be rebuilt in a few weeks. A burnt over groa needs Mifty to a hundved yearg, _ .. . @. O. Déifon, President, The Carling D Rouncés following ?pointnenu: J. m..._...-t?. anmaintad Aomatraller of ‘ WHY WRITE? Editor‘s Opinion PEREONALLY YoOUrS With opéhing of the trout season, the forests of cnuntey will again come alive with "city hong Distance is caster, quicher, and so satistying. The cost is far toss than you mssy think. Mb okers doub 4 vstigane, formerly Assistent Comptrotler, Canadian ries Limited, is appointed Treasurer of The Carlin: wies Limited. Both of these appointments are to becom: Â¥e ffimediately. EYES EXAMINED n.v{'ss':s af , /"26 priiC AEqhonl 2 en n esd c op ced C aepi c on 1 the following ?poinï¬nenu: J. W. Herold, formerly er, is mgted omeptroller of The Carling Breweries . Mr. will continue in his capacity as a director q.m,; & No o s m m as _ aus warBaLoo CHRONICLE J. H. SMITH, Managing Editor and Publisher President, The Carling Breweries Limited, anâ€" u';' _ |14) ) 13L mg.momum ONE 2â€"1936 LONG DISTANCE! ... it‘s so easy by OPTICAL REPAIRS Ey j * It‘s by the w W a t e rloo 7 Ladies‘ Auâ€" xiliary o f t he Kâ€"W Hospital & it‘s â€" y our P chance to s send your money to do good where you can‘t go yourself. Every ta: day comes under the close scrutiny of the city officials and is therefore worthy and properly conducted. This one is no exception. Here is what you will be helping the Auxâ€" iliary to do. â€" _ Buy / In the main these ladies perâ€" form two services. They assist in the work of providing amenâ€" ities for the people in the Scott Pavilion and for the L *A »,“ atz uzs ;I,'«:&'. $ J:7 . 2L . THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE Waterloo Branch H. G. Frye, Manager Do YOU WANT TO Build a home of your own? McLaren If you need financial help to build a house or duplex, see the manaoef'o( our nearest branch. He will gladly tell you how mortgage loans are arranged under the National Housing Act 1954. THIS ORIGINAL DOCUMENT IS IN Mortgage loans are only one of the many services we offer our customers at any of our more than 680 branches. There‘s a tagâ€"day this S a t u rday. 6k WATERLQO,, iT COSTS SO LITTLE! Stationâ€"toâ€"station rates on 3â€"minute calls from KITCHENERâ€" WATERLOQ to: ®These special low rates apply after 6 pm. and all day Sundoy. For rates on calls to other places just ask your Long Distance Operstor. etnpomenn n e en S 0 it im d in im ueP M B BB tnd TIME TO MOBILIZEK FOoR PROSPERITY nursesâ€"inâ€"training of the wholé hospital. * Amenities, everyone should know, are the things that rm=ke all the difference in living and working. In cases such as these they ‘migzht easily be called necessitics. The difference to the chronic patient between an existence without little gifts of flowers er one thing and anâ€" other and being able to look "orwa~d to the visits of Mrs. Musselman, and â€" Mrs. Class who brings these little gifts from time to time, is very great. It is the difference beâ€" tween an ordinary day in hosâ€" pital and one on which the patient can look forward to ‘flle cheer brought by a welâ€" come visitor. This may not seem to be much to mnyon* who is young and in good health. To the old ond infirm it is a tatte of horven upon % VERY POOR CONDITION ecutinz~ thoir corvices throâ€" | ughout the year in a perpet-} | uation of the s ir‘t of Christâ€"; \ mes and Eastertide. | i <â€" Nâ€"arly cveryon* knows that| _ the life of ‘a rocd4 nurse is one nf sâ€"iv‘~> snd t~at the period of triin‘n@ is s no easy nerâ€" lod nor esn it cver be. Until a fow voari amo the nurse®‘ ‘r"crea:"n reom of the Kâ€"W | ITeepitâ€"* =~1 evite rnattreeâ€" * tive,. Th‘ is no foult of the anthoriti~s but rather beteuse monew comâ€"s firt for bare ersentisls end onlt Tater for <uch things as windowâ€"Graves. r+dino and 6ther ad4itione. Th fonds to sunn‘s these hom»â€" like additions whith the your« nurses may eniov in their [ snare time have been catherâ€" ed slowly. The nurses themâ€" selves have raised monev for the nurpose through teas and in other ways. To this project The Waterloo Ladies Auxfliary has also lont a hand. I can â€"~*‘h. To the doubters among us potential givers, I would s~y that a visit to these unâ€" fortunate oncs would dispel all doubt as to the humaniâ€" terion quality of this service bound to loosen the purts strinâ€"cs of anyon. At Easter and at Chr‘stmasâ€" time whon pationis are partiâ€" eclerls ia nord of knowint that somcon> cores, spccia! * U3 goa mivene TWs is the time when & number cf other orâ€" cen‘zctis=1 rnt forth spet‘al efforts of th‘s nature. The Ladieg â€" Avci‘~= >._ howevor, ecutinz> thoir ~orvices throâ€" ughout the year in a perpetâ€" vation of the s ir‘t of Christâ€" ~»~dily see that, to a young nurseâ€"inâ€"training away frfom her own home, the difference between discouragement, loneâ€" OoF FUEL OIL FOR FEDRRAL lqul‘Dl%B THROEGEOUT THE _ PROVINCE_OF ONTARIO GEALED â€" TENDERS â€" ldd(cuod TENDERS FOR THE SUPPLY * to the undonl’nod and enâ€" dorsed as above, will be recelved mt PP " 46 Omg: Tar / the supply of fuel oï¬ or Federal Bulldlr;‘n throughout the Provâ€" Ince of Ontario. o2 O Forms of tenders with -,ocl- fications can be obtained from the Chief of Pureh‘llh and Stores, Department 0 hbfle Works Ottaws, Ontario, a the District Architect, 36 Addiaide Street East, Toronto Ontario. Tenders will not be oo--l:orâ€" ed unless made on or sccor 17 to these forms and in accordâ€" ance with the conditions . set forth therein. e Es DUREnt cR The Dcrr!ment reserves the right to demand from anmy sucâ€" cessful tenderer, before awardâ€" ing the order, a security doma- it In the form of a certHied cheque drawn on & bamk fmeorâ€" porated under the B‘%l Act or the Quebec Savings Bank Act payable to the order of the g‘l:nnurnblo the _ Minister _ of blic Works, equel to ten per cent of the amount of the temâ€" Ger _ in neoé‘ane- vl&h the Government Contracts Regulaâ€" tione now in forée or Bearer Bonds, with unmafured coupens attached of the orn of Canada_or of the Han Neâ€" !lou‘ Railway Company and constituent . com és uncondlâ€" Dorlr’mon! of Puâ€"b'gl‘c _Works, Otfawa, April 25. 1985. CBIB A €4 liness and ultimate hilun\ might easily be that of having or not having such a recren-} tive retre@t as a common sotâ€" ial room of this kind. The Auziliary are to be compliâ€" monted upon their insight into this side of a nurse‘s life. This amenity may well have saved for the nursing profesâ€" tion sevcral of our most sucâ€" e~â€"sful and most néeded nurâ€" * P ecd »* 4. 14612 I wl ;/ 4/ m L +# Well, that‘s what your monâ€" â€"v wl be sit to do when you buy a tos on Saturday. Whetâ€" her you give with a praver ar just give, you are bound to b~ blessed in the giving! T3E NEWS REGARDING the râ€"~cvel of the size limit monin\~rol. or Walleye nike in Ontario has beon rece ved h â€"mixi~g â€" feslings. This «rzers to be the comcensus amone the beo~le vie‘ve talked to <‘<c0 the anmouncemient was Porsonally, we‘re definitely ‘~ favor of the move. Generâ€" ~!I7 spe«kim~, so manv lakes, ~~~ticularly in the more southâ€" ern parts of the province, ar» slrsady so badly overpopalâ€" ~+~d that there is little chance of most of the pickerel ever reaching the size which until now was the legal Himit. Further _ complicatine . the ~‘cture is the fact that a creat many of these undersized fish bave already reached the reâ€" productive age, and a @ood many â€" of them â€" have â€" been anawning _ for some _ yeats. Their stanted offspring have further reduced the food supâ€" ply for all fish in the waters affected. It is obviously a matâ€" ter of the greatest importance that these fish be removed by anglingâ€"or at least as many of them as possible â€" in order that there may be a more satâ€" isfactory food supply for the remainder. Now, we‘ve no idea what thinking was behind the stateâ€" ment that this removal of size limits was, to quote the Deâ€" partmental announcement ‘"in the nature of an etpéfiment". From the knowledge we have of the condition ol':lm lakes (especially here in the sonth, and to a lesser degree in the northâ€"west), the impression we wather from the statement is that this "exveriment"‘ is not to be confined to the taking of pickerel solely. | We assume that there is rather a definite challonge here to the sportemen of Onâ€" terio. They wil be presented with this situation, to face it as a test of their spirit of rportsmanship and fair play Obvioudiy, there are many overstocked lakes in Ontario. In these places, it will be more than necéssary to lighten this problem of food for the fith that there are, correspondineâ€" ly, plenty of lakes where this situation does not spply. In these instances, the #portsma® be on his honor to set his own be op this honor to set Ma own éize limit in areag whete the food situation Is not acute. We have a sneaking idea that <th» Keicti‘s Korner But it‘s just as EP e S . nï¬ Candda. It i pletsant to rgad that Kiilchener OFNCIE!s fave wellâ€"deserved praise to . e o on e o mmm&m y. A Te gram sports writer reports Césch Drainvillé as saying the ""ï¬cnm@ ichmen, relying 6h a flexible definitioh of amsteus, hope to gain %&3 as Canada‘s Ofympic hockey teanmy next year. It w be a highly popular choice, throughâ€" out Ontario, if a Kitchenerâ€"Waterioo teem were to represent the Domririon abroad Nowhere else in all the world were there two boats g like these two, making apparently dangercus trips to prd a closeâ€"up view of some of the finest gcen°ry on the con l@‘w.:&!'ew péoplé ever forgot their sail on the Maid of ve who to Niagara Fglls does mof go On takf J’E’i’ Mist. S everybéody wflo vie‘wtn:&e Fali summer sees the two little boats. They are as much & of the scenery as. 't';ba"t"is’la};‘g' or the rocks that lie at the foot of the Amgrican Falls. was always onie of thein making the trip slowly, with muich puffing"of steam, up toâ€" The brief ttip was full of thrills. The cost wes less than $1.00. Life Magazine described it as the biggest value 1%‘ 75 conts that any ph'oio*lrler could find anywhere. (The ~ost for the boat ride was 75 cents, with ‘5 cents tacked on "or the ride down the inclined railwav.) The nass°ngers had ‘s put on cilskins to keen out the snrav. ofherwite they wéuld ~con be drinpins wet. The boits hed been makin= the ':? for about a hundred verr:. Thev starte1 out from the Canadâ€" ‘an side. called at a !>nding on the U.S. share, then made the clow trip un »«~irst the current. with a feet return trip to the HU.S, land‘n~ ond a fast sween arrcss the broad, rough â€"ive~ *n the Canadian side ones more. _ _ There was no other way ~f cotfing such a gooddview nf both Folls. To thig _ was ~d4ded ‘he thgill of wonderin what would hapnen #ï¬*flms of th:ï¬l“" at the Hï¬t cvddenly failed in midâ€"stream. Thev never did f~". D ~ftor decade, the Maids keot on. with never a faslity. We â€"â€"sn=~t thot the trip was safer than it lonked. The cantains would know every cutrent in the river and make use of them all. But alweys there Wwas that period of uncertainty in midâ€" stream. Strangely énough, pd:od.l;‘ ever seemed to set uuib:'l: aids ,of.. the . trip was a rough one, m»lfw{; gfldp}t_flfl qn other waters didn‘t ssem to have C WV ENPWE Fo en e es nsc *¢w ftouble when they bounced on the greén waves of the *â€"cad Niagera. Maybe the trip wasn‘t long enough to develop nevees. It is said that one of the Mists was built 100 yemd£ ~r5 the nther was 60 vears old. That is interesting. An Sort of the same m~me was sold and piloted down the rive@r ~ coptury ~#o by the cabtain and two crew members, who ‘~~t it safely to Qugenston. But it wayld be impossible to ***e g ‘boat un the méve@r to the Pa"tgn the Maids of the :4 wore built at Ni@gara FoVs. It seems that enough of ~ hulls ard marhinerv can be salvaged, so that the ~*â€"‘4s can be rebuilt, nossiblv in time for this summer. â€"~â€"t poy fairly well. S§o manv Canadian cruise ships on ~reat takes and the St. Lawrence have been burned and Courage has its many troubadours, but few speak tor ‘~ar. This is understandable enough, @s métely to talk Tbï¬t "ear tends to make one ous. Besides, f0body wanté to be tagged a; an approver ;z fear, l€6t it be suspected he e#aits thatqu:flyt_;ecgunghemg'thol!t _2 w “C:;u-n'ie is the hero who has won when all seemed yet many & hero might have avoided getting into a fix he first been more féarful. _ 2 s w All this is much to the point today here in Canada. Comâ€" placenc,y is too much with us. In spite of the headli only a small part of debates, panels, speeches, an? wri% conversations deal vllthf defence. Cln:&ilm cel ; sa es tion at bei spokén of as an im nt part the world, yet ?gw will let themselves 3:1,» the progablflfld of the Russigns taking the rest of Asia or not waiting for the Germans to réarm in Eurm A reafly uséful e«mtr{mï¬ofl to the free werld would be Canada to have an intelligent dose of pubtic feat sand to det on the urging of t‘l:n feat. r sports wri Ed It is when fear is translsted into action that courage ;omu bt.ICk into its own. ‘l(;he'!; the hero, hfoml(l;!ed from enr,b.tucoun.oonzm th a good chance 0/ If his combination of r and courage has brought him ht a_ strong e‘nou‘g tion, be may not have to fight at all. This could be m& Cmdl and her uooeug nations. The Individa«! ign, trying to Help bring thi ENWRTOEOgs EMVE PPE TPEEee Ne Py L e P P d condition about, should stop ï¬&dfl’!n( Wis government to spend more money on monâ€"defence ..e-msv ï¬ather,lz should Oncmlrl‘(i the govetmment to carry out those pol! of defence that it must dlearly know déré urgently heeddd. ~+ renlaced that is honed the + s»pzired or oth*~ shing Builf way in which we react to these lake was without a limit and the next one had restrtetions. It would be difficalt in the extreme â€" almost impossible to enforce such a regulation. And it would be unfair. This experiment in the reâ€" moval of sise limit (it has ne bearing on the number of figsh taker) has, as far se we‘re concerned, a dooblebarrelled meaning. It will serve to prove the value of increased engling pressqre as a means of redecâ€" MADS WILJ. BE U!SSFEN !F O D VESSELs ARE ROT RPE®UILT (FERGUS NEWSâ€"RECORD) IN PRAISE 01’ I’EAR (THE PRINTED WORD) But it woyuld be impossiblé to tha Pa"tflll the Maids of the FaVs. It seems that enough of i be salvaged. so that the in time for this summer. w Canadian cruise ships on the va ing overâ€"populations, and it will slso prove a pretty falr guide to the attitade of the anglors themselves. satisfactority in the eyes of those in charge of wildlife managemment, should the angâ€" ling public measore up to this challenge in the anticipated fashbon â€" it seems logical to predict that at some date the sente scheme might be mppNed to these waters which are ourâ€" rently fading the ijdentical problem with bass. From this Kornmer, it appears that the remedy for a most regrettable situstion hds been placed in the hands of the sportsmen and anglers. Theé manner n which we take up this challâ€" enge may have a great deal to in amother year. he two Htids of the«1 ve there two boats gui dangercus trips to pri est gcen=ry on the â€" _ sail on the Maid of a Fgllz does mof go 0n the r w;o fléfl!t% Falls in They are as much a part the rocks that lie at the Wâ€"ide nf the Mist will be must _have read with two Maids of the â€"«Mist. d se