GIVE DAD LEATHER TO HOLD HIS MONEY AND HIS FEET Two things dear to every father are his money and his feet. So what better Father‘s Day remembrance thin a gift of fine leather to enclose one â€"â€" or both. j A man usually has definite specifications for the case in which he carries his money, so‘ make discreet inquiry before you go shopping. Find out if he likes <pocket secretaries or wallets and whether he likes the kind with one compartâ€" ment for everything or those designed on the file cabinet principle. Consider also the man. k)uld he like a money case gleaming red alligator, or is he the type that sticks to blackâ€"pinseal?~â€"Is heâ€"aâ€"eareful dresser: the kind who would like one wallet for his tweeds and another for his business suit? Or is he the sort of man who would consider it frivilous to own moré than one wallet? You have plenty to choose from. There are sleck calfskin and kid in smooth or lightly grained _ versions. There is morocco leather that acquires a rich patina with wear, as well as pinseal, ostrich, pigâ€" skin and sharkskin to name but a few. So make a careâ€"| ful selection that will make! PDad think kindly of you when| be reaches in his pocket to‘ lend you a fiver. | As for shoes, any type of father will love a pair of lightâ€" weight tropical .léather that will do for his feet whatâ€"lightâ€" weight suits have done for his comfort and apnearance above the ankle. You can find h‘s size by lookinc inside a pair he already owns â€" or you can give him a gencrous gift cerâ€" tificate from a gocd shoe store" And «hroeâ€"rou‘reâ€"about it you might suggest some of the more dashing stvles that will take years off his feet: such as a slipâ€"on in <mooth Thursday, June 18, 1957 84 King St. S. Waterloo _ SH 5â€"4116 POP‘S A PRETTY GOOD SORT OF A GUY .\ND YOU KNOW HE‘S WORTH REMEMBERING IN A SPECIAL WAY. THIS YEAR GIVE HIM SOMETHING HE +~WILL REALLY ENJOY â€" _FOR INSTANCE â€" â€" SCHICK â€" SUNBEAM â€" PHILISHAVE CHOOSE FROM OUR SELECTION OF PERSONALIZED PORTABLE A TRAVEL ALARM CLOCK STOCKIE ELECTRIC ELECTRIC SHAVERS RADIOS OR leather with a vamp of slightly grained leather and a_ side buckle â€" or a threeâ€"eyelet tie in brushed leather. Leather belts are always good. You can get him one in conventional black s m o o th leather or a sportier one of braided leather in brown and beig'e_, black and white or red and black. Again there‘s the narrow1lthreeâ€"quarter or even oneâ€"halfâ€"inch belt with side rings of silver or hammered brass to match the buckle. it comes in soft pigskin . . Or you can get Fathér a brushed leather belt to match his brushâ€" ed leather shoes. & There are a multitude of other gift ideas to be found at the leather goods counter. For a more substantial gift there‘s the new airplaneâ€"weight leather luggage that‘s not only as light in itself as any other luggage material but needs no heavy wood orâ€" metal conâ€" struction to keep its shape. On the other hand, stayâ€"atâ€" home fathers will bless ~you nightly for the gift of an easy chair upholstered . in genuine leather. And practically any father would love a leather jacket in suede or softâ€"grainâ€" ed leather. â€" If smaller gifts. are more within your scope there are leatherâ€"covered brushes, shayâ€" ing kits, portable radios and alarm clocks. There are Launâ€" der Lcather gloves especially designed for golfing, driving or hunting as well as for dress, Famed Canadian poetess Pauline Johnson â€" was _ the daughter of a Mohawk Indian chief. _ 1 And, if you haven‘t done so already â€"â€"perhaps this is the vear to give Father a leather frame to hold another cherishâ€" ed possession: his favorite picâ€" ture of Mother. R THE WATERLOO (Ontario) CHRONICLE Outdoor Manners Help â€" MakeOur Summer visitors can play havoe with provincial, roadside and community parks; ruin naâ€" ture‘s garden spots and cause untold damage to the property of rural land owners. Some of it is done maliciously, some unknowingly and a great deal of it is done because the perâ€" ‘son or persons doing it do not care. Park‘s Beautiful ‘This year, as ever before, will find thousands, of people heading for the outâ€"ofâ€"doors, for lakes,, streams, woods, fields : and ; hills, Hyndreds will be making the trek for the first time, and many, with Jitâ€" tle consideration for other people, will leave their camp, fishing or picnic sites. looking like dump heaps. Good manners are just as essential out of doors. as they are in the home. Those who persist in spoiling woodlots, stream banks and public areas should be fined; just as the city dweller would have the farmer fined who camped on his front lawn or cut down a shade tree for firewood. HELP MAKE IT A BIG NIGHIT WATERLOO‘S CENTENNIAL QUEEN WILL BE CROWNED FRIDAY NIGHT AT THE MEMORIAL ARENA. HELP CELEBRATE THIS BIG EVENT IN OUR CENTENNIAL CELEBRATIONS. | SEE THE PARADE OF CONTESTANTS AT 7.30 FROM KING AND WILLIAM TO ARENA. : - WATCH THE JUDGING OFâ€" CONTESTANTS AT 8.30. WHICH GIRL WOULD YOU CHOOSE? FRIDAY, JUNE 14th NP COME DANCE AT HER CORONATION! OUR QUEEN QUEEN HER COURT BE DANCE AT 10 P.M. 10 CENTS A DANCE NO ADMISSION FEE There are a number of do‘s and don‘ts in using the outâ€" doors The Golden Rule of "do unto ‘others© as ~you would have others do unto you" is the best one to follow. Would you want someone to leave tin eans, broken glass, garâ€" bage, disfigured trees, broken fences and deep ruts in your yard? . Then don‘t do it on someone‘s farm or woodlot, or in .a private community or roadside park. f Signs, markers, trail signs, nature specimens and other items are to be left alone and not disfigured. Carving names initials, addresses, etc. do not result in beauty marks,. All they do is. damage property that before long will have to be replaced, and the replacing is done with the tax money provided by the same people that do the damage. The worst problem, however, is "trash":â€"Tin cans should_ be flattened and burried. Better still, they should be taken back home and disposed of in the usual manner. Glass bottles and other containers should never be tossed into streams or lakes. They. should never be broken on the camp or picnic site, and when in doubt, bring them back home and disâ€" pose of them. . FOR OUR It is just as necessary to get picnic privileges on private property as it is to get perâ€" mission for hunting or fish= ing, Get permission before picking wild flowers. In public parks it is usually prohibited, as it is seldom that wild flowers stay fresh when the picker returns home «C _ ‘The important thing is stifl to treat others as you want to be treated. Always leave the picnic areas just aw clean o# cleaner than you found thewm. FOUR SIMPLE RULES TO FOLLOW: 1. Be as neat in parks and along highways as you are im your own yard. 2. Ail parks have bins of cans for litter diaposal â€" use them. # . 3. Lakes and rivers are not community dumps. 4. â€" Litter is not only unsigh® ly, but highly unsanitary and A fire of undetermined o# igin destroyed Canada‘s park# ment buildings in 1916. Tax â€" paid withdrawals o€f cigarets for ‘ consumption im Canada in 1955 reached an all= time high of 24,576,087,000. dangerous. ies : e PACGE NTNETEEN