Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 5 Apr 1962, p. 4

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this year. Scheduled for May 15, 16, and 17, the Mart has shown to be one of the best means of showing the people in our area what excellent artisians . and craftsmen that can be found "right in our own back yard". The Mart is going to be held in the Waterioo Market Building; a classic example of the artis tie taste of City Fathers long dead and gone. The Mart is now known for miles around as a literal treasure house of the beautiful and the unusual. Here then, is just a SHORT list of the many articles that are being offered at The Artists Mart: Spoons, bottles and jars, stools, chairs, sculpture, decoraâ€" tive flower pots, figurines (inâ€" cluding animals), bells, bootâ€" jacks, _ brasses, _ woodenware, tableclothes, paper knives, dolls jewellry, books, military items, screens, ship models, opera glasâ€" ses, maps, miniatures, chessmen and old games, napkin rings, PAGE FOUR The second Artists‘ Mart sponâ€" sored by the Women‘s Commitâ€" tee of the Kâ€"W Art Gallery is *Tested under the i io leadi T ae ‘ o“':.‘duponub-ofc ing New Symbol of Seagram Quality Before introducing Seagram‘s 5 Star, Seagram tested* this great new brand of rye whisky from coast to coast against the three leading brands in its price class ... and in test after test Canadians liked the taste of Séagram‘s 5 Star best. Next time try Seagram‘s great new brand with the Five Stars on the bottle. WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION? with Douglas Henderson De Profundis For local service phone weekdays 7:30â€"9:30 a.m., Saturday evenings 6â€"8 p.m. to:â€" ‘Waterloo SH 2â€"8397, St. Jacobs MO 4â€"2822 or for long distance Zenith 4â€"4450 To:â€" 1. Scare your wife, children and neighbors. 2. Spread Vibriosis and Trichomoniasis. 3. Cost over $200 to raise. 4. Kill you or the hired man. 5. Take the stall space of a cow that makes a profit. 6. Leave a barn full of miserable offspring and set your breeding program years behind. 7. Knock off the water cup and flood the the stockyards. â€" 10. Beller when your favorite prosram is on the radio in the barn. C Or do you need the 8. Break stanchions and pens with regularity. 9. Eat a nail or wire and die on the way to Need a Herd Sire? of tales, but they do know that it‘s over a hundred and sixty So there it is, ladies and gentlemen. If you‘re planning to decorate, remodel or if you‘re just plain curious like me, plan to attend The Artists‘ Mart. RECOMMENDED â€" The Saraâ€" gossa Manuscript â€" (Avon) One of the most unusual books I‘ve read in a long time. Noâ€"one knows who wrote this classic set needlework, spool cabinets, store bins and cannisters, wine glass es, old posters, trays, cups and saucers, benches, lamps, tea serâ€" vice articles, dishes, wash stand sets, fans, carvings, antique kitâ€" chen utensils, tinware, <silver picture frames, paintings, prinis, baskets, steins, oriental articles, bookmarks, canes and paper weights. fish servers, bowis, candiesticks, doorknobs, banks, antique toys, bronzes, ironware, coveriets and shawls, clocks and watches, mirâ€" rors, busts, fireplace accessories, JOsEPu ¢ seacmam c 5ons umite® wartmuon ontams cammoa Seagram; If we don‘t, they say we are to serious. If we stick close to the office all day, we ought to be around hunting uaterial If we go out and try to hustle, we ought to be on the job in the office. If we don‘t print contributions, we don‘t appreciate genius. If we do print them, the paper is full of junk. If we edit the other fellow‘s stuff we‘re too critical. If we clip things from other magâ€" azines, we are too lazy to write them ourselves. Now, like as not, some guy will say we copied this from some other newspaper. We did. If we print jokes, people say we xd‘ht-w.-uuah-nn tells HIS tale, and so on and so on. For those of you who like a master tale of terror and years old. Set in Old Spain in an young 'fi-nhh:;mmm is lost in the wilderness of the An Editor‘s Life is Terrible Hard Early spring mowing has been | known to damage grass. Let thei grow to a height of 24â€"3 inches| before the initial cutting. And remember that a sharp mower will lessen the chances of pulling â€" turf out before it has a chance to reâ€"establish itself. ‘ Many gardeners try to roll deâ€" pressions out of a lawn. which is a hopeless task. Add screened topâ€"soilâ€" to the depressions, a little at a time. . Rolling is perhaps the most im portant spring _ garden project. First of all, it levels the lawn surface, which is vital for good mowing in the months to follow. In addition, rolling firms the soil, so that plants will make better use of water and thereby dry out less quickly. One rolling in the spring should be sufficiâ€" ent, but roll only when the moisâ€" ture is ideal. If the soil is too wet rolling will pack it and damage the soil structure. And if it is too dry. the roller will accomplish very little. The roller shoud be just heavy enough to firm the heaved turf into the soil. Most lawns show signs of wear and tear at the end of the winter. Some of them have heaved, while others have beâ€" come matted with Jleaves, twigs and all types of garden debris. It‘s time for a spring cleanâ€"up. Four phases of good lawn careâ€"raking. rolling, topâ€"dressâ€" ing and mowing â€" warrant specâ€" ial consideration during the earâ€" ly spring, say horticulturists with the Ontario Department of Agriâ€" culture. Spring raking should be done lightly, with a flexible _ leaf broom. Heavy rakes should not be used. It‘s not necessary to remove all dead grass; it rots to form valuable humus. ROLLING IMPORTANT Need Your Support Extend your helping hand to our _ crippled childrenâ€"help them to overcome their fears and help to instill in them hope, courage and selfâ€"reliance. If we sincerely believe in the basic humanitarian concepts of our Society, then we all have a responsibility to make certain that crippled children do not sufâ€" fer unmecessary hardships, due to lack of medical advice, care and treatment facilities. Very _ expensive _ appliances such as braces, wheelchairs and artificial limbs as well as costly operations, â€" hospitlization _ and therapy are of utmost necessity in providing care and treatment for crippled children. The coâ€"ordinated effort of thousands of dedicated volunâ€" teers working in association with the Ontario Society for Crippled Children, has set an enviable orthopaedics standard not only in Ontario and Canada, but for all of North America. The Easter Seal Campaign with an objective of $1,000,000 established for care and treatâ€" ment of crippled children, needs not just an individual, but a comâ€" munity effort to justify and purâ€" sue its purpose efficiently. Caring For Lawns On March 22nd, nearly 2,000,â€" 000 Easter Seal mailings entered homes, offices and â€" factories searching for helpers of crippled children. Since 1947, Easter Seals have and still do guarantee to provide education, recreation and progressive health programâ€" mes which are channled into a dynamic force for these childâ€" fourth season at the Stratford Festival and his first with Gilâ€" bert and Suilivan. He originally appeared here during the sumâ€" mer of 1950 when he starred in the revue, "After Hours." The following summer he returned as a member of the Shakespearâ€" ean company to play Capulet in "Romeo and Juliet" and Philip, King of France, in "King John". Last year he was seen again on the Festival theatre stage as Buckingham in "Henry VIH", Holofernes in "Love‘s Labour‘s Lost" and Nicanor in "Corioâ€" lanus", as well as Cassady, the art dealer, in the "The Canvas opera will open at the Avon theatre on Friday, July 6, and, 45 performances later, will close on August 18. Creley and Kombrink To Lead in "Gondoliers" At Avon Theatre ilda, his daughter. The _ light w * Juck Creley and Hom~Komâ€" brink have signed for two of the leading roles in "The Gondoâ€" liers," the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta which will be presented this summer at the Avon theatre as part of the Stratford Festival‘s In Early Spring THE WATERLOO (Ontaric) CHEONICLE will be Jack Creley‘s Always one of the most popâ€" ular of the G. and S. works, "The Gondoliers" was first presented at the Savoy theatre in London on December 7, 1889, where it ran until June 20, 1891, for a total of 554 performances. "The Gondoliers," which tells of the romance of a pair of Venâ€" etian gondoliers, one of whom may or may not be the long lost heir to the throne of Barataria, is the third of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas to be presented at Stratford. "H.M.S. Pinafore," produced in 1960, and "The Pirâ€" ates of Penzance," presented in 1961, are curren'tlyrfllâ€"n'{r_ivnvg_ l; repertory _ at Her â€" Majesty‘s theatre in London. "Die Fledermaus," "Un Ballo in Maschera," "La Florta del Destâ€" ino," and "Otello." In 1958 she was the winner of the Metropolâ€" itan Opera‘s Auditions of the Air and made hber New York City Centre Opera debut in the leadâ€" ing role in Menotti‘s "Maria Golovin." Born in St. Louis, Hona ‘Komâ€" brink has appeared with St. Louis Symphony, the St. Louis Municipal Opera, the Mormon Choir in Salt Lake City, as well as with the Kansas City, Toronto, Ottawa, Baltimore, Rochester, and Detroit Symphonies. On Canâ€" adian television she has sung leading roles in "Eugene Oneâ€" gin," "Tosca," "Electra" â€" and "Falstaff‘. Broadway with Paul Scofield in "A Man For All Seasons." Miss Kombrink, who will be making her first Stratford apâ€" pearance, has been the leading soprano of the Canadian Opera Company with which she perforâ€" med the leading roles in "Tosca," One of Canada‘s most verss tile performers, Mr, Creley has been seen in a wide variety of stage and television roles since he first came to this country from the United States several years ago. On the screen, he was recently one of /the principal players with Teress Stratas in the 20th CenturyFox movie, 110 KING $T. S., wWOVEN WITH A SPRINGY CRUSH RESISTANT YARN THAT WILL OUTâ€"PERFORM, OUTâ€"LAST, OUTâ€" BEAUTIFY ALL OTHER CARPET FIBRES, MOST STUBBORN STAINS DISAPPEAR WITH A DAMP CLOTH. coLONY BAY 8.95 A(R".AN sqQUARE YARD & * Floor Coverings A BEAUTIFUL HARDTWIST RUG BEAUPRE‘S INTERIORS LTD the way is clear, proceed? 3. Stop, sound horn, then proceed? 4. Stop, and when it is safe to do are you required to do: 1. Speed up and get out of the way? 2. Signal the driver to pass? 3. Pull to the right as far as possible and stop? 4. Pull to the left as far as possible" quired to dim headlights: 1. Within 100 feet of the ap proach of another vehicle? 2. Within 500 feet of the approach of another vehicle" 3. Within 1000 feet of the approach of anâ€" other vehicle* 4. Dimming is a safety practise, not a law? C. On approaching a stop sign at an intersection, what does the law require you to do? 1. Slow down, sound horn and being granted a driver‘s permit fuiled on the first attempt. qualify if had to licâ€" ense? You.;fld be .n‘m out 40 per cent.of the applicants 25 Weber â€" Waterloo ORNAMENTAL IRON Could You Welding & Forging SH 3â€"8971 Stairs, Porch Rails Grilles, Grating Fire Escapes IRON WORKS "Â¥ D ‘t a id V C * 2. Slow down, and if 12.95 SOUARE YARD SH 3â€"5283 Test? HALLIDAY SWIMMING POOL SH 5â€"9098 or SH 5â€"6417 94 DUNBAR JOSEPH ELLERT & SON Automatic Heating & Appliance Centre 125 UNION ST. E. 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