_ < Around . and About, _ ... | ï¬lhd'h&lklodm // _ ‘And Stimulate Programs _Local WI members attending the convention included Mrs. George Reist, R R 2, Kitchener, President of the Helena Feasby Branch, elected chairman of the ‘standing committee on citizenâ€" ship and education, Mrs. Cecil Barbour, Wellesley elected area recording â€" secretary, and Mrs. ‘Norman Jamieson, R R 2, Elora, elected to the executive comâ€" mittee. concentrate on doubling memâ€" bership as a goal for the 75th anniversary in 1972. < She also announced that the Zhembership fee of 50c, in effect Bince 1947, will likely be doubled to ease corner â€"cutting in operâ€" Mrs. W.B. Rettie of RR 3, Fergus, was elected president of the area, succeeding Mrs. Wilâ€" liam Makins, of R R 1, Stratford. Both were nominated delegates to the third national WI conâ€" vention in Wolfville, N. S. next ‘The W1 was not founded as & fund â€" raising organization. We minds of women to see ways of Leftover egg yolks may easily be hardâ€"cooked and used in sandwich fillings or grated over a white sauce. Simply place the yolks in a strainer, lower into enough simmering water to covâ€" €r, and leave until hardâ€"cooked. When roasting, always place the meat, fat side up, on a rack in a shallow uncovered pan at 325 degrees, F. The fat helps baste the roast while it cooks. E. R. THEDE 88 Queen St. S. Kitchener Mrs. Leonard Trivers of Theasâ€" Batteries Accessories and Repairs For Most Makes Ball Point Pens FREE â€" Supply Limited Pree Knitting Instructions â€"â€" With Wool Thursday, Sept. 26th Plaza Wool Centre YARNS ANNOUNCE THEIR OPENING Sweaters Men‘s â€"â€" Ladies‘ 385 Frederick (Kitchener Plaza) St. We Carry A Selection of Patterns SH 5â€"9060 All Top Quality Mes:.. 440. ‘: We reoP 3 en y . + 7 y HEARING AID HEAR EVEN WHISPERS Dial 744â€"7403 Plaza Wool CENTRE (Kitchener Plaza) AYERS BLANKETS WITNEY POINT Just before serving, toss vegeâ€" tables lightly with dressing. Mr. and Mrs. Charies V. Gottâ€" fried, 185 Bridgeport Rd., Waterâ€" loo, announce the engagement of When. your group is catering to a large supper, try this reâ€" cipe for cabbage salad. WESTERN GARDEN SLAW (Vield : â€" 50 1/3 â€" cup servings) 1 c. commercial sour cream Vac. sugar Â¥4 c. lemon juice or vinegar 2 thsp. grated onion 1 tsp. dry mustard 5 qts. cabbage, finely shredâ€" Combine sour cream, sugar, lemon juice, onion and dry nfusâ€" tard; mix well. Chill until ready to use. Combine cabbage, celery and green pepper; sprinkle with salt and pepper. She watches as the guests assemâ€" ble. Ezcitement fills her to the brim: But now and then, a little tremâ€" Group, Kâ€"W Symphony, was heid last night, Sept. 25, at the Waterioo YWCA to plan a sub scription drive for the forthcomâ€" ing Sunday Afternoon Symphony SMALL GIRL AT HER SISTER‘S WEDDING Wideâ€"eyed beneath her bonnet‘s ble Of rosy lip and chin betrays The pang of separation pending. For each beginning, someone pays With an ending. An old bread box makes a good storage place for 10 pounds of flour. There is room for the sifter and measuring cup too, and the box can be painted to match canister sets. Jim; ‘"Do you and your wife ever think alike?" John; "Yes, if I am late getting home we both think the same. We are both thinking of what I will say when I get there." A meeting of the Women‘s Church Supper 1 qt. celery, finely diced & c. green pepper, fin diced 1 tbsp. salt Time _ When halving a cake recipe ’it is very important that the capacity of the pan should also be half that of the size. Check sizes by measuring amount of water necessary to fill the pan. Size is of even more importance than shape. _ ~ * Why not drop in and see your local branch of the YWCA in action? "We invite you to celebrate National YWCA Week with us", said Mrs. Paul Eydt, director of the Waterloo branch, "by gettâ€" ing to know us â€" not just as a place where women and girls find decent housing and a helpâ€" community.* In the two years since the local branch opened, September 29, 1961, it has served the comâ€" munity well. It has completed extensive _ renovations, _ added three large activities rooms, and doubled its range of craft and interest programs. Among the most successful of these programs have been the Tiny Tots Nursery School, now at the "waiting list" stage, Cake Decorating classes and Millinery classes. ‘‘We like to get suggestions from groups for even more courâ€" ses and are happy to set them up on request," said Mrs. Eydt. This year a new series of lecâ€" tures has been introduced called "Concerns of Women‘"‘. It covers such topics as a woman‘s inâ€" terest in LAW, INVESTMENTS, COMMUNITY LIFE, CAREERS and POLITICS. Speakers will include exâ€"Alderman, Mrs. Anna Hughes, now €lerk of the First Division, Waterloo County Court, and Mrs. Vera Batke of the Naâ€" tional Unemployment Insurance Office. The Bridge, French and German classes continue as us ual and a new homemaker‘s course on the Cooking of Special European Foods begins this year. "We also like to develop the interest of grade 7 and 8 girls ONE OF MANY groups using the actâ€"the Omegaâ€"Tau club for Grade 12 girls. ivitie rooms at the Waterloo YWCA is all dressed up "to "visit" all those you love ... and to stay, without ever outlasting your welcome ... in a family group portrait by (STUDIO). Gather everyone together for a family portrait that will keep all of you toâ€" gether, always, wherever you Murray‘s Studio 40 King St S. Come in today or call tor an appointment at your convenience. Great for Christmas Greetings, too! 742â€"6262 _ as a part of the The lass who tops the "best dressed" list this fall will take the high road to fashion with tall, trim leather boots. Women will find the boot is unbeatable in any weatherâ€"or ary leather. A special preview of leather boots for next season, held at Shoe Fashion Service of Leather Industries in New York. displayed a dazaling varicty of colors, StÂ¥fes and textares, incluâ€" ding smooth, grained, | waxy, and appreciate support from the schools in this direction. We get very good reports about these early teen classes", Mrs. , Eydt added. The preâ€"season showing introâ€" duced a new boot silhouette, high and limbâ€"hugging. More faithful to the contours of the leg than the widerâ€"cut boot seen last year, this paredâ€"down shape gives the boot an "at home" look indoors as well as out. And new featherlight leathers make it {eel as weightless as a hummingâ€" bird‘s wing on your foot. How high the boot? B can be thighâ€"high, as in one long, lean number in black smooth leather with back lacing. Most tall boots hit between midâ€"calf and knee, though some turn at the knee with gored inserts for a close, ecmfortable fit. She also reminds us that the three large activities rooms are available for meetings. They are comfortably furnished and proâ€" vide kitchen facilities ‘"‘The shortage of staff is our greatest problem at the moâ€" ment but we must make do on our limited budget," she said. Helping her is Housemother, ther. for the most part Fur cuffs. braided trim, angled toplines. and gores of contrasting color are most popular. Leather boots for teenagers feature silver or gold buckles, brightly colored 1i nings.and use two or more leaâ€" ther textures or colors. ~~Styleâ€"detailingâ€"is â€"Kept â€"simple,| Boots Take High Road To Fashion This Fall brushed, suede and patent leaâ€" Lined in smooth frictionless leather, boots can be worn inâ€" doors or out with ease and eleâ€" gance. In wet, windy, belowâ€"freeâ€" zing weather, shearling (woolâ€"onâ€" leather) linings will keep the frostiest feet warm and dry. Meâ€" diumâ€"weight leather soles move / WATERLOG SALT PRESTON BLMIRA € KITCMENER: 69 King Streot Weeat and WESTMOUNT Mrs. A. Blake, and assistant, Mrs. Douna Smuck. Future ideas in Mrs. Eydt‘s mind are plans for a series of Dinner Meetings with interesting guest speakers and next year, perhaps a revival of Tennis, if the courts can be fived up again. The YWCA and its services, supported in Waterloo through Federated Charities, belong to the community and they are proud, through your support and participation, to belong to it. flexibly with the foot, providing support and allowing easy moâ€" tion. â€" ‘This week, take a look at one of your most valuable assets. Women will be wearing the aboveâ€"ankle boot, the ankleâ€"skimâ€" ming bootie and the dress bootâ€" shoe as well. Available in all lextures of leather, these lowâ€" boot styes feature such touches as scallops or pixie cuts (pinkâ€" Boot heels, like boots, will come in many heightsâ€"high, mid and lowâ€"and many shapes â€"curved or straight, stacked, chunky or trim. reund the top of the shoe, spat eifeots, and saddle straps running across the bootie instep. The color palette of the leaâ€" ther boot for fall encompasses the deep country browns and greens, the bright tones of scarâ€" let and Mediterranean blue, the subtleties of palomino and anâ€" telope, and the elegance of musâ€" tard and cranberry. NOW OPEN PARKSIDE HAVEN NURSING HOME Good Meals T.V. Phone 744â€"6461 ATERLOO TRuUST Twentyâ€"four hour professional care from The WATERLOO TRUST where our money earns) h s HIGHER INTEREST..." Dining Room and Tray Service Reasonable Rates for the ill and convalescent GOVERNMENT LICENSED "‘. . . Our Interest Cheque SAVINGS COMPANT 75 ON TERM DEPOSITS (Quaranteod investment Coritficetoak Top winner in the HMobhies and Handicraits â€" sections, â€" womes‘s competiticns, at the KW Fal Fair was Mra. Austin Rauer, 055 Simple Lines, Leather Textures l@ Mark Fall‘s Smartest Handbags |â€" bags keyed to clothes for casual living. leathers. Lines are simple and easy, whether pouch or clutch â€" box bag or barrel. Leatahers are beautiful in the range of textâ€" ures â€" â€" grained, waxy, smooth, sueded, antiqued, lustre. Top bag for fall will be the style was shown most often in grained, brushed, antiqued, and the new waxy leathers, and usuâ€" ally sports brass hardware in closings, emblems or other ornâ€" amentation. armg" of simply styled, handâ€" A fall fashion preview presenâ€" ted here by Leather Industries that the accent on handbag fashâ€" being oversized, it is also "takâ€" en up" by the suburbanite‘s bigâ€"city sister, who knows a good thing when she sees it. This casually elegant handbag Other popular styles on exâ€" hibit included shoulder bags, barreis, crescents, envelopes and clutches. The leather boxâ€"bag, constructed with rigid sides and a lidâ€"type top, will be back on the fashion scene in both roundâ€" ed and angular shapes. Each handbag displayed the distinctâ€" ive _ blackâ€"andâ€"gold _ "Genuine Leather" tag that means quality to the discriminating shopper. The leather color story for fall features "deep country" shades. Starring is the brown family, including antelope, bone, honey and mahogany. Also imâ€" portant will be deep tones such as cranberry, mustard and olive, and neutrals on the order of fog grey and taupe. The "authenâ€" tic" look of. waxy and antiqued leather tannages, and anilineâ€"dyâ€" This fall, the wellâ€"dressed woâ€" §/a% Take Handicraft Prizes without the were six residents of Bunnyside Home for the Aged. Mrs. Aona Â¥Frank took a first tor Habdt tain their original markings, is a natural for this casual fashion picture. For dressy costumes, trim leather bags with a slimmer, smaller silhouette were shown, principally envelopes, clutches Style details are kept to a minâ€" imum â€" â€" burnighed gold clos ings, selfâ€"leather bow or other simple decoration. black will add fashion excite ment to the fall social scene. After â€" dark â€" handbag styles spotlighted glossy smooth leathâ€" ers, glowing lustres and sleek suede leathers. Occasionally illâ€" uminated with a touch of jewellâ€" ing, these stunning leather bags in vivid colors, pastels or inky menus. Serve it in tasty soups and chowders, in puffy lemon or chees souffies, or in custards. Include milk often $1.71 Per Month From Your Waterioo Public Utilities Commission e\\s@"‘{t sw * a6) i B# ymo d l‘i‘“ \g"g HARTMAN‘S PLUMBING & 74 ALLEN ST. E., Waterioo, Ontario Phone SH 5â€"9703 KROPF PLUMBING & HEATING EVA PLUMBING & WEATING 63 ALEXANDRA ST. Waterloo, Ontario Phone 742â€"9685 10 DUNBAR ST. N., Waterloo, Ontario Phone 742â€"1959 PHONE SH 2â€"3581 Y our W at;floo (Melvin D. Kropf) Julie Tusch Winners in the Fine Art comâ€" petitions introduced this year at the Kâ€"W Jaycee exhibition and fall fair were Edward Jackson of Doon, first, Julie Tusch of Preston, second and Jane Magill of Toronto, third, in the oil class. In the water colour class Peter Goetz of Kitchener took first, Julie Tusch second, and Ron display. chener, Mr. Gordon Couling Art Director â€" Macdonaid â€" Institute, Eccles of Doon third. Judging were Mrs. G. E. Eastâ€" man, 187 Claremont Avenue, Kitâ€" Queen St. S. Kitchener. Cathy Millroy, B.A. of Preston, art inâ€" structor at the Doon School of Fine Art, assised in an advisory was responsible for the hanging. __ _ (Anglican) _ Lincein and Mayficld Avenue The Rev. D. B. Baldwin _ FEAST OF s7T. MICHAEL AND ALL ANGELS 800 2 m. Holy Eucharist 9:30 am. THE FAMILY _ SEBVICE (HKE.) Bishop Chandu KRay of SAINT COLUMBA‘s Young Peopit‘s Plu AUDITORIUM For