The Waterloo County chapter of the Silver Cross Women of Canada were guests at a dinner at Mr. and Mrs. Clive Woolner of. Bridge Street. Mr. O. W. Weichel, former Waterloo North MP, spoke to the group on con- federation and the centennial. Ingo Origionals. 20 John Street, received top prizes for design in shi wear, knit wear and curling sweaters at the Ontario govern- ment's annual fashion award competition in Toronto last week. Awards went to a canary yel- low ski sweater, a pink after- sln sweater, and a rib stitched pale gold curling sweater. Mrs. John Stiefelmeyer, ways and means converter, reported that $94 had been raised through a recent card party and rum- mage sale. The annual garden party of the Women's Auxiliary to the Margaret McDonald Sunshine Home for Retarded children, Wellesley, will be held on June 2hth at the school. Mrs. Anthony Schumilas, St. Agatha, is general Convener. A contest of home baking, open to the public, features six classi- fications - bread, cakes, pies, buns, jams and jellies. A concert GRADE EIGHT STUDENTS Carol Rawls, Diana Wainio, Janet Reibel, Donalee Veliers, Peggy Walz and Bren- da Pugh display some of the fashions they themselves made in home econo~ OTTAWA PLAZA KITCHENER ' WATERLOO OPEN 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. EVERYDAY PICK THEIR [MCI If! Women's Week HENDERSON'S BAKERY ONE DOZEN SUGAR COOKIES TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU FREE 80y Purchase OR MORE WITH AN A Mother and Daughter Tea was held at Erbsville public school last Saturday. It was sponsored by the Erbsville girl guide company. General conven- cr for the tea was Mrs. Ken- neth Gremm and Mrs. Marlene Waechter. Mrs. T. R. Sutties of Waterloo, district commissioner for Waterloo - Westmount, and members of the Rummelhardt Women's Institute, sponsors of the company, were guests of hon- or. in the evening will be provided by the London Salvation Army band. Receiving guests were Jane Martin, Betty Jean Waechter and Sibylle Von Knovloch. Get Your Pocket Novels For The Cott- age Now. 15 For $1.00 NN EXCHANGE TOWERS PLAZA ' WATERLOO 28 Regina St. N. Waterloo, Ontario Open " Till lo All Varieties mics class. The fashion show put on by grade 7-8 students was the highlight of the MacGregor Home and School Association meeting Monday. 1"11liil"tlfl,,f1ii'1thlllt1llii N lOCATlON . FOR YOUR FREEZER -- CHARTERS -- HAlVES OR WHOLE OR YOUR FAVORITE PORTION V.ltPrloo Chronicle lARGE AS$0lt'rMENT OF FRESH MADE SAUSAGE READY TO EAT BEEF and PORK 1lljrlflllll,ilil SQUARE MALL no Waterloo (inside. Wed., Juno t. Iâ€. RONA“ Every time l hear a local n- diet announcer say, u 'Aecording to our ding-dong weather con- sultant, it will be ""PG rainy, windy, or whatever I have to chuckle. ' Time was when someone who predicted the weather was cel- led a weather prophet or a weather predicter. But times have changed, and words such " prophet and predicter have a too-positive meaning. They in- dicate decision and have a touch of the dogmatic. But the word "consultant" does not have these connota- tions. Besides, you can get mad at a weather prophet, but yoa simply can't be annoyed at a Wool Shop PHONE 744-6364 KING ST. Thurs. Till 9 pm Pri. 10 pm Sat. Till 6 pm WATERLOO Meat Packers and Sausage Manufacturers 91 Bridgeport Rd., Waterloo Offbeat Report RETAIL STORE tcel,ty,jjijiti,tiiiip,ts [1% Russ K I 9E SH " 54766 Tliter-ig Um - V*I9‘. consultant it the weather doe.- n't turn out right. After all, he didn't say It would be sunny. He just said, "all things being equal and all things considered. we advise that the weather win be this or that." Anyhow, communications eh pert: say that meanings are not in words but that meanings an in people,' so this very pleasant word has been applied to many areas of Me bevause of the pleasant response it evokes to its hearers. bosses are no longer called bosses are no longer called bos. ses; inspectors are no longer in. spectors; they are now eonwlt. ants. MALL (Continued on page 6)