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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 2 Dec 1926, p. 3

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"Goudies || ==a==»: _â€" for Better Values®" MR W U R M who will be at the / WALPER HOUSE, Kitchener, on Monday and Tuesday, yeombor 13th and 14th. We are the purchasers of the Dorenwend business and we have the Dorenwend staff to make the Patent wigs and toupees, the two staffs combined are superior to any in Canada. If you are looking for the most durable and most natural hair goods no other firm can produce just the sameâ€"highâ€"class satisfactory goods. ‘Telephone â€"our new represenâ€" tative, Mr. Wurm at the hotel for appointments. a The W. T. Pember Stores, Limited, 129 Yonge Street, ‘Toronto PEM3BER‘S * A Special PreChristmas Selfing Features , * Opportunity to outht the familyâ€"and yourseltâ€"in new Winter clothes, at savings worth whilé. 4 O# the Dowhstairs Floor |_â€" .. some + PISTRIBUTORS OF . GOUDIES LIMITED â€" Kitchener‘s Daylight Store. â€" King and Queen Streets, The place the kiddies love to n ‘visit. \ Let them come right away. Childhood can‘t have too much happiness. Playâ€"days are all too fleeting! ; (Toys of the best, the worthâ€"while kinds, will be picked out first). + T he OO MAE Th on : h en m mnemenn m mm uen mm e n uhm se snn uin s Christmas Greeting . Cards We have a big variety of beautiful Christmas Greeting Cards and Wall Frame Mottoes. You are cordially invited to call. Well made, of pleasing appearance, and durable. $3" high. Price .... Announcing their new representative Toyland Quebec Heaters M. WEICHEL & SON LIMITED Books and Stationery PHONE 2186 A Store Ever Striving To Better its Last Bgst % â€" WRAY‘ S Jewel Home Was mer ‘Two Styles and Sizes "The Big Hardware Store" 116 King W., Kitchener x YÂ¥ALE Heats by Circulations instead of Radiation. This Heater will take care of up to 5,000 cubic feet in from gone to three rooms and distributes the heat Qvenly throughout. It burns any kind of coal or wood. Great prices were paid for pediâ€" greed British Friesian cattle at the recent dispersion of the herd owned by G. Hold Thomas, Bucks, Engâ€" land. The 67 animals made the high average of $1,020. The highest price was $5,000, paid for the yearling beifer, Northdean Meibloom 5th. Another heifer, Northdean Barbara,, sold for $4,500. The two bulls, Northdean Meibloom‘s Beatty and Northdean Marthus Beatty, sold for $4,500 and $4,000, respectively. BRITISH HOLSTEINS SELL WELL TOTAL OF $3,975 A very successful dispersal sale of thirty head of pureâ€"bred Holâ€" steins was held Nov. 24th by Albert Tattersail at his farm in Dereham Township, near Mount Elgin. The sale was well attended and the bidâ€" cing brisk, good prices being real ized. One temâ€"monthsâ€"old buil sold for $285. The top price for a female was $205, which was paid for a 2â€" yearâ€"old heifer. Four milking cows were bought by Ernst Ernstein of Kingsville. The sale totalled $3,975. HOLSTEINS BRING Price $32.00 Height 44 Inches. Fire Pot Inside 13 Inches THE HOME WARMER Gats attention in every other way than a consideration of the eyes. Parents, the above deâ€" serves your best thought» Many a Child with Defective Vision jGEo. W. GORDON, 0.D. Optometrist Phone 2777w â€" 50 Ontario St. S. Kitchener s $18.00 WATERLOO, ONT. LOCKS & HARDWARE ncumscmanntcuintamtii §| The marriage of . Jean . MANG, daughter of the late Rev. and Mra. T. J. Atkins, and Heary Good, son ef Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Good of Kitchâ€" ener took place at Toronto recently. ‘The Ladies‘ Aid Soclety of St. Paul‘s Lutheran Church, Kitchener, realized over $400 as the result of the annual sale of fancy work and homeâ€"made baking held last week. WIN PRIZES IN SHQPPERS‘ CONTEST In the Soppers‘~Contest just conâ€" eluded inâ€" Ki r, Mrs. A. Reinâ€" bardt won t:.nu coach, 'm others qualified for a trip to and for other prizes offeréd in the cuntest. PLEADS GUILTY \ . In police court A. Rapport of Cleveland pleaded guilty to a charge of securing money from a widow and her daughter, near Heidelberg, by false pretences in. connection with an alleged bongâ€"swindling deal He was allowed flo go on suspended senâ€" tence provided he leaves Canada im« mediately, which he agreed to do. Rapport resumed responsibility for the alleged swindle and the similar charges against C. Rogoff of Cleveâ€" land and C. Keele of Toronto were withdra wn. FATALLY BURNED On Friday morhing Mrs. Laverne Harmer of Kitchener, aged 50 years, was the victim of fatal burns which she sustained whep her clothes caught fire from a gas oven which sheâ€" had lighted to warm herself. Before her son could come to her rescue her clothes had been prac tically burned off her body and she was one mass of livid burns from head to foot. She succumed in the K.â€"W. Hospital the evening of the sume day. Her son, Melvin Harmer, aged 19, is in the hospital with seâ€" vere burns on his hands and arms GETS THREE YEAR TERM IN PENlTENT!ARV‘ In the Kitchener police court beâ€" fore Magistrate ~Weir, Philip Relâ€" linger was sentenced to two years in Kingston Penitentiary for the theft of pigeons valued at $100 from J. Hoffman, Jr., and to three years in the penitentiary for houseâ€" breaking. He, was found guilty of the first offence and pleaded guilty to the second. The sentences will run Comcuiicntly. Rellinger served a term in Kingston penitentiary preâ€" viously for an assault on a Kitchâ€" ener woman. He had been examined as to his mentality and found to be normal. L SEED OATS AND BARLEY MAY BE SCARCE "Owing to the unfavorable weathâ€" er 4h Ontario this fall we are assumâ€" ing that good seed oats and barley are going to be scarce," stated W. J. W. Lennox of the Dominion Seed Eranch, Toronto, last week. "Farmâ€" ers who have not a supply," conâ€" tinued Mr. Lennox, "would be wel‘ advised to move quickly, and those who are doubtful of the quality of their grain after so much weather damage should get a Government germination test." | SWIFT ACTION! | Scarcely had the Chamber of De | puties approved the new security llaw when squads of police and ! soldiers swooped down on, occupied end closed the headquarters of all ‘antl-Fascist parties and societies ~which the law ordered dissolved. ‘The places will be occupled only until they have been transformed to "useful purposes of habitation." Mr. Lennox did not anticipate any general famine of good seed, pointâ€" ing oit that in the past it was selâ€" dom that the whole of Ontario was short in any one line, but he also added thht it was too early to make any accurate estimate, . , BEaby‘s Own Tablets Are Effecâ€" tive and Easy to Give. | Bdaby‘s Own Tablets are sold by medicifc dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Willtams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. You do not have to coax and threaten to get the little ones to take Baby‘s Own Tablets. The ease with which they are given, as comâ€" pared with liquid medicines, will apâ€" peal to every mother. None is spillâ€" ed or wasted; you know just how big 52 dose has reached the little stomfach. As a remedy for the ills of childhood arising from defangeâ€" ment of the stomach and bowels they are most satisfactory. * Mrs. Rose Veyer, Willimantic, Conmn., says:â€""I used Baby‘s Own ‘Tablets in the Canadian Northwest and found them a wonderful mediâ€" cine for children‘s troubles, especialâ€" ly â€"indigestion and constipation. 1 have also given them to my chilâ€" dren for simple fever and the restâ€" lesaness accompanying teething and they always_gave relief 1 can reâ€" commend Baby‘s Own Tablets to all mothers." CHILDREN LIKE THEM REALIZE OVER $400 A marwked increasé in the numâ€" ber of patients cared for . at t mmm.m ed in the annual statement of Sister M. Bonaventure, superintendâ€" ent of the hoapital In the year endâ€" htlou”.uz.tluomnh erease of 49% over the number for the previous year. ‘The total number Of pationtsâ€"from Oct. 1, 1925 to Sept. 30, 19%6, is 1,412. / 1412 The current expenditures for the year totalled $62,053.77 while the reâ€" celpts amounted to $55,693.25, leayâ€" ing a loss of $6,360.5%, which is comâ€" paratively small when the size of the hospital and the few years it has been in operation are taken into consideration. Capacity of the hosâ€" pital is 96 beds. At the present time only 80 beds are set up for use, several of these being used for the accommodation of nurses. Maintenâ€" ance from the city for indigent paâ€" tients reached $4,696.83. CASE DISMISSED s A. R. Lichty of Milvertonâ€" was acâ€" quitted on a charge of having liquor :nothor than a private dwelling. magistrate _pointed out that j while he had been.seen with -omo-l thing in his hand, the police had not been able to secure any evidence | which proved that it was liquor. A‘ plea of not guilty had been enwred: by Lichty a week ago. Another Milâ€"| verton man, Menno Steckley, was '4 allowed to go on suspended len-! tence after he paid all damages in ;‘ connection with an &ccident in front ; of the City Hotel. On this occasion* Steckley‘s automobile crashed into‘ a farmer‘s buggy. l After paying damages amounting to $40, Leo Gole of St. Jacobs was allowed to go on suspended senâ€" tence. Some time ago his car colâ€" lided with one driven by Ezra Burgâ€" hardt of Elmira. NAMED VICEâ€"PRESIDENT OF CANADIAN NATIONAL Albert T. Weldon Will be in Charge of Traffic and Express. A circular issued by> Sir Henry W. Thornton, Chairman and Presiâ€" dent, ‘Canadian National Railways, announces the appointment of Albert T. Weldon as Viceâ€"President in charge of Traffic and Express on the System, vice J. E. Dairymple, resigned. Mr. Weldon has been General Traffic Manager of the Canadian National Railways, a posiâ€" tion which will be abolished. The new Viceâ€"President has been well known for a number of years past to the commercial communities of Canada. He was born at Dorâ€" chester, N.B., in 1876, and entered the employ of the old Intercolonial Railway as messenger at Moncton in 1890. The next ten years were spent in various clerical capacities mainly in the Freight Department, and the Foreign Claims Department at Moncton. In December, 1901, he TRAFFIC VICEâ€"PRESIRENT Mr. A. T. Weldon, whose appointâ€" ment as Viceâ€"President in Charge of Traffic and Express, Canadian Naâ€" tional Railways, to succeed Mr. J. E. Dalrymple, is announced. became Chief Clerk to Division Freight Agent, Noca Scotia Division, with headquarters at Halifax. In 1904 he resigned from the railway to accept the position of Secretary to the Halifax Board of Trade, and two yearts later was nwovtad General Sales Agent, Port Hood Coal Comâ€" i2 Patients Cared For Our Yearâ€"Loss on Year‘s Operaâ€" tions $6,860. pany with headquarters at Halifax. After being less than a year with the Port Hood Coal Company he again accepted a position with the Intercolonial Railway as Division Freight Agent at Halifaz, in charge of the Nova Scotia territory. He conâ€" tinued in this position for two years, and again resigned to accept a poâ€" sition with the Dominion Coal Comâ€" pany at Montreal, as General Freight and Passenger Agent, of what was then known as the Black Diamond Steamship Line, operating between Montréal, Newfoundland and Gaif Jn (October, 1914, he again re« entered the service of the Intersoâ€" lonial Railway in â€"the capacity of ENJOYS GOOD YEAR Assistant General Freight Agent, with headquarters at Moncton, and in 1917 was appointed to the posiâ€" tion of General Freight Agerft of the Canadian Government Railways, and about one year from that time, when the amaigamation took place bo-} tween the old Canadian Northern and Canadian Government Lines, was _ appointed, first, Assistant Freight Traffic Manager, with headâ€" quwarters at Moncton, and a litgle later Assistant Freight Traffic Manâ€" ager of lines East of Port Arthur, with headquarters at Montreal. He contifued in this pesition until the final consolidation of the Canadian National in 1923, at which time he was ‘Jnobud Trafftic Manager, Atâ€" lan Region, with supervision over both freight and passenger business, with headquarters at Moncton. Me. Weldon was appointed to the office .rmm-:nu of the 334 Anniversary . _ One lot of Boys‘ 2 Bloomer Suits in Brown, Tan and Gray mixtures, stripes and checks and Overplaids, sizes 9 to 18 years. }%1}1]; aslsortmen;atilf sty}sa and patâ€" terns. is lot originally so at $13. Sale Price ................. 58'45 Norfolk styles, sizes 2 to 8 years, Sale Prite ......................c.cc..cccc.... One lot of Boys‘ Winter Overcoats, sizes up to 34, many different colors and patterns to sélect from. Regular $14.00. Sale Price Sg.45 One lot Boys‘ Winter Overcoats, Ulsters and Dress Coats, 311.45 Tweed, Chinchillas, etc., sizes 30 to 35. Regular $16:.00. Sale Price Chinchillas, Whitneys, Brush Cloth and Tweeds, very smart 86.95 and stylish in a big variety of models, sizes 3 to 10 years. Sale Price Smart Stylesâ€"Foot Freedom and Long Lasting Service Spell Attractiveness . and Economy in Misses‘ high cut lace Shoes, Black or Brown, Kid or Box Kip leathers, sizes 11 to 2. â€"Sale prige ... $2 49 Girls‘ Gunmetal high cut lace Shoes, low rubber heels, size 8 to 10%. Regular $3.00. Sale price $1098 Misses‘ Patent and. Gunmetal Strap Slippers, sizes 11 to 2. Reg. $$.00. Sale Pribe ........â€"issn. $1 89 Growing Girls‘ Gunmetal 1â€"strap Slipâ€" pers, made on a new medium wideâ€" fitting last, rubber heels, sizes 2% to 7, worth $4.00. Sale price ... $2 95 Misses‘ high cut Lace Btoe:, low rubâ€" ber heels; sizes 11 to 2. Sale $1 98 PFICG ... .c.comicirnivivmnsisinseseveness «a _ Children‘s la Lace Sh to 7. Regu $%.u0.. Sale PTIG@ . ........... Ruvcccmmmmermmenmens Little Gents‘ Dark Brown or Black Calf Lace Shoes, rubber heels. Sizes 8 to 10%. Sale price ... 31-89 Ladies‘ 4 moreite, 4 Shoes. _ Ai price ........:. Girls‘ 3 b|‘ all sizes. Sal clal sale ]fl Milses‘D{l Sale price ...A! * Ladies‘ Ru Girls‘ Rubbers, sizes 8 to S&IG DFIOB .. s.......cccomarmamem Children‘s Shoes You couldn‘t make them for the price, let alone the material. $ .45 RUB Ail Boys‘ Junior Overcoats ckle Goloshes, fine Cashâ€" y, to (fit every style of o bv*hoes, fine quality, la Lace Shoes, sizes 5 all sizes Boys‘ Overcoats Boys‘ Overcoats RUBBERS Sale ittle Gents Suits b}mdfihwfl“m:h:‘nhâ€"â€"l ‘it does with @M!,m_'dhfi_lm' STRONG COMPETITION PROMISED AT GUELPH . Entries have now been completed in the beef cattle of the Guelph Fair, Nov. 29â€"Ded. 27, and the same exâ€" cellent competition for which Guelph ras become famous will again hold true. Shorthorns lead in number, with Herefords and Angus in the order named. ‘The following are actâ€" ing as judges: Shorthornsâ€"J. D. Brien, Ridgetown; Herefordsâ€"W. H. Hunter, Orangeville; Angusâ€"W. C. Paton, Queenston. Entries in beet cattle have béen strengthened by exhibitors from moqund Wanitoba. § The commercial classes for steers | are exceptionally well filled, there being a total of 137 steers antered in the show. aonhnmloml breeds as the classification throws all breeds together ~to M’ against one anothor on their morits| us beef cattle A new feature in thes. attractive offerings. These Suits for young meh are made from Fine Worstedsâ€"and Tweeds, single and double breasted modelsâ€"by the best makers, colors are Grays, Browns and Blues. ; § ‘ Men‘s Overcoats $13.90 These are fine warth Coats, made from fine Wool in Ulsters and Box Models, They are splendidly tailored from good heavy substantial fabric, light and dark colors. 10% s T9¢ "©> 60¢ BOYS‘ DEPARTMENT Boys‘ â€" Suits $1.35 $2.95 $2 45 Young Men‘s Suits Garments that sold to $30.00 5909¢ One lot of Boys‘ 2 Bloomer Suits, Brown, Grey and fancy Tweeds and Worsteds. Big assortment of wonderâ€" ful values. $18. Sale Price ......... .&......... Men‘s High Grade Black or Brown calf leather, Goodyear welt lace ‘Shoes, all sizes. Regular $7.00. Sale Men‘s Shoes Specialâ€" ~ Made of good quality Brown pliable leather, plain toe or toe cap, allâ€" sizes. Regular $4.00. Sale price ... i â€"â€" 82.069 Young Men‘s Black Fine Box Kid Lace Shoes, made on the new last; sizes 5% to 9. Regular $5.00. Sale DFICB .......cccoscsermicnvesvvsnsnecmerscerriges $3 39 Boys‘ Fine Box Vici Lace Shoes, made on the new last, sizes 1 to 5; made for dress wear. Sale prl_ce$2-95 Boys‘ All Solid Leather Shoes for dress or school wear. Black or brown; sizes 1 to 5. Sale price ... $2 3(’ Youths‘ Soll(f Leather Box Kip Lace Shoes, sizes 11 to 13. Sale PFICO . ............c.ccaccsommmenieie $2 19 Men‘s Oxfords, smart designs, in Black or Brown, Goodyear welt, made on the new last. Sizes 6 to 10. Regular $6.00. Sale price ........ $3 89 Men‘s 1 buckle Overshoes, fine Cashâ€" merette quality, all sizes 6 to 11, Sale Price ...« 52-45 Men‘s Rubbers, sizes 6 to 11, Sgle PFICB ... .ccoummtwoimimsion 98(.' Boys‘ Rubbers, size 1 to 5, new feature in . Minard‘s Liniment for Nonwraigla, Little Gents‘ Rubbers, sizes to 10%, Sale PrICB ... Youths" Rubbers, sizes 11 to RUBBERS â€" RUBBERS $16.50 Regular $15 and $1(Q 8( FOR MEN comnection with the 1926 fair is a slaughter competition for beef cattle X:n the animals will be judged. rthorns, Angus, and Herefords and steers for slaughter will be judged on Monday, Nov. 29, comâ€" mercial classes of steers on Thurs day, Dec. 2. wWEsLEY UNITED CHURSH, % GALT, TO INSTAL, $12,000 ORGAN Wesley United Church, Gait,‘ is to have 3 new organ which will cost â€" aproximately â€" $12,000. . The plan was given final approval at a congregational meeting held last week when a : recommendation from both the quarterly official and trustes boards in favor of purâ€" chasing a new organ was confrmâ€" ed by a vote of the church memâ€" bers . 98e . 89¢ "19¢ ‘ 69¢ 3w «9

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