Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 16 Jul 1937, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

* 20,000 Votes for One Year, New ; k Jack Gies Still in Lead. 2 Mrs. E. Zinken, New Dundee .... Mrs. John T. Clayfield ............. Mre. Jos. Straus ... Russel Stroh, Comestogo .................. Mrs. Leslic Strong, Bloomingdale .. !‘_om:-__nge'. Winterbourne ....... David Bowman, R.R. 33, Waterloo ... Simon Huber, Bamberg ..................... Mrs. A. Schickler, Waterloo ................. Miss Alice Schiedel, Bridgeport ........... Mrs. W. Schmidt, R. R. 3, Waterloo..... Miss Marie Schnorr, Waterloo ............. Miss Helen Schummer, Linwood ......... l_lorbc_rt Snider, Waterloo ..................... Miss Beatrice “u‘il;r: Waterloo.... Mrs. Clayton Musselman, Waterloo Gordon Musser, Wallenstein ........... Mrs. 1. Grossman, Waterl00 .............................} Mrs. M. Heinrich, Waterloo .............................,.. Mrs. Rudolph Heller, Waterloo .......................... Mrs. Harold Hinschberger, R.R. 3, Waterloo .... Howard Huchn, Heidelberg ................................ Wm. Huchn, RR. 3, Waterloo .......................... Mre. Wm. Hunt, WaterlO® .................................. Miss Theresa Kittel, St. Agatha .......................... Bruce Price ... The standing below is for all votes deposited for publication up to last Monday night: William Ditmer, St. Agatha ....................l.lc.lcccccclcccclclcl... 18,175 Henry Gingerich, Baden ,.............................. The bid schedule of votes for new subscribers as outlined in the headâ€" ing above applies all next week up chants offer feature votes on special items for Saturday. Window cards will be supplied for this purpose. WATERLOO COUNTYS ONLY SEMIâ€" WEEKLY Customers should look for them when purchasing at all club stores. PREISS 1 SHANTZ " SOLOMAN Chance to Win First Prize.â€"Watch for Vote Specials in Stores on Saturday. . Contestants who are now down in to and including next Monday, July the standing will have opportunâ€" New, a‘s up to vach one personally ow, it‘s up one h#‘ufi-ldv-hfitpom of winning one of the major prize belAl: Alag mebor dbigh P wb i con d Water Ice Wafers, pound 22¢ Tomato Juice, 2tins . . . 23¢ Tuna Fish s 2 tins . . . 250C Schneider‘s Jellied Veal, lb. 355C Catsup, 12 oz. bottle . . 10c Oranges, medium size, doz. 33¢ Watermelons, each . . . 59¢ Contestants should call at the Chronicle Office next Monday afternoon or evening, when important information will be given out by the Club Manager regarding feature votes for balance of the competition. In the afternoon, 3 to 5 o‘clock, in the evening 7 to 8 N EW S! 50,000 FREE VOTES FOR REGISTRATION ON NEXT MONDAY It RED&WHITE The Waterloo Chronicle Double Vote Specials â€" Saturday t The Chronicle brings you twice each week an accurate summary of the news of Waterloo and district in all its various phases. Illustrated with "spot news" pictures and presenting many special features, you‘ll find it a welcome visitor. Subscribe NOW! The Third Standing is Announced. RED & WHITE 100 King St. 8. 50 orp ac w.â€" Phone 649 RED & WHITE 14 Union St. E. l. PER + YEAR GUBLPH, July 13â€"Back from a trip through the Prairie Provinces, Dr. G. P. MeRostie, head of the field busbandryâ€" at the Ontario Agricu} tural College, today declared one of the smallest crops to be harvested in recent years is expected in the Canadian West. Dr. McRostie said conditions in Ontario, with respect to crops, are in remarkable contrast to those prevaHling in the southern sections of Saskatchewan where for anolber year, in maby instances due to lack of moisture, there will be no yield. Farmers there, however, conâ€". tinue to show optimism in the face of disaster. There is a continuation of a definite trend begun in the past two years to moÂ¥e away from drought areas to more favorable disâ€" tricts. :Q.rmwm’.ldy Special Prize Winmers. ) Mrs. Wm. Schmidt and Miss Marie Schnarr won the two cash prizes last week. _ The same prises, $2.00 and $1.00 :l‘.&:m:hhd::nm'“k ‘or largest vote returns to Monday, 6 p.m. _ has 9P Smallest Crop in veral Contestants Still Have Club Contest Says O.A.C. Head $2,00 in Canada; $2.50 in U.S. iption.â€"Alf. Arnold and Phone 1030 Food Stores 23,325 12,000 15,000 15,000 15,000 14,150 17,850 12,325 85,700 12,625 11,475 11,500 79,175 12,700 52,800 _ fronically, Roediger was trapped by the same bait which he is said by police to have used to draw wellâ€"to. do women into marriage. ‘Tarrying at the scene of his last conquest, the courtship and "marrlage" of PhHlli!â€" pine Straasburger, near Stony Plain, outside Rdmonton, he was located when he ansgwered an advertisoment, inserted by police, in which a myâ€" Stony Mountain‘institution until ;l;- lice have chocked the disappearance of several of his "wives." Meantime at the Headingly, Maniâ€" toba. jail the bigamous German is under sentence of nine years in peniâ€" tentiary He will not be sent to the _ Police at Toronto may search a ravine in the vicinity of the Vaughâ€" an road house to which Eoedlfl:r brought his Allandale wife, as police across Canada search for indicaâ€" tions that the bigamous buteber married others, and for clues to the end pf those marriages, i _ "I kept on 'o"’inlfc' and in August went to the police, asking them to try and locate my mother. It‘s too late, though, I‘m afraid," Duncan McKenzie said at Barrie reâ€" cently. s Toronto is a crux in the case. It was to Toronto that the wealthyâ€" looking German took Mrs. Christâ€" ina McKenzie ,of Allandale, when he married her at Barrie in August, 1935, using the name of George Rodgers. In October her son Dunâ€" can received a postcard from her. At Christmas Roediger, alias Rodgâ€" ers, sent card. Nothing more has ever been heard of her. These are a few of the questions police across Canada are asking as they delv: in;o tl(l}e devious past of a grimâ€"face erman sausageâ€" maker and convicted bigamist whom police claim married at least nine Did he lure others into bigamous marriages, and where are they now? Wi‘l a murder charge or charges be laid? Did Meta Roediger actually die by selfâ€"administered poison in St. Catharines, Ont.? What caused the bathtub death of Bessie Schmidt "somewhere in the east"? Was it epilepsy that caused the death of a woman in a Catakill, N.Y., well? Why _ did _ George Roediger ‘"marry" _ Mrs. Julius _ Regetnik, Martha Stender, Miss M. J. Birss, Phillipine Strassburger, and Mrs. Barcroft? or dead? hermn Butcher, Sentenced at Winnipeg, Believed Linked Trail of Bigamous Nuptials Preceding Mystery Deaths Starts Probe Over Canada Is Mrs. Christina McKenzie alive Street Address .......... To The Waterioo Chronicle Needlework Dept. Design No. 169 Use this coupon. Print your name and address piainly. *ernntrtrererserseeveeccersessenscessecssessssess000 Arvvernranvectsssspsersessettttrenssenssessse88e00tsen04s oosess seentes200e118ecas8s 000 Enclose 15 cents. ~~ s ‘__W. D. Thompson of the Grand MOTOR CRASH River Railway Company has been T yoâ€"a~ | transferred _ from Brantford _ to TORONTO, JfllL}I&â€"J‘lfl Brant, | Kitchener. The Brantford Board of Mimico girl, was killed and a Mimi.‘ Trade regretted greatly the loss of co youth, Ronald Carie, with whom Mr. Thompson and wished him every she was riding on a motorcycle, was success in his new position. He sucâ€" seriously hurt at suburban Long‘ ceeds Sherwood Ewald, who "’"f"': Branch tonight when their machine ed to Ig:in the sales staff of the Blue crashed into an automobile. ‘‘Top Brewing Co. \ wrecked machine. GIRL DIES IN A companion, Evelyn Rawlings, 24, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rllpll' Rawlins-, of the 10th conceasion, ; Gosfield South, was seriously inâ€"‘ jured. She is in Hopewell Bo:flhl! lnfl'erl':f from extensive lacera ons, ‘ and undetermined internal injuries. The bus driver and 12 p-uenxen’ escaped unhurt as did the two occuâ€"‘ p.nl{ gf tln._ur which struck the‘ two and a half hours after the crash His skull was fractured. into a bus, overturned and was then struck by a second car before he could be pulled from the wreckâ€" age. McMillan died in l!o’:ewell ‘B-olpit,'l, Ifiin_i_ngton, at 11 o‘clock, KINGSVILLE, July 13.â€"William McMilian, 28, of 14 Maple street, Kingsville, was fatally injured toâ€" x!dcht wl‘:en his automobile crashed Kingsville Man is Fatally Injured in WPVA en nds mtitstis, 8 MB oubbishill n acha ie In 1916 he was convicted in Prince Albert Sask., for cattle stealing. In 1923 he was fined $400 on a liquor charge at Star City, Saak. Born in Grobensiel, Germany, he left with Bremen police a record of Six convictions for misappropriation, swindle and Jarceny, police state. thical "widow of means" sought‘ a life partner. Roediger answered and police hailed him before the Winniâ€" peg Court to answer a bigamy charge and await the outcome of their probe into his myriad courtships. Record In Germany A brief record of his known conâ€" quests shows that he used matrimoâ€" nial newspaper advertisements exâ€" tensively in gaining new "wives." UNLUSLUAL FACTS REVEALED Motor Car Crash Â¥ _# e _ . JAMES DUNNS m# BRrartas? is a" commory overi 27 Tr 2. adF wiTt F6GS 4nD CuBrD sourp PeTarees, MORSELSY OFf THE sTARS | _ Gertrude Finkelstein, 19, was jkilled while riding behind Ronald Carrey, 18, on the youth‘s motorâ€" ‘eycle. The machine collided with an auto driven by Richard Freeman. ‘Evelyn Wanless, 18, auto passenger, suffered facial lacerations. Judge Clement to Settle Preston‘s Assessment Appeal crashes will be inserted in the daily and weekly press. . "This accident fatality toll has got to be checked somehow," said the Premier. TORONTO. â€" Premier Hepburn yesterday announced a campaign to make Ontario motorists "fear conâ€" scious" in a further attempt to cut down the "appalling‘ toll taken in automobile accidents through the province. The Government, he said, would open a newspaper advertising c-m{uign m _wh_ich pictures of fatal "Fear Conscious" Campaign Against Speeding Motorists Arkwell was catapulted to the pavement when the machine he was riding skidded _ and â€" overturned. James French, 20, driving the moâ€" torcycle, suffered serious injuries and hospital officials said he was growing weaker.. _ TORONTO.â€"Walter. Arkwell, 23, Toronto, died in hospital Wednesâ€" day, second victim of motoreycle accidents in Toronto during the last 24 hours. and probably clg‘t. This informaâ€" tion was contained in a report made to %..dmmu U‘:i'lm‘a Comm;l,-hg: on nesday anager V. 3. llelntyn. flofinnpohr:r !oll‘owedb a ourâ€"day operation e of a bus borrowed from Detroit. A five cent fare vails at the present time. The x;:m were based on local ggention and operation in Detroit. e busses, it was estimated, would cost 20 per cent. more to operate filed the report. Second Victim of Motorcycle Crash ns e oo P e CBERT bdnt Audiinadsaaith & ) 1 0 line connecting this city with|Seipâ€"At K.â€"W. Hospital, July 13, to Bridgeport and Waterloo would inâ€"| Mr. and Mrs. Lioyd Selp, Willow voive a fare of at least seven cents| street, Kitchener, a son. f~â€"~â€"â€" # Pietrykâ€"At Kitchener, July 12%, to KITCHENER. â€" Substitution of| ‘Mr. and Mrs. Gregor Pietryk, Joâ€" busses for street cars on the present]| seph street, a son. Seven or Right Cent Fares if Busses are Substituted for _ Say Busses Would Increase Fares In PRESTON, July 15 t m FO.â€"Under the Ouâ€" tarle Governme: rm work The Twnâ€"C at ‘Toronto . â€" Preston‘s (The charge was made as repreâ€" sentatives of the North China zov- ernment and Japanese spokesmen sought a settlement of the trouble. The Central Government of China was ignored as negotiations began.) Mil:fiNK.{:iG. China. ::i:)hinleu ofâ€" e rged esterday Japan‘s immediate o jocfi!m in North Chine was final detachment of the provâ€" inces of Hopeh and Chahar from the Central Government in Nanking. fJapan Wants Final Detachment of Chinese Provinces _ ‘"Nobody knows more about parole cases than the police," deâ€" clared Chief Robinson. Chief R. J. Robinson, of Kingâ€" ston, suggested that the Parole Asâ€" sociation of Ontario should have reâ€" presentation on the parole board and in the remission branch. in releasing prisoners before they |luve served their full &rison senâ€" tences. Official after official stood ‘up in the convention room at Hotel London and told of crimes comâ€" mitted b{ men out on parole or t§cketâ€"o{- eave from penal instituâ€" __ The police officers seemed to think that Tlrole boards were too lenient in releasing prisoners before thev _ LONDON.â€"Declaring that many ‘murden. holdups and other crimes ‘nre caused by "wicket and vicious" men out on parole or ticketâ€"ofâ€"leave from reformatories and nitenâ€" tiaries, members of the Pori:e Asâ€" sociation of Ontario at their fourth annual convention here Wednesday afternoon protested against "wrongâ€" ful liberation of criminals." Police Want Representation on Parole Board. â€" Protest Wrongful Liberations. Free Parkingâ€"Dube and Ontarte Bte. _ _The subject of the Roh.rf talk given at the K.â€"W. Rotary Club on Monday by Paul Angle was the Aaterilization of the soil. If this were done, he stated, a far greater part of the earth‘s surface would be made habitable for humans and would improve the general health conditions. Sterilization also opens up the soil, he continued, stating too that the soil has a greater effect on li‘ving_ conditions than might be Freed Convicts Commit Murders thought. ’ It is reported on good authority toâ€"day that 4 syndicate of Kitchener ‘men rropoou to mequire land near the old sugar fut::anm Bridr- ‘ forsin order to pr e grounds for ‘all fairs, harness races and other attractions. The Kitchener Park lands are close to the sugar factory and a commissioner states a re{r:- sentative from the syndicate d asked for prices on land. Sterilization of the Soil Subject of Rotary Talk Syndicate Repofied Sponsoring Fall Fair and Races Monday . Tuesday â€" Wednerday JULY 19 . 20 . 21 The Coronation In Techni Colour 4 .â€" DAYS â€" 4 Wed. . Thurs. â€" Fri. â€" Sat. JULY 14 â€" 16 â€" 16 â€" 17 THE MARX BROTHERS "A Day At The Races" ‘"Slave Ship PHONE 215 On These Timely 8 Reiluced Prices on Lawn Mowers and Coal Oil Stovés dn h“u Warner Baxter Wallace Beery Weichel Hardware wC« :‘1'../ before they "Draegerman Thursday â€" Friday â€" Sat JULY 15 â€" i6 â€" 17 Una Merkel â€" Eric Lindeg "Good Old Atlantic â€" City, July 13. â€"Thumi sucking causes retarded growth, unâ€" sound sleep, loss of appetite, inforiâ€" ority complex â€"and crooked teoth, Dr. Earl Swineheat, of Baitimore, told the American Dental Association toâ€" He said his Andings were the reâ€" sult af five years‘ study of 88 boys and girls who constituted what he described as a crossâ€"section of "mil lions of American children" who beâ€" bitually suck their thumbs. Thumb-Sucking Retards Growth MacLANE MUIR â€" ADDED Rosalind _ Charies KEITH _ QUIGLEY James _ Patricia DUNN , ELLIS "Venus Makes Trouble" * Criminals Of The Air" Chester Morria â€" Leo Carrillo ‘I Promise to Pay‘ WALLACER The New Universal presents â€" SHOE STORE & REPAIRS 64 King St. S. . Phone 941 WATERLOO Child‘s Sandals in fawn and brownâ€" 5 to TV ................ 8%¢ 8 to 1044 ............. 9%9¢ 11 to 2 ... MWP Youths‘, 11 to 1314 .... 1.59 Boys‘, 1 to 514 ............ 1.79 Men‘s, 6 to 11 ... 1.99 DOUBLE VOTE SPECIALS FOR FRL. & SAT. lay â€" Tuesday â€" Wodn JULY 19 . 20 . 21 Monday and Tuesday COOLEST sPOT IN TOWN â€" Added Attraction â€" Friday and Saturday Ed. House Soalk" 2 Features â€" Also Featuring ATTRACTION im Courage" WATERLOO €%

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy