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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 12 Aug 1949, p. 8

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Continuous Sat * MONDAY Marguerite Chapman in "THE GALLANT BLADI June Allysoi DINNERWARE to the Ladies, Wed., Thurs. and Fri. evenings ersft burtle along the : noous En en Oe i O and Wed. matinee Plus small Service Charge FINE STEAKS FOR THE FINEST PEOPLEâ€" OUR CUSTOMERS! Jranie‘s Restaurant _ In Technicolor â€" ADDED FEATURE â€" ~LEATHER GLOVES" nmm.hum:x: close to the seawall ='tlnhumuvi¢'0f on without being exâ€" e PCECTE C 0O seem never to tire of the You‘ve never tasted a real treat until you‘ve sumk your teeth into the sizzling goodness of one of our tender steaks. â€" Prepared to your order. AT 72 KING ST. SOUTH WATERLOO WATERLOO with Gene Autry In Cinecolor mÂ¥ ~â€" TOESDAY â€" Calls For The "Sweethearts of The Month" If you are celebrating your wedding anniversary this month, or you know of others who are . . . PHONE 2â€"4447 â€" KITCHENER Or mail us the information. In Cinecolor Valuable prizes CFCAâ€"FMâ€"(106.1M.) SOMBRERO®" OUR HOURS TO SERVE WOMEN®" We must hear from $1.00 Change of Ownership sATUEDAY ©1.00 to 1137 BURKE Cedar Snack Bar Monday to Friday, Closed Saturdays SIMPSON, originator of the ( complete control KING ST. NORTH AT CEDAR _ â€" WATERLOO are here for the couple in August. Sunday from 10 a.m Waterloo Beagle Hound Places First In Branttord Dog Show Iin sn hourd 1 Mr. Wolfe from pureâ€"t huls in Hoke he was three oo P k mdumw.wu,u @ Ave., Waterioo. < Last Saturday one of his regisâ€" | wred beagle hounds "Champion Bugle Boy "Ith" won first prize for the best of breed in the be.g hound class out of a s:up of at the Brantford dog w. * e" also took second prize lm g:flound group competition. ‘ Mr. Wolfe purchased the hound from pureâ€"bred reti:wed kenâ€" lnel.s in Hokason, Delaware, when he was three months old. He paid ‘uu for "Bugle" at that time. The Wolfe family need have no fear of “kem the wolf from the door". have eight reâ€" gistered hounds, a {ouna litter of pups and several other hounds for protection. Another one of his hounds, Jaâ€" cobi Bushman, phced_thh'd‘m‘}he HHS Ee UIL nels in Hokason, | he was three mon $125 for "Bugle" The t“Iolk.te fami t of us R the door”.ew cobl DUSMUORTTAETUTIC EL L s4#n open competition at Brantford Give Credit For Small Loss To Fireproof Ceiling FLORADALE. â€"The Seranus S.| Martin & Sons sawimill was saved from destruction Sunday mghtâ€"~‘ thanks to a fireproof furnaceâ€" room ceiling. â€" Te } Sunday night‘s fire was disâ€" ;1 1cuvered when Mrs. Isaac Lichty | noticed smoke pouring from a disâ€" | ‘used chimney and notified Mr | Martin, senior. He broke into the 1build'mg by forcing a window and found a couch, cupboard and | ‘other articles in the furnace room, were in flames. |\ _ Neighbours responded to calls . | of help and aided in quelling the \flames. _‘ | â€" Milton Glebe, fireman, and ‘Emmanuel Bauman, were in the building . several hours â€" earlier | stoking the fire but all appeared ito be in order when they left. |\ _ Electrical wiring was destroyed by the blaze. Damage was estiâ€" mated at approximately $100. Fire of undetlermined | "TID OOAAA C was discovered in tge cf‘urn;ce s room about 8:30 p.m. Sunday ut c ' 'Ih 1 the ceiling made it possible to ap‘ure o 'eves | confine l_he blaze to that area. Quick action on the part of iwo The mill, a new one completed | Bridgeport Rd., Waterloo resiâ€" not long ago, replaced a pT°eVIOMS |dents, resulted in the capture and structure | that | _ was destroyed,| arrest of two middleâ€"aged robâ€" with a loss of $18,000, by a 1945 \bers, early Wednesday morning. fire. _ James Mills, about 40, of no Sunday night‘s fire was disâ€" |fixed address and his accomplice 1cuvered when Mrs. Isaac Lichty | Anthony McGillivray of Kitchenâ€" noticed smoke pouring from a disâ€" |er are in Waterloo police custody ‘used chimney and notified Mr. this morning after robbing a seTâ€" Martin, senior. He broke into the |vice station at the corner of Lexâ€" \building by forcing a window ington and Bridgeport roads of burCine 1220 "lch cupboard and |about 100 packages of cigarettes. Ise SCs eC3 4 .c cnevask you before August 27th for the summer THE PUBLIC of undetermined orlgin to all his life, is till 12 p.m longest married Cedar Snack Bar, has now taken over l of the business. River Pollution ‘Doesn’t Bpther City of Waterloo Waterloo officials feel that this city is in a more ftavorable posiâ€" tion than many of the other muâ€" nicipalities on the Grand River in respect to ways and means of reâ€" 2 0t 0_04___0 the straam . mov A Waterloo official said no ONC could be critical of Waterloo Over its sewage treatment system, mâ€" ticularly since its $200,000 plant went into operation. There have been complaints from rural areas about the fact hat none of the municipalities discharging their industrial and domestic waste into the river are giving it sufficient treatment to prevent a high percentage of soâ€" lids from going into the stream. This is a ‘rarlicularly unsanitary condition during the low water periods such as at Epr&en& A statement by E. F. Roberts of | to the sanitary ‘ation. \Quick Thinking Men Responsible For ‘Capture of Thieves pelxxa SHH0 EO CC n A statement by EE.F. Roberts of Brantford, secretaryâ€"treasurer of the Grand River Conservation | Commission, that the Grand River | is now an open sewer, has raised | alarm by the Department of, Health and the Grand River Conâ€" | servation Commission in respect Msea ie ‘ 1230 am. Becoming PBUBKIUT S \they asked Mills if he would like a ride into town. He accepted and \the two drove him up to Waterâ€" loo police station where the poâ€" |lice took over. SE PeC ul l aizente ughed out dUUuP PUU POCDCSLOQOOmI Two â€" unidentified Bridgeport Road â€" residents_ noticed Mills walking along Bridgeport Road shortly after the }'obbery about ernits enentarne * Police immediately rushed out ‘to the scene of the robbery where they «apprehended McGillivray, who was sitting in a truck with | the loot. RLNL! Luc net covrtain as vel. ‘ EME PRICC Police are not certain as yet, ‘but it is thought the truck used |in the robbery might be a stolen one. | Entrance to the service station ‘was gained by prying the front ‘door. _ Details of the robbery are not }comalete at the time of writing | an Waterloo police are still invesâ€" “tiga.t‘mg. n e Smallest boat ever to cross the \Atlantic Ocean was a 14â€"foot rowâ€" ‘boat in which Ivar Olsen and ‘John Traynor rowed from Bath, ‘Me., to Le Havre, France, in 1881. \‘The trip took 53 days. ‘,& pollution from the stream. Lterloo official said no one Reâ€"Assessment of Waterloo May Be Completed By Early Fall E. A. Fraser, Waterloo assessâ€" ment commissioner and tax colâ€" lector, feels that the measuring involved in Waterloo‘s reassessâ€" ment program will be completed this fall. _ s 2e sds an this 1d1l. It was originally anticipated that the work would require colâ€" | lege students for two summers. | However, they have gone ahead |â€" n:iuch more quickly than expectâ€" | ed. ‘ Working in South Ward 1 Measuring buildings and gathâ€" ering of assessment information | for the north and east wards has ‘been completed. At present the four students are working in the‘ |south ward. |_ Mr. Fraser said the students |hired by the city are doing a very !good job and everyone seems to. be coâ€"operating in enabling the \men to get the required informaâ€" “lOI’l. Cards filled in by the four gathâ€" ering the information on Waterloo homes and business establishâ€" \ments will be compiled during the winter and next summer. This OUR SPECIALTIES Hamburgers Barâ€"Bâ€"Q‘ ment s%8teMm, PAT* |D_ulo5 who gather each morning its $200,000 pflt f,,wap:up of coffee and a few minâ€" ition. . utes chat, will form a coffee club, been complaint])/a moet regularly at the Cedar as about the 206| Gnack Bar. _ the municipalitl®]" mhere is much to be said fOr ir industrial 400 |.; _ coffee clubs Affairs of the into the river 4€] ", _ __aq those of a personal naâ€" aspect of the situâ€" . w.â€"mu | tionâ€"and not with a either. This is the only kind of attitude pm.vtthth-etnodlumt.cnd na-umwbtthebemdln Waterloo officers that if zoot suiters come into Waterloo and lmmmw.mnm to wish they bs_dplckedhonm °* " *8B WAaTBRLOO . en pe se n s i of coffee is here. Burk Si i now sole proprietor of m Snack Bar, says that from now on toffec will be five cents a cup. of rrwenzmbeaunmw rea creunfimBurkeu.fl'u‘;‘_'n. . LA PL2. af PoB! NPWE CAAT S I is any cheaper, but he hopes that with the bwme. some of the rmps who each morning oracupo(cofleeuxda(ew minâ€" utes chat, will form a coffee club, and meet regularly at the Cedar Snack Bar. f There is much_to be said for these coffee clubs. Affairs of the ci!.yandthoseolnpessmfilmâ€" ture can be discussed at length, and even if you don‘t know all the members of the club you are sure to find a sympathetic listener. They are to be recommended highly, not only because Burke serves excellent coffee, but also ’because‘the'y are a let down im | the pressure of business each morâ€" \ning and afternoon. Four Bridgeport "Gunmen" Scare â€" Off Wellesley Soda Jerk; Police _ Arrive To Find Groundhog Hunters FREE AIR Junior Farmers Plan "Indian Style" Party Junior â€" Farmers of Waterloo‘ County will hold an "Indian style" party at the home of viceâ€" president Florence Hall the latter part of this week. Delegates who have attended the recent Junior Farmers leaderâ€" ship camp at Paris have arranged the program Walkerton Club Want Game Preserve WALKERTON. â€" A delegation from Walkerton, including Presiâ€" dent Irvin Lobsinger of South Bruce Game and Fish Protective Association, and George Gear, Bruce County agricultural repreâ€" sentative, met a committee from the Department of Lands and Forâ€" ests and journeyed to Greenock swamp. They inspected the section lyâ€" ing west of and between the vilâ€" lages of Chepstow and Cargill, 2% miles long and 3% miles wide, with a view of making it a game preserve section. It is felt that if this were done, it would be a replenishment cenâ€" tre for deer and other wild life, for the rest of Greenock swamp, and all othor swamps and brushâ€" |land bordering this area. | _ The Government rcpresentaâ€" tives will consider the matter phase ‘wil! be done by the ment department. Sm T OARIRAE END TOES On 1951 Assessment Roll ‘ Mr. Fraser hopes that the new figures will go on the 1950 assessâ€" ment roll for the 1951 taxes. The field work for the 1949 asâ€" sessment roll has been completed and at present assessment notices are being prepared. They will be delivered during the last week of August CLEARANCE SALE "%.% 99¢ * Slippers Summer (‘HI:‘n[;’RF,N‘S “, * Tennis Shoes * Slippers * Crepe * Leather * Neolite * Panco Soles R5"‘**:D 20 King 8t 8. â€" WATERLOO * Play . Shoes awaited fiveâ€"cent cup wWOMEN‘S Women‘s and Children‘s SAVE with SAFETY At Your Men‘s and Women‘s anvas or Leather e * Red ither * White olite * Yellow anco * Black Sales * Green & Gym 1.49 49¢ Shoes Fully Clothed, Chum rescues Pal _ With Broken Neck At Gravel Pond Diving into the water fully clothed, a Kitchener youth saved his chum‘s life at Forwell‘s gravel .pl:k north of here, Monday night pulled the paralyzed victim to shore. * The hero of the nearâ€"drowning is Wallace Weber, 19, of 27 Cedar St, who rescued Gilbert Hinsâ€" perger, 2%0, of Â¥1 Ellen St. West, Kitchener. Hinsperger suffered a broken neck when he struck a shallow spot. He is in St. Mary‘s Hospital in fair condition. â€" . Weber arrived on his bicycle as his friend was floundering in the water. Hinsperger had dis appeared from the surface before Weber was able to jump into the eight feet of water _The young hero, who weighs 132 pounds, grabbed his 206â€"pound chum and brought him to shore where artificial repiration was ‘app_hed. siderable water and was con: pletely pa_ral}‘zed in his legs. â€" Weber had arranged to meet Hinsperger at the gravel pit. The latter arrived first with a girl companion who was unable to WELLESLEY.â€"Four young gound-hoslhuntem caused a rore in Wellesley Tuesday, when a young lunchâ€"counter attendant thought they were holdâ€"up men. The husky young lads, all from Bridgeport, pulled up in their 1930 roadster in front of Joe Dean‘s grocery and iceâ€" cream parlor. Laverne Hamâ€" mer, 14, on duty outside, saw their .22 rifie and two Bâ€"B guns poking out the window, and when they came in the front door he ran out back calling for police. One resident pulled the vilâ€" lage fire siren, and another phoned provincial police in Stratford and Kitchener. 1;;qerger had swallowed cu The police arrived over back roads in a matter of minutes, surrounding the store and entered to find the asfonished groundâ€"hog hunters, complete with license for the .22 awaitâ€" ing service of a cold soft drink. The four youths were Edâ€" ward Golebfoski, 21; Alex Currie, 18; J. E. Currie, 16, and Clarence Currie, 14. w tS 6 ev t CcRAry MR en 6 T 1 0 e p§eh w en Monday August 15th oHRONIOLER E Opet s y0° QOfifiq This Joseph Street Store opening will present a lovely c ama6 First Floor DRAPERIES, FLORAL SETTING sw in . A motorist to minute flood-liahunt‘“uem Nas been installed at the park and eames will be held afternoon and The best softball teams of the United States and Canada will ap evening ear at the Canadian National Exâ€" ibition this year. An upâ€"toâ€"theâ€" COMPLETELY FURNISHED Summer wearthings for the whole fam Now‘s the time to plan for All Summer Millinery "Shop With Confidence" 3 1.98 2.98 3.98 $3.95 For MEN‘S STRAW HATS g" € 6 H ® oâ€" w (gn g 0 * 0)”)7(%%5 "/ lt ~ 3;3’%&\ m‘/; ' 48 o Men‘s Shop. King Street, 4 ANOD COLOUR SUGGESTIONS courles Start Work on mds 4 Mihacardeduntedeh . Dop new arene has begun. “Er"“"" has been levelled and a bulldozsr tiv imes. The averaze Canadian uses well over twenty pounds of soap a year. Mostly on Saturday nights? FURNITURE STRAWS AND SUMMER FABRICS For whole family included THTIS in time for the annual fall ut the building should be Millinery Section this summer‘s wearing excavation work owners can do to improve the appearance and with fine furniture. ARTICLE REMOVED régulor prices up to $15 next summer‘s saving as well as BY BULLAS BROS. ith Separate Entrance $7.50 Hats For Oueen Street Main Rloor in August clearance reductions BY MORLEY STUDIOS Your Invitation To see the opening of the MODEL HOME in Kingsdale (Close to Rockway) Waterloo Band Heard al Mount Forest in This (Gg@PIEE ENNE CHT MUSIOO World War was held here last Friday with bands present from Wateiloo, _ Guelph, Hillsburgh, Hanover and Arthur. Prof. C. F. Thiele and Waterloo Musical Society B presented part of the program This Is Summer Wear All 56 Joseph Street KITCHENER Phone 7â€"7365 August 18, 10940 Reduced â€"The first tattoo since the Second Our 40th his

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