JUDGE DECLARES WiILL OF EXâ€"MAYOR‘S FATHER INVALID Londlords Meet Dr. Leavineâ€"â€" Say 150 Units Vacant in Kâ€"W It was emphasized that landâ€" lords have had rent control since the time overhead has increased more than 300 per cent. Wages have also gone up in proportion, it was claimed, but on The executive of the Kâ€"W Proâ€" perty Owners Association met with Dr. 98. F. Leavine, MPP, last Fricay night to discuss the proâ€" gosnl for lifting rent controls in Waterioo and Kitchener. A 1937â€"model sedan was comâ€" Sletely ctes(m)ed aud a 1951â€"moâ€" lel car received smoke damage in the smomidering blaze. There was smoke and water damage to the building. Spark from Welding Machine Said Cause of $1,000 Blaze Damage estimated at $1,000 reâ€" sulted from a fire at the Dearborn Auto Refinishers, 24 Dearborn St. East, Water!loo, last Friday night. Scries of 8 begins on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7 at 2:30 p.m. in the clinic room. Discussion on nutrition, general health, demonstration bath . . also tour of Hospital. For details writee The C. D. Morris Nursery Ltd. P.O. Box 5, Ocean Park, B.C. Give her a box of RED BERRIED HOLLY All giit wrapped for Christmas. and a sisterâ€"Vernon arnd Wilâ€" Mrs. Helen Taylor, the sis ter in whose home the elder BHauman died, supported the wil} in court last November. The document was contested by Mrs. Taylor‘s two brothers 114 King S. Brown Colonial buckle with strap. Hurlibut grade. Goodâ€" year welted. . . . Sizes 8% to 3 ... B and C widths. LLOYD SCHWEITZER SHOES Waterioo, which left an $8,500 estate to the exâ€"mayor‘s sisâ€" Remember Mother HURLBURT and CHUMS BM hy sAvAct V. 0. N. Preâ€"NWoatol Classes Burrogate Judge E. W. Cleâ€" mumm';"mu Claim 300% Increase a second will of Alexanâ€" Many other styles to choose from SPECIALIZE IN CHILDREN‘S FITTINGS Waterloo Assessed $10 and costs were Ralph Kieswetter, St. Clements; Roy Davidson, Linwood; Frank Samms, 493 Shoemaker Ave., Ronald F. McDonald, Niagara Falls, paid $10, }Hc:fï¬zi;g costs Fined $5 and costs included Arâ€" thur Henrich, 10 Earl St.; Llioyd Netzge, Conestogo; Vernon Scholl, 130 Albert St., Waterloo; Wilbur Gleiser, 9 Princess St., Waterloo; Kenneth J. McDonald, 291 Ottawa St., Kitchener. Waterloo police are still contiâ€" nuing their "open season" on speeding motorists. Fines totalâ€" ling $65 were paid recently by motorists here for speeding inâ€" fractions.~. rental units would ot:n up immeâ€" diately when controls are lifted. Continue ‘Open Season‘ On Speeders The owners urged Dr. Leavine to use his influence to get a liftâ€" ing of controls which they claim are causing a great deal of hardâ€" ship and confusion. Say 150 Units Vacant It is believed to have been smouldering from 645 pm. when the proprietor left the building. A spark from a welding machine is thought to have started the fire in the 1937 car. They claimed a surv;g shows there are more than 1 vacant houses and apartments in the Twin Cities and that another 150 the other side of the picture rents ha\i'e remained under rigid conâ€" trol. 100 blaze The t:rn c:mud on g: hpp.d%uduflo_n: due influence. . * The judge‘s order leaves the Way open for £robnl¢ of a 10‘1: vi\}l‘l lvtuch 'vi&:d the estate eq amo four children. Ko{:everl.‘(u Tay â€" lor‘s iawyers said an appeal will be entered against the fred Bauman and Mry. Laura judgment. e fire was discovered by a rby about 12.30 a.m. Waterâ€" firemen extinguished the 3.95 to 7.95 7â€"1012 | _ Word was received from Guernâ€" ]sey‘ Sask., of the death of Mr. tClsrence Burkhardt, husband of Mary Snider, daughter of the late ‘Mr., and Mrs. Joshua Snider of By Mrs. B. C. Woods (Chronicle Correspondent) Anniversary service will be held in the United Church on Sunday afternoon at 2 o‘clock with Sunday School at 1 o‘clock. Student Austin Snider of Kingâ€" ston will be the guest speaker. Special music will be provided. On the following evening a turâ€" key dinner will be served in the basement of the church. REGINA. â€"Four persons were killed Monday when a Kitchener man‘s car struck a passenger train at a crossing three miles north of the city. e The car was owned by Raiph Rose, broker and managerâ€"owner of Pioneer Petroleum Co. Ltd., of Kitchener. BADEN.â€"Behind the doors of Noah Steinman‘s Novelty Shop, there‘s a collection of relics worâ€" West Montrose : Oldest $4 in County, Assorted Pioneer Relics Feature Collection of Baden Man Four Killed in . Kitchener Auto i C cu e 2 o_e 1200 J UEIRED CHTC â€" to The Chronicle by Ed. Fisher, 809 Belmont Blvd. The clip<| Sincere sympathy is extended ping, over 30 years old, â€"indicates that "the largest muskie to Mrs. Archie Mcl!lchlan in the caught by any method weighed 75 pounds, taken in a net but | R@SSiNE ‘gc’i:';h'l‘“‘b“‘d- the iss the one above was taken out of Intermediate Lake, Mich., 26| Mrsrfton _# ,;:mg,';als‘::wg years ago and weighed 110 pounds." The unidentified fisherâ€" |was held here at their home Sunâ€" man landed his prize catch only after an hour and a half|day night On Monday the body struggle. The fish measured seven feet four inches in length, | was taken to Dresden where the with a 51â€"inch girth. After tiring the fish out, the angler g??og‘zdï¬oï¬m“ at ;{" ‘,;.'h“; tied the end of the line to the boat, rowed to shore And |funeral service was held at Dresâ€" then hauled it in. den on Tuesday afternoon. This snapshot of the world‘s record muskellunge caught |£* to M with hook and line was taken by Percy Haver, of Detroit. It -sr°e';s‘;f.t: was reproduced from a‘Detroit newspaper clipping submitted | berger of to The Chronicle by Ed. Fisher, 809 Belmont Bivd. The clipâ€"| gpcere_ World‘s Largest Muskie Bricks made by the father of Hydro founder, Sir Adam Beck, in a local brickyard also feature in the collection of relics. Its present owner secured them some years ago, when an ancient house was dismantled. The Beck plant was located behind the Dominion Linseed Oil Company, and alâ€" though no trace of the brickyard exists today, the Beck Stove Works are still standing, but abandoned. A flashback to the time when druggists dispensed medicine in powdered form is an antique mortar and pestle, of a type now famous as the symbol of drug _ Also included in the currency department is a twoâ€"dollar bill bearing the date June 23, 1923 and a portrait of the late King George V. During his five deâ€" cades in business, Mr. Steinman also managed to procure a large box of "shin plasters", 25â€"cent bills so called because they were said to be used in soldier‘s boots to ketw the cold out during the Boer War. However he disposed of the "twoâ€"bit" bills some time ago. & _ Perhaps that‘s why it wasn‘t too much of a surprise when Mr. Steinman came up with a speciâ€" men of those much publicised arâ€" ticlesâ€"a fourâ€"gollar bill. And if that seems amazing, it‘s also inâ€" teresting to know the antique "four spot" is believed oldest in the county. Boasting the date May 1, 1882 on its discolored surâ€" face, the bill was picked up from a prospective buyer who probâ€" ably found himself short of cash and offered the $4 in exchange for merchandise. "I hadn‘t seen any before so I took it," said owner Steinman proudly, Whether he‘d sell it or not is a different matter. Villagers speculated the article might be worth a large sum, so Mr. Steinman‘s hanging on to the ancient note, ‘till its value is deâ€" termined. thy of any historical society, which Mr. Steinman has managed to accumulate over a period of some 48 years in this village. But every article in his extensive colâ€" lection isn‘t visible from the store lobby, and consequently, no one is really sure what his total acâ€" cumulation includes. LUNCHES & REFRESHMENTS â€" SERVED DAILY â€"â€" ThHiILO‘s CorrEE Snor BY APPOINTMENT â€" CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY SUNDAY DINNERS SERVYVED ay." PWE There‘s other things in the colâ€" lection too; maple sugar molds of byï¬one days, a fishâ€"shaped cake mold, a South American "holy wood" cane and a handâ€"cranked coffee grinder. But perha?s the one recalling the most delicious memories to the minds of some is the star of the show, a "little brown jug". ‘There were no fences about 75 years ago, and the county was a wild Place of forest and swampy woodland. Lonf. shaggy cattle roamed the hills and dales in search of food, and guided herds to their side by the merry tinkle of cow bells. Such is the explanaâ€" tion Mr. Steinman gives for a blackened flat bellâ€"shaped relic on the store wall. Two lanterns, one of fortified glass, and the other of perforated iron, trace the evolution of lightâ€" ing to its present electrified state, while a wooden threshinghflnil reâ€" calls memories of â€" threshing "bees" of other days when oxen clomped over the barn floor to tramp out grain. | _ An iron inside an iron is a unique piece of equipment, but the collection also includes a speâ€" ciment of this type. When wood fires played major parts in boostâ€" ing settlement farther into the inâ€" terior, a small piece of metal was usually found warming there on the Aottest of nights. This was inserted into a hand iron which provided an aperture especially for this purpose. Two "inserts" gfl\enlly came with each iron; offeewarmed while its twin was in stores across the continent. Seems all patients were first compelled to add water with their medicine before closing their eyes and gulping the usuallyâ€"objectionable beverage. It‘s a far cry today from the|spent four years in charge of Felâ€" times when yokes vtl}cl:re as comâ€"|lowship Lodge at Camp Petawaâ€" mon on humans as they were on | W&. . animals. One of the ancient shoulâ€" ] Fellowship Lodge was built and der pieces formerly used to carry | fur(l:n.;hed _ by thed Natiom‘; water pails occupies a large space| W.C.T.U. in 1942, and operate in _the _ Steinman _ collection.| by the Soldiers and Airmen‘s Crudely fashioned of massive|Christian Association. To memâ€" w(;%d, bthe nntstrumqnt was flrst\g:::i ‘gf ‘t}:i loic.;‘nl &r:on who h:g us y enterprising pioneers‘ * t raising pushing into the great wilderness | funds F‘;f this project the address that was then Upper Canada. ‘gg‘?rc:“r:»ex{;amig ":l,mcmi)nlx‘ng v::: ® * ® #® ® m’x- ,“‘g j insl ; ; business session Mrs. Clarence uie it ’""}’e i pment i l'fllil-box'n, treasurer, reported that ;1}:1 lquen 2 :fce olsogqunlp r:lwent, but the union had made $60 through e collection also includes a speâ€"| i ciment of this type. When wood/‘he- operation of a booth at the free nlated maler nerts in hacc |School fair. Sincere sympatha.cis extended to Mrs. Archie McLachlan in the passing of her husband, the late Mr. A. McLachlan on Saturday afternoon. A memorial service was held here at their home Sunâ€" day night. On Monday the body was taken to Dresden where the Masons held a service at the funâ€" eral home Monday night. The The wedding took gllnce in St. Joseph‘s R.C. Church, Macton, Saturday of Beatrice Logel, dau’hter of Mrs. John Logel, R.R., Wallenstein, and the late Mr. Loâ€" gel, to Mr. Oliver Kreutzweiser, son of Mrs. George Kreutzweiser, Teeswater. Rev. Menno Hinschâ€" berger officiated. (Chronicle Correspondent) The Fergus Christian Business Men presented the Rauav Day proinm of testimony and song, a film and an address at Evanâ€" gelical U.B. Church, Sunday night. > _ on Sunday Kreutzwelserâ€"Logel, (CitGnlthe Coffragantones Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Hehn and dluihter of Formosa spent the weekâ€"end with Mr. and Mrs. Alâ€" vin Kieswetter. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Heipel of Philipsburg called on friends here Topic of the Youu_ People‘s Biâ€" El:u:eh Su:ldnm vening bod on y e was "The Grace of Humility". Mrs. Cranson Knechtel held the chilâ€" dren‘s meeting and Elverne Hallâ€" man was inznno of the discusâ€" sion. Linwood : Floradale : some ts were made. mmdv-hehr’u nah Brubacher read acripture and Mrs. Delton Schmitt led in prayer. prayer was offerâ€" ed for WCnuon Knechtel who was critically injured in an automobile accident and is at present in St. Catharines Hospiâ€" Bam!)efg : The Helping Hand Mission cle mer ar the hoe a my mt By Mrs. Gertrude Bowman By Miss Jetret Manser (Chronicle Correspondent) «on fhok fioimes ., Thirtyâ€"four Clubs com‘)ose'the Roya‘liCana;‘i_inl:a I-l‘l.yinx F ubs A:; sociation which p a large pai in training pilots ‘;;‘s the somin- ion‘s defence buildâ€"up. Â¥% BA + By Miss Myrtle Becker {Chronicle Correapondent} The September meeting of the W.C.T.U. was held Wednesday afâ€" ternoon at the home of the presiâ€" ‘dent, Mrs. J. S. Hilborn. Mrs. A. Shelby was in charge of the openâ€" ing devotions. The guest speaker was Rev. T. E. Summers of Hesâ€" peler. Rev. and Mrs. Summers spent four years in charge of Felâ€" lowship Lodge at Camp Petawaâ€" Roseville : 32 King St. N. â€" Waterioo Phone 2â€"2672 tively stops asthma attacks or we refund the full purâ€" BEDFORD s MONDAY, OCTOBER 6 at 3 p.m. in the, clinic rooms WATERLOO BRANCH OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAy aA Opposite ASTHMA NEFRIN They are all of the richest fabrics; the most intriguing trimmings; and the most beautiful colours seen in a decade. Come and s=~ ‘them at Goudies. MILLINERY â€" Queen Street Main Floor DRESSES AND COATS â€" 3rd Fioor YOU All signs point to the Return of Elegance. Dresses are dramotic, designed to flatter the figure; coots ore luxurious with fur and styling; and hats, following* suit, are more p;emfying and picturesque V.O.N. than they have been Quoality ond Service for 43 Years counizs. Mrs. Em. Matthews (Chronicle Correspondent) Rev. W. M. B. Metcalfe of E}â€" mira United Church occupied the pulpit in the United Church here. Mr. Eric Read, our student pastor, Glenallen : 94 King St. S. WATERLOO Phone 3â€"5914 LUCK Y l ANNIVERSARY PRIZE WINNERS allh |° diit" 90 C P Pnialh P or‘s nintrraiily ts dwabs it 10.4. t 2410 K. W. Schaefer, 12 Maple Court, w’;terloo Mrs. E. Bailey, 78 Weber St. West, Kitchener Ronald Huras, Milverton, Ont. Mrs. John Massel, 232 Samuel St., Kitchener Mrs. A. Pearsel}, 351 Waterloo St., Preston, Ont. Miss N. Hackbart, Bamberg, Ont. Mrs. Tony Fendinger, 190 Lancaster St. W., Ki Mrs. John Palubeski, 40 Knox Ave., Kitchener A. W. Obermeyer, 35 Floyd St., Kitchener W. B. Hager, 23 Schweitzer St., Bridgeport Mrs. E. Peppler, 96 Waiter St., Kitchener Mrs. Ed. Fyfe, 695 Rockway Dr., Kitchener Mrs. H. Daum, 87 Union St. E., Waterloo Mrs. C. Schmidt, 66 Brubacher St., Kitchener Mrs. R. Steffier, 263 Herbert St., Waterloo Mrs. H. G. Miller, 363 Mill St., Kitchener Ethel Merner, Chicago, Illinois, US., c/o 109 Union Blvd., 1 Mrs. B. Holloway, 115 Moore Ave., Waterloo Mrs. Helen Eby, 30 Menno St., Waterloo Mrs. A. Eichholz, 45 Alexandra Ave., Waterloo Rito Triffo, 3 Moss Park Place, Toronto, Ont. Mrs. A. Wey, 194 Oxford St., Guelph, Ont. HAIRG We were so pleased with the Sale, we decided to give an additional 24 minor prizes. These were Evening Star Jelly Servers, valued aot $1.50 each. Mrs. M. Pashnyk, 242 Bowman St., Waterloo Â¥r§. §_Wa_h_l, 201 Waterioo St., Waterloo 1. A. Dleizef 2. Mrs. Geor 3. Mrs. Tom 4. Mrs. A. K. 5. Miss B. Mc 6. Mrs. L. Er 7. Urvan M. OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9:00 P.M Mrs. A. K. Hasen, 17 Agnes St., Kitchener Miss B. Montag; 112 Geneva St., St. Catharines, Or Mrs. L Erwin, Durham, Ont. Urvan M. Schmidt, Coronation Blvd., Preston, Ont A. Dleizeffer, 119 King St. S., Waterloo Mrs. George Holle, 193 Palmer Ave., Kitchener Mrs. Tom Ellis, 32 Beverley St., Waterloo HAROLD F. WALZ SEVEN MAIN PRIZE WINNERS WINNERS OF MINOR PRIZES #. Telephone 3â€"303! King & Queen Sts. â€" Kitchener S inbctioritic d B4 °°=®e CC F. YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE J EW ELLERS c/o 109 Union Blvd., Kitchener AT Miss Watson, teacher of the seâ€" nior room, is still at home in Belâ€" wood with her mother, who is very ill. Mrs. Lessley Noecker of Mary borough Township is teachâ€"»* ing until Miss Watson returns. conducted the service on Sunday. Kitchener in Elmira