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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 16 Jan 1953, p. 1

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. * _ Vol. 96, No. 3 There are a number of cityâ€" owned cars now sportinÂ¥ fancy 2 dents and creases, in of al glaces, their roofs. Evidently those ownâ€" ing the cars did not believe ice was of sufficient weight to harm their vehicles and so took a chance and parked them under trees or overhead wires. c M h Lo i ds t n s nca s 4 * C 90e A2s i wO p P 3 S B % . o $ aPe on . esn ue t 42 e RO VRX T S m pt o) e y 6 EPCE a tss hoket, At S c 9 6 eb yeteet * " o | (ee ol Un Cree (ey C . ) + prpr e se o. S ie T s i SA + . v. ho i Bs ' C F L e nt oo s 0e ,,,v}._;- CE C 5.3 " * e ie s C ie o + hy o t A "9“” 3 e eA o y +m ‘lv‘*; , ;. r;, J < w ce k / ol 5.l & eA LC ts > â€" Ks;> 2 â€" m CC * baa sOY n # €4 a8 te ol * "4 C £ c % P w ol oi 5o dn °* lt Aia n e 1 2o s 5 / 7R a e e M, e ) 268 +J Cha ~a e ie e i . 4 sn y P * 2k o# â€"% + w a . 399 e # s ; 3 8 x t s 5 is L Pabaat = / »dagut i+ . Set <44 4 # 4 * +% k elae a" yer *# Prof Y "Talâ€"<ta0 $ "k.s a A *A * en te Jn oi < C ~«p ® s * S uk > t » ie 5 «n * *CMR LC ’ x + 4 ) + % c a 2 PA) se # 2 # * â€" s ‘Cs Gnciter Avter Rel * ® / x «A * e t io + a ; ®3~ arpgeys e am suieet ib\ tm w f ® io in Stat Ap4 6P * M 1 k a k oo p $ a 4 ?s E:\g-«;'l t ) t A«% $ Y3â€"~#~ > 5 + 3 g h ' ' * *n \'1’ t % & & x 2Â¥ t fi"!. ;4 * & 6.* mA f f : *hy A 24 A1 * m Â¥ 2Â¥ "3 z: ) 4 f L > . " . wHa e P t k P . * 9 lfi > x‘ * 8 â€" mA Reem hE’h for a few minutes‘ work, still the police do not make anything out of it so you‘ll have to kick to whoever towed your car. Police are allowed to also make a storage charge when it is necessary to put a car in stonie. This is also chargeamble to the w There seems little doubt but that the zoning done in this city is or has been far from tsfiuhcâ€" tory. With the number of manyâ€" facturing plants in the Caroline street district, it seems as though this area might long ago have been designated as industrial and developed as much. It is extremeâ€" ly doubtful if any of the residents of this area would refuse a good price for their property if they were assured sufficient to locate elsewhere in Waterloo. However, 3 the fact that they are now located in an area serving industry does not alter the fact that the road in front of their homes should be improved and the railway forced to maintain this spur in top shape so long as they are operating there. Most people pay the two dollar fine for parking without ln{ proâ€" test, but kick like steers when it comes tq paying the five dollar towing ‘charge. While this does Police in the winter usually ticket a parked car if it remains longer than allowed durinf the night hours. This is to facilitate snow removal, and the same car owner is seldom bothered during the summer months unless he is causi:f a bottleneck or interferâ€" ing with traffic. When a car is towed away following a police orâ€" der, it has usually been ahndin’ in the one spot for a couple 0o: days. Care is taken that nothing is done to harm the car and if it has been left in gear, it is winched up by the truck and towed backâ€" wards. Country roads are still treachâ€" erous with ice, and more than one driver has sat helpless behind the wheel and watched his shiny car slide effortlessly into the ditch. Trouble is you can‘t sue Nature for all the damage she is doing. You just have to develop a sense of humor and hope your pocketâ€" book will stand the strain. J.H.S. Those complaining about the police towing away parked cars{ actually do not have a great dea to kick about. JHS, The recent ice storm which crippled areas around the Twin Cities, did a fair amount of damâ€" age to trees and power lines withâ€" in the cities. It was nothing to what happened out in the suburâ€" ‘ban aré@s though, where whole trees and telephone poles came down under the weight of ice. Blaming others for situations now in existence is of little real value. Fact of the matter probâ€" ably is that indusiry needs the railway spurs now located here, but they spoil otherwise fine streets. People must live here for us to have a city, but industry must operate here before we can bring in the people. The whole thing seems to boil Mr. Bauer also pointed out that it would at the present time be impossible to supplement train service with trucks as there is no through street to carry the heavy traffic, unless it was all routed onto King street.. â€" Mr. Bauer thinks that a great deal of the trouble with streets, railways and the placement of inâ€" dustries in residential areas and houses in industrial areas, is due to the way Waterloo was allowed to build up without any real planâ€" ning being done. If the zoning byâ€" law was such that factories could not build in residential areas and houses could not be located in inâ€" dustrial zones, then there would be no clash between industry and private citizens. Each would pay tneir share, and would be able more easily to see what they were getting for their tax dollar. in 1905. Service by the CNR imâ€" mediately improved. Probably a case of a little bit of competition doing a lot of good. The condition of Caroline street is not entirely the fault of the railways, in the opinion of Mr. Bauer. He points out that the railway spur running along the side of this street is kept in good condition so far as railway serâ€" vice is concerned and feels that it is up to the city to maintain the street. The CNR was the first railway to establish in this city, but due to poor service given by them, the CPR was asked to locate here. This they did, establishing pasâ€" senger service in 1904 and freight Mr. Bauer says that without the railways, the cluster of industries along King Street could not posâ€" sibly exist, or at least not on their present scale. Many of the shipments made by these indusâ€" tries are carload lots, and transâ€" porting them by truck would not only be costly, but would clutter the roads of Waterloo with more trucks than there are now. _ In the opinion of Mr. Edgar Bauer, the need for a railway spur through Waterloo is just as great today if not more so than it was when first started years ago. Around W aterloo The whole affair started on a note of doubt and we have yet to see a venture succeed in which there was no real effort or faith that it would be a success. Profit so far as the service was concerned, evidently did not ocâ€" cur, although the actual trial was short and many people did not even have sufficient information to take advantage of it. Evidently thé short try it was given did not indicate a too genâ€" erous gayofl. so the service was disbanded. JH.S. Waterloo‘s new cross town bus service has ended its short and probably not too useful life. You don‘t have to be a young man or a young girl to act in this capacity. Even if the days are past when you actively particiâ€" pated in square dancing, you can still give these youn’ %e:ple a lift if you will just call n Mcâ€" Laren, Waterloo‘s â€" recreational director and tell him you‘ll do the calling if the others will do the dancing. Number is 2,3663. How about it? _ _A group of young Waterloo people would like to learn square dancing . .. but they have no one to "call off". They have the reâ€" cords, the hall and the inclination . . . but no teacher. They have asked the Waterloo Recreation Commission to supply them with a teacher, but the comâ€" mission does not have one on tap. There must be dozens of people in Waterloo and district who tould call off for these young peoâ€" ple and square dancing is certainâ€" ly a lot more fun to watch than the regular kind. { down to simply this. Don‘t park your car on the street, or if your driveway is so filled with snow that you cannot possibly get into it, then sleep in the car, taking with you an alarm clock so that you can wake every few hours and move your car out of the way. J.HS. Do you like to square dance? Do you like it well enough to give some young people a hand who would like to learn how? i CHILDREN APPEAL FOR DOG‘S RETURN The first named in each of the committees is viceâ€"chairman. A board member is chairman and Mr. Martin, publicity, * Mr. Harding and Mr. N{artin of the advisory vocational commitâ€" tee and J. O. Beynon of the board were ister added to the mankgeâ€" ment committee. Also, Mr. Mistele, Mr. Swartz and Mr. Lochead, music; Mr. Misâ€" tele, Mr. Martin and Mr. Swartz, insurance; Mrs. Arthur Thomson, Miss L. C. Augustine, Mr. Harâ€" ding and Mrs. Bryden, cafeteria; and Mrs. Bryden, Mr. Lochead and Mr. Martin, publicity, * 8. Byrden, Mr. Harding, Mr. Marâ€" tin and Mr. Lochead, courses and teachers; Principal C. R. Philp and W. J. Unwin (for extraâ€"curriâ€" cular act_ivities), management. Rev. F. G. Stewart and Mrs. P. J. McGarry, who were elected chairman and viceâ€"chairman, reâ€" spectively, of the Kâ€"W Collegiate Board Monday, received the same appointments to the advisory voâ€" cational committee Puesday night. _ Committee members: G. H. Mis~ tele, audit committee; G. H. Locâ€" head, auditorium, gymnasium; C. H. Harding, Mel Swartz, Wilson Martin and Mr. Lochead, buildâ€" ing, property, eguipment;)l(s. R. K.C.1. Board Picks Not Enough Patronage If the time between buses wasn‘t so great there weuld have been more pulrom;g:, Ald. Arno Hauck criticized. wever, both Ald. Hauck gnd Ald. Frahk Bauâ€" er agreed tl-;t there just weren‘t enough people to commute on w 1953 Committees The dog was a pet of the children who are appealing to anyone who might have found it to return "a kid‘s best friend". In addition the Dane was purebred and conâ€" sidered valuable. With no immediate recommenâ€" dations to correct the tion the Kitchener PUC was to continue with the experiment as long as the city would pay the difâ€" {erence in costs. The mottled blond Dane was missed two weeks ago Monday and nothing â€"has been heard of it since. In view of the substantial loss and the obvious defects in the system, it was unlikely that any change in schedule, fare structure or route would bring sufficient revenue to cover the cost of the opfnuoxglgyorkobemm PLATTSY I L L Eâ€"The young family of Harvey Blackmore of Plattsville, is feeling extremely blue these past several weeks since their Great Dane disappeared from home. out. The lack of transfer privileges, the routertaken and the time inâ€" terval in service has rmled in complaints the Mayor . The fare was too costly for thase traâ€" velling with any frequency. To Discontinue Waterloo Crossâ€"Town Bus Service A daily lo~= â€"f between $40 and $50 the housâ€" ing and speciai con.mittee at WlwboCoum*fi to recommend :‘ . the Kitchener PUC be requested to revert to the curtailec crossâ€"town bus service in omeration prior to rossâ€"town line (By Chrozicle To Correspondent) _ Kitchener â€" Waterioo‘s percentâ€" age of illiterates is lower and the proportion of those having better Storm Causes ‘Ghosts‘ To Start Stove, Ring Phone Did you know that out of Waâ€" terloo‘s population of 11,991 there are 320 people who are entirely lacking in formal education of any kind? That‘s what the Buâ€" reau of Statistics in Ottawa says. Waterlooites with one to five years of schooling number 137; five to eight years, 3,918; nine to 12 years, 3,561; more than 18 years, 899. 320 Waterlooites Hliterate Basis of the charge against Mrs. Brohman was that she was guilty of having the beer in an illegal place by reason of the fact she is the registered owner of the store. Broke Into Tears Mrs. Brohman testifying in her Given Five Months Last week Mrs. Brohman‘s husâ€" ‘band was convicted of mna beer for sale and sente to five months. The beer, found by police Oct. 5th in a basement at the rear of a grocery store at 935 King St. West, figured in both charges. _ _ In laying the case over, Magisâ€" trate Kirkpatrick indicated he wished to study rulings in previâ€" ous cases. i Magistrate _ Kirkpatrick _ reâ€" served decision one week Wedâ€" nesday in the case of Mrs. Gilbert Brohman, Weber S¢., charged with having beer in an illegal place. Charged with Having Beer In Hlegal Place, Woman â€" Breaks Into Tears at Court "For two years," a Toronto paâ€" per said in a newspaper story, "hotelkeepers have bitterly comâ€" plained that because they have to close between the hours of 6.30 and 8 p.m. (a ruling designed to send their customers home for A branch caused all the fuss. Breaking off under the TORONTO.â€"Reports this week indicate that the hours in which beer may be sold in taverns and hotels may be changed following a meeting next week of Premier Frost and Judge W. T. Robb, Onâ€" tario Liquor Licence Board chairâ€" Herman Kartechner of RR. 1, Waterloo, probably thought he had spooks in his house on Snunfioyo when his phone rang and no one was on the line and when his electric stove was turned on but no one was near it But it was only the storm. May Change Hours in W hich Beer May be Sold IN HOTELS, TAVERNS Minister‘s Text Put Into Practice Chronicle Helps Record During Storm Crisis The hydro power went off and not a word was uttered as the clerk produced several candles. "It is better to light a canâ€" dle than curse the darkness," was the text used. PALMERSTON. â€"â€" Palmerâ€" ston cou?cil hlad thehoppor- tunity of applying ‘the text uséd by Rev. George Young of Knox Presbyterian Church here, when he made his adâ€" dress %to the council at‘ its inaugural meeting. _ with Lanadian Press eo‘gz from Toronto. Much of news had to be phoned in. Acknowledgements to both newspapers appeared in a news story on the front page. Nostalgic memories of unâ€" selfish coâ€"operation between daily and weekly floated through the Chronicle last week, as a Chronicle reporter rescued a 1932 Kitchener Reâ€" cord _ from _ longâ€"forgotten nevupnget exchange files. The Chronicle set type for the Record when "Up to the present time, the (;mdun Pacific Telegraph linemen have been unable to repair the damage done by the storm to t:e private wire of the Reâ€" cord." A Galt newspaper, the Reâ€" porter, also aided the daily with Canadian Press copy Ayatitn yrige to V t ln' W-te;'loo Counltyâ€"out of a tota pulation of 126,123â€"peoâ€" g;; mP;n no schooling number 3,â€" ; more than 13 years, 7,531. Over in neighboring Kitchener of 33,910 adults, 1,107 lack educaâ€" tion of any kind, 972 had one to five years of school, 15,708 had five to eight years, 12,722 had nine to 12 years and 3,401 had 13 or more years. \ than 13 years school is higher than the national average. Origr_x:lly the charge against Mrs. hman was one of illegal possession but at the close of the crown‘s case at the request of Crown Attorney Dauftman, it was amended to one of having beer in an illegal place. Mrs. Brohman added that she had not been in the storage room from that time until the police made their search. She had never authorized any beer or liquor on the premises, she said. own defence momentarily broke into sobs at the outset. When she had regained her composure, she acknowledged she was owner of the store and that the room in which the beer was found is part of the storage space. She testified that on one occaâ€" sion she had found several cases of beer and told her husband to get them out. She threatened to smash them. The next day they were gone. o j All returned to normal :hen the wires were separatâ€" dinner) patrons go to liqugy lounges or pa(fl-ss cents a bottte for beer. No ught beer is sold ; in bars. . "Reports at Queens Park indiâ€" cated clmngin? of these hours may be one of the several new regulations.. A second change suggested is that board meefi::g be open to the public and befiope: to t.:: |:;ubh2 and the press. Advocates of open hearings say the Liquor Licence Board is a judicial body and should be treated no differently than other law courts. The wire crossing caused the phone to ring continuousâ€" ly until Mr. _ Kartechner moved one wire. At this point the electric stove was mysâ€" teriously turned on. branch fell across a hydro w}re and the latter crossed a te ghonc wire. e wire croasing caused The move is the culmination months of effort on the part the two organizations representâ€" ing the blind. It has cg:.:ad vids{.l support throughout . Mr. Schneider will be presen partly because of his advocacy of, the measure when he seconded the ;;)ee(;};"fml‘l'\"& throne whe: the House of Commons assemb last fall. The delegation will call on Ilr! Martin Jan. 14. It will also in clude representatives of the Can adian National Institute for the Blind and of the Canadian Counâ€"< cil of the Blind. o means test for blind pensioners; a C.N.LB. officials reports. 1 To Request End . z Of Means Test for : Blind Pensioners : Norman Schneider, MP for Wa terlco North, will be part of delegation which will ask Hea Minister Martin to introduce gislation for elimination of th hice. "~there" the " tage mi ‘s There are only two m places that can afford wood places that can afford wood elling like mpt-m bright paint for that. of the rooms. ~ .. â€" upertee ge ie Lodie were decided uon and io Kenovaté » â€" Families Forced to Flee ?_'_‘E“i __In $15,000 King Street Fire wire crossing caused ne to ring continuousâ€" til _ Mr. Kartechner one wire. At this point ctric stove was mysâ€" y turned on. returned to normal a view to renovating _ Although predominantly comeâ€" dy which centred around an Irish fantily, the play also had some drama. The cast includes Nancy Lessaâ€" ry, AMbert Ruetz, Patricia Gray, Maurice Schnarr, Ronald Gray, Geraldine Miller, Ann Powers, James Hoffarth and Douglas Walâ€" Prompters were Douglas Wailâ€" ton nmr Ann Powers; makeâ€"up, William Bierschbach; stage manâ€" ager, Albert Kroetsch. The play was presented twice Sunday to members of the conâ€" %.Louin Catholic Youth Orâ€" ga tion this week presented a threeâ€"act comedy "The Lifil])t Eternal", at the parish hall. e play was well received. 3â€"Act Comedy Wellâ€"Received At St. Louis Proposing changes in the 1953 contract, Local 791 of the Waterâ€" loo Fire Fighters Association have requested a meeting for discusâ€" sion. The fire and light commitâ€" tee felt the earliest it could meet the firemen was January 26 for preliminary discussions . Howâ€" ever, it may be posté)oned to Feb. 9 if the committee o;s ngt have an rtunity to study the proâ€" poozp:gregment. i Robert Bauman was recomâ€" mended for reappointment as bicycle licence issuer by the office committee of Waterloo Council Monday night. Bicycle License Issuer Reappointed Term at Kitchener Says Newspapers Are ‘Big Guns‘ Of Advertising ._~, Damage was estimated at $15,000 in a fire last week in Murray‘s photo studio, 54 king Street South. Two families were forced to flee their smoke-filled apartments. All offâ€"duty Waterloo firemen were called in when it was feared the fire might engulf the whole block. While only a section of the threeâ€"room studio was damaged (lower photo), extensive water damage was done in the Hub cigar store. "Any arm$ which uses rifle fire. when it should be using artillery will lose the battle, if not the war," he said, "and any merchant who depends upon some lesser medium of advertising when he should be using newspapers, will lose sales, if not his shirt." Newspapers are the "big guns" of advertising, Howard Mark, advertising manager of the Robert Simpson Company in. Toronto, told the annual meeting of the National Reâ€" tail Dry Goods Association in New York this week. The course is offered by the deâ€" partment of economics and busiâ€" ness administration in coâ€"operaâ€" tion with the various insurance and trust companies in the Twin Cities and Toronto. Fortyâ€"six University students, school teachers, business men and women in the Twin City area have registered at Waterloo Colâ€" lege for the insurance estates and trusts course. Fortyâ€"Six Register For Insurance, Estates and Trusts Course Here The work to be done by the Fire Marshal‘s Department is exâ€" pected to start here this week. The job will take about three or four days. The PUC will stanâ€" dardize the hydrant couplings. Department Gets Standard Couplings Fire Chief Albert Pagel says equipment for the standardization of Waterloo fire deparment coupâ€" lings has arrived. The mayor said the public should know that the move to help the family _ originated "through the kindness of Ald. Frank Harber who directed inforâ€" mation on the case to the mayor‘s office." KITCHENER. â€" Mayor Weber Wednesday said further donations have been made to the fund in aid of the Kitchener mother with Parkinson‘s disease. This brings the total to $800, he said. Telephone officials had preâ€" viously thought that the repair job would take about two weeks but recent indications are that it wi(l*l be completed by this weekâ€" end. More Donations For II Mother city A few calls are still being reâ€" ceived about disrupted hydro lines but everything is just about back to normal. The 100 outside workers brought in to aid the local hydro staff have left the All hydro services, crippled by last Saturday‘s storm in the Twin City area, have been restored, a H.E.P.C. spokesman has reported. Telephone officials hope to have their repair job completed by this weekâ€"end. Disrupted Hydro Services Restored 8.15 pm, i Lectures in the course are key executives of insurance and trust eomrniu and each speaker is a zec list in his own particular 1d. The aim of the course is to give those interested a mom standing oT e i::!:l and 0 es fundamentals of K-uua. anâ€" Lectures are beeim(im on Monâ€" day and Wedn y from 7.15§ to 8.15 pm,. & BAMBERG COW GIVES BIRTH TO THIRD SET OF TWIN CALVES The regrouping calls for theinâ€" troduction of the 10â€"cent public telephone rate, replacing the fiveâ€" cent rate in effect in the group which Kitchenerâ€"Waterloo has outgrown, and for the introducâ€" Twin City residents now have 23,507 telephones in their local calling area. _ o . Because the Twin City area has outgrown its present telephone rate group, increases were authâ€" orized by the Board of Transport Commissionets, The number of telephones in this calli:g in this calling area has increased beyond the maximum limits of the rate group to which it was assigned. Increases in telephone rates for the Kitchenerâ€"Waterloo area reâ€" commended in the Bell Telephone Company‘s report of Oct. 31, 1952, will go into effect Feb. 22, it was announced this week by C. F. Volland, Bell Telephone manager in Kitchener. Increased Telephone Rates Effective Here in February Canada is now selling wheat to 78 countries and the demand for it is increasing yearly. She is sellâ€" ing much ‘barley for human conâ€" sumptionâ€"so much it has reached the point where the price of a Farm Economists Prediction This was the prediction of Dr. H. L. Patterson, farm economist, Ontario Department of Agriculâ€" ture, to more than 100 attending the first "swine day" in Trinity Fellowship Hall, Kitchener, Tuesâ€" day The hog markets are related to the western grain markets in that the amount of grain not eaten by human being is in direct ratio to the number of hogs fed. It is offered in alternate years Two huge crops of western grain is believed to have partially caused the overproduction of hogs in _fhe lgst two years. For the first three months of this year the surplus will conâ€" tinue; for the next six hog marâ€" ketings will barely fill the needs and for the last three there will be a shortage. Hog Surplus to Disappear Economist Tells Farmers A normal grant of 20 per cent. is allowed from the Fire Marshal‘s Department but the city anticiâ€" pates an extra 10 per cent. in view of buying additiona) equipâ€" ment. With this reduction the cost will amount to slightly more than $19,000. © The purchase of a new pumper, approved several weeks ago, will represent an overâ€"all investment of $27,665. The truck is being bought from the LaFrance Foamâ€" ite and Fire Engine Company, Ltd. & 30 Per Cent. Grant worth of fire truck equipment wa approved Monday %t by Wat erloo Purchase of an additional $2,690 worth of fire truck equipment was Waterloo to Purchase $2,690 Fire Equipment The 1952 roll was $899,550.36. In 1961 Waterloo tax collections amounted to $732,375.13 or 97.66 per cent of the total roll; 19650, atizined n wils 1998 Derc., Senscter, ‘Wetsrise tax eoll:hcgc reports that h";: l:'"‘ 'mfloob’hx;#hcfiom He points out that in 1942 colâ€" lections totalled $245,007.61. Last year they amounted to $885,004.20 et“llxne-ntolficconohh\ roll Waterloo Tax"Collectionis Up $639,917 in 10 Years (By Chronicle Correspondent) â€" BAMBERG.â€"A Hereford cow on the farm of Mrs. Peter Dorscht, east of Bamberg, is setting somewhat of a record. + This week the cow gave birth to twin calves. This is the third consecutive year this same cow has given birth to twin calves. Lectures are given on life, health and accident, automobile collision and cuualt{, marine and fire insurance as well as on wills, estates and trusts. A study is also made of investment and security analysis, mortgages and insurance analysis, mortgages a law and lover,\m«lt Waterloo College is believed to be the only coll in Canada ofâ€" fering a unlv.rd.g of this nature. tates and trusts Individual residence service goes up from $4.15 to $4.50; two party service from g:fl) to $3.50 and rural line from $3.05 to $3.15. Individual business service inâ€" creasesl fron(n $8.40 to )”g"“h;: arty line (temporary . I;7.:'»{) and rural line from $4.60 to _ _ However, facilities are not yet available to provide for the 10â€" cent public telephone rate or for the new measured business serâ€" vice. Consequently the fiveâ€"cent rate for the local public telephone messages will continue in efféct for a temporary period. Temporary Service The com_F:ny has requested the Board of Transport Commissionâ€" ers to approve a monthly rate of $7.50 for the continuance of twoâ€" party business service for a temâ€" porary period. Fal tion of a new type of business service caled businessâ€"individualâ€" line message rate service to reâ€" place twoâ€"party business service. Canada will consume more and more pork as she is growing fastâ€" er industrially than any other country in history. It is questionâ€" able if we are not attracting more skilled Americans than they are attracting from us, the economist said. y in f Should Decrease Therefore hog production should decrease as Tfinin surplusâ€" es are eaten up. ere are only two foreign markets for m now, Dr. Patterson said, Bri and the United States. There is no use trying to sell hogs to a country like China, whose nationâ€" al diet is only about seven per cent animal products. Although Britain bought more than ever from Canada in 1953, there was less money spent on food and he thought we could never count on that market too much again. The markets we must develop are Canada and the pound of barley is now than a pound of oats. of smoke, he said. The mayor quoted the chief as saying it would have been hla ous to put on the respirators the firemen first went into the building to find the source of the fire. Respn{ators shouldp't be put on after inhaling a certain amount The additional equipment inâ€" cludes a portable spotlight, floodlights and otger extras. Rumors Untrue A rumor to the effect that the department‘s respirators would not work at last week‘s fire was declared untrue by tll‘:xw Robâ€" erts. A report submi by Fire Chief Pagel revealed that there was nothing wrong with the ‘ m,mmumfl council‘s decision to increase rate of penaltyonmm from oneâ€"half to one per month will provide an added in centive for prop:ty owners to pay their taxes prior to the due $317,046.01. «* is o« Cot, is Consume More Pork

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