Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 17 Sep 1959, p. 6

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it “wwu. Lo A imncouticculh Iâ€"Aubestscs*d UE PC nCt .â€" _ /warning. If and when it hap | nailed him for three years‘ unâ€" & -mwmcmmwmuom'tu h‘tm&b-mfillhhmmflmr“ i ts sive vou a hard time . , . it | needs § 'hfid." FC% * ;O“m“...O.QOQ..QQ..Q.OQ......i 'l‘AK- UIT .A‘Y <@ â€" _ with step saving P ‘ extension A ® _ phones .‘ * P you a hard time . , . Serrated Tip Eliminates C Grapetfrur ig‘m"-; Ts .m"wfi lb!‘Al GIFT EM POR EVERNT N ED. BERGMAN >.OQ.O..”..’_”.“”....Q‘ t he made a slip,| cumstances, i8 it * OR mtundon.flc!n’tmfl“”“lm'fl good. He has just|your horn when he â€"cuts in A flu cold is making | ahead too . sharply? 14 KING SIT. & To orderâ€"call your telephone business office. i o° P a* P JEWELLERS LTD. Grapefrvit IDEAL GIFT. ITEM FOR EVERY OCCASION, WATERL OO morning glories twined about the fences along the tracks and at one stop I saw a sign that s ANNOUNCEMENT PARENTS WISHING TO HAVE THEIR CHILDREN EXAMINED ARE ASKED TO CONTACT THEIR OWN CHIROPRACTâ€" or CALL SH 3â€"3821 or SH 3â€"5802 SEPT. 21st to 25th FOR CHILDREN OF SCHOOL This Program Of Spinal And Posture Examinations Is Sponsored By The Chiropractors In The Kitchenerâ€"Watâ€" CHILDRENS SPINAL CHECK PROGRAM erloo Area, Time And Pacilities Will Be Provided For This Service. > me. It took up all of Kindergarten Through High School â€" _ WITHOUT CHARGE the flat front of the Mitle store Store‘,‘ the abbreviation meanâ€" ing the store‘s stock consisted of everything from.soda cracâ€" kers to high rubberâ€"boots. In a & %mw f ~bear orf deer skins stretched on barns, or sheds, umm:‘bdumt& These either on * M'muun("‘:nuwin den of the perpetâ€" f mwmflnhnubmnn e 2 _1 ns L EWE _7 2i 0 ancuanent n fands am told, you can buy aimost everything from corset stays to pumpkin seeds. f â€" The red and gold sunset, low on the horizon, made me feel that old Sol intended floating Fight into the Daylinet for the night. In. the mountaigs, or in up to the setting sun. Not on the prairies. There the sun seems to be laying the promâ€" ised pot of gold from the end of the rainbow right at one‘s feet as it slips below the flat, thin line of farâ€"away pastures. I awakened next morning well on my way to the west coast. Beside the tracks, motorâ€" ists raced along the Transâ€"Caâ€" nada Highway every time it came in view. Where several of theéem had purchased the antâ€" lers of deer they had strapped whos for Wilsons? _ o the 166 %@‘Z’ | beats thirst In a big â€" UP r o D4 | 22 ne % some posh den of the perpetâ€" f \m w?u. for the inhabitants haveâ€" &. price on everything "C sek Jasper and, as I was to visit in \this haven in the heart of the â€"1| mountains only on my return ks | journey, I strolled in leisurel{ «o | fashion up the main drag. . | paper ‘mill in the west, I not j | iced the wild flowers had chanâ€" .. | ged #nder Where mauve 2 | and ow had predominated 1| in the colour spectrum of the t | prairiés, now vivid orange and o|the red of the Indian Paint â€"| Brush wad wild galardias paint here wis the largest pulp and should never enter a shop, or ask tourists where they bought the "cute little covered wagon", for it is one sure way of rur ning the risk of missing my in a fascinating Jasper shop simply jammed with gifts gua ist, when I looked at my watch and realized I had just twe minutes to run two blocks and board the train before it pulk ed out of the station. Clutching the miniature cgovered wagon, twelve scenic postcards and a souvenir brochure of Jasper down that hot street, over a low cobblestone fence, and ar rived at the tracks just as a sympathetic conductor, who had been watching my progress, gave the signal to the diesel to get going. I was almost as breathless later in the afternoon as day closed down on the exciting race the train was baving with the Fraser River. My only comâ€" pensation was that on my re turn, I would see all this glory by daylight, for Canadian Na tional Railways officials have been thoughtful enough to route their crack transcontinâ€" ental train so that their pas sengers see all the mountain We had a halfâ€"hour BJ > 'I:lulvl # B 0 on ia l on their holiday journey to the of popularity. As early at 500 B.C., a Roman named Aristor enus was so proud of the letâ€" tuce in his garden that he and wine. We use simpler juiâ€" ces for dressing nowadays, but the crisp green leaves of letâ€" tuce still are a delicious four dation for most salads. LETTUCE LONG= POPULAR Emergency ward beds in hoe pitals are needed for the sick . .. . they should not be taken by the caréless. Good drivers do not fill these beds, says the Ontario Safety League. ° Sttested to the fact that ; hailed ‘te the * my change

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