Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 31 May 1962, p. 1

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There is also a little matter of issuing a warning that watâ€" ering lawns must cease and the enforcement of this law. We live in a neighbourhood where watering is taboo, but the clowns on both sides of us water morning, noon and night but the cops do nothing about it. This we hasten to add is in Kitchener, not Waterloo. What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander and if one is allowed to water then all should be. At present, beâ€" cause we tried to obey the edict not to water, our brown, dry lawn is something less than atâ€" tractive, placed as it is between two well watered green ones. TAKEN FROM A SMALL MARITIME WEEKLY NEWSâ€" PAPER â€" Notice â€" Anyone found in my chicken yard late at night will still be there in the morning, and 1 mean still. WHEN CITY ADMINISTRATION does not have enough intelliâ€" gence to plan ahead so there will be plenty of water even during drought periods like we have been going through, then in our opinion they should be responsible for all the new lawns, shrubs etc., that must be replaced on private property after it becomes legal to water again. In the case of the teen agers its youthful stupidity without a thought they could be dead in a matter of seconds if a drivâ€" er failed to notice them. In the case of the delivery people, its sheer, damn laziness because the driver does not want to walk the width of the road even though there are No Parking signs. riding bicycles the wrong way on one way streets should be stopped immediately as should the practise of a few delivery drivers in stopping on the the wrong side of these streets. Watching a group today, the only thing we could figure that was being used was one arm of each workman and the two machines. The arm was to show | the machine driver where to | work, while the other arm was employed in holding the shovel in an effort to remain steady while standing on one foot. J.H.S. PRACTICE OF ‘TEEN agers in Peculiarly enough, the four to eight men needed to do this job are equipped with shovels. These we have come to believe are not for the purpose they were dsigned, but rather as a means of comfort to the workâ€" men who diligently lean on with a ditch digging machine, and a bulldozer or front loadâ€" ing machine. IT ALWAYS AMUSES us to see what happens when some of the works department decide Chronicle Quip Russ. Honsberger e » > s‘ . R BA s o o es ol e ie o ue e e e ie + voume © 9 es e t m e â€" P o ‘ f ifi w‘ . ) k is ‘% s #+ 4 t % 6Â¥ on c gigp > M " ' " e $ "o M 4) t 1 _ Â¥ e e . v on mt T “f. " 0 LP us K C â€"â€"‘77 hia% / 4 Not Promises" Read Page 4 N. D. P. Candidate "Progress, J.HS JH.S. by A transcript of the address follows. FIRE DAMAGE :$40.00 "All the world"‘s a stage," and SHAKESPEARE STAGES HIS WORLD As a man, Shakespeare was inâ€" terested, and expected his audâ€" ience to be interested, in the pressing world affairs of his day. Already in Love‘s Labor‘s by Harold Paikin Read Page Election Notes" Liberal Candidate WATERLOO, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAYâ€" 31, 1962 THE PARTY LINE These instances in Love‘s Laâ€" bor‘s Lost and Errors of interest in current history in the making are merely the ebullition â€" of youthful spirit. But the history plays were to elicit and develop this interest into the idea of man‘s place in the universe which gives sustance to Shakesâ€" peare‘s great tragedies. For Shakespeare came to his "four It will be well to remind ourâ€" selves that three of the four soâ€" called "great" tragedies are also histories, two of them from Britâ€" ish history. Hamlet is Seandinayâ€" ian history with an English setâ€" ting, which gave it special interâ€" est for England. Lear is English legendary history, but King Leir Social Credit Candidate Our Financial Read Page by Wm. Pavlik Crisis }{LMPROVERS NOT PENALIZED "Ottawa Report" Will Not Appear This Week (See Page 6) Times News Service PRETTY GAiL EMMERSON strikes a pose during the Naâ€" tional Open Baton Twirling Championships held in Toledo, Ohio, over the weekend. Gail marched off with two awards for fancy strutting, and solo twirling. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Emmerson, 47 King Street N., Waterloo. Weichel‘s Column, . (Mike) 10,183

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