Waterloo Firemen Answer Three Calls In Three Days When he returns to pick up the late model car he thought he‘d bought, the dealer explains that forms‘" were, in fact, a sales eontract. The most common schnookle is to advertise a late model car for what appears to be a giveâ€" away price. The customer, atâ€" tratted to the lot is shown the car, pays a deposit and is told that he can collect it in a few days, after it has been tuned up. In the meantime, he is ‘"loaned" another, older car "just so you bave transportation." Condition of the loan is that he must sign either a "receipt‘ or "insurance mobiles, and going back to Engâ€" lish nobility, Lady Aline Barnett, about a careless driving charge she is facing this week. She exâ€" plains that she has had a brush with the police at least once a year since the started driving. Her Ladyship is 80, and has been driving since 1905. In the past three days the Waâ€")swered three calls in the city. terloo Fire Department have an-' On Monday, September 23rd, Now that the election is over, and we can look back on it obâ€" WATERLOO FIREMEN raced to this house on George Street yesterday morning with their sirens screaming, put their ladder up to the se c o n d story window, tore off the screen, opened the winâ€" dow, climbed inside and found . . . nothing. Total dm. ® On. tom m..n' __ActtAiindh alizn Atman ac unc ammmees on 108 Waterico City Council whisked through 18 pages of agenda and reports in little more than an hour Monday night in compariâ€" son to the more than three hour meeting the week before. A major portion of the hour was spent discussing variations to the proposed crossâ€"town bus service in the northâ€"west of the city. Alderman Harold Wagner stated that in addition to the $500 subsidy announced last week KIETH BUTLER, the successful Progressive Conâ€" servative candidate in Waterloo North who scored the biggest upset in yesterdays provincial electâ€" ions as he defeated Liberal leader, John Winterâ€" meyer, by more than 2,800 votes. BUTLER DEFE AS TORIES 1 Crosstown Bus Route Changed Chronicle Photo a five o‘clock alarm summoned the department to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Pallas, 20 Avondale N., Waterloo. A pan of grease left on the stove had igâ€" nited and firemen were forced to break into the twoâ€"storey duâ€" plex in order to put out the blaze. Alderman Wagner also stated that the cities contract with the Kitchener P.U.C. prohibited a duplication of services on King Street and so the proposedâ€" bus They were at the scene for alâ€" most an hour getting the blaze under control. Damage was exâ€" tensive due to smoldering plasâ€" tic wall tiles, smole and greasy soot throughout. Damage to the fittings and furâ€" nishing was estimated at $1,000 and to the building, owned by Mrs. G. Breitmaier, 168 Elgin Cres, Waterloo, approximately $1,500. to be paid by Oberlander Conâ€" struction, a promise of an addiâ€" tional $300 has been obtained from the University of Waterloo. Both these grants would be apâ€" plied to any deficit accrued in the first two months of operaâ€" Another call came at 9:08 on Wednesday to the home of Mr and Mrs. H. Schaefer, George St., Waterloo, where the odour of smoke was reported. No trace of fire was found and it was thought to be coming from the kitchen of a downstairs apartâ€" ment where canning was in proâ€" cess. Again, at 12:49 on Wednesday all units responded to an alarm at the Kent Hotel, King St., Waâ€" terioo, where a fire was found to have started in the downstairs Barâ€"Bâ€"Que being used to burn rubbish. Overheated pipes had ignited the ceiling and caused fire to break out in the hallway above leading to the ladies bevâ€" erage room. Damage was estimated at $25 but later inspection indicated that it might run higher, smoke and water having caused consiâ€" derable damage to the furnishâ€" Firemen were on the scene for Chroniele Photo. Honour Local Girl At U.S. University We‘ll Be Out On Wed. Next Week out of a possible 4.0. Delia Marian Houser, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. Ray Houser, 84 Albert St., Waterloo, is a senior majoring in sociology. Her father, president of Waterico Lutheran Seminary, has been inâ€" vited to give the bachelauriate sermor at her graduation. A Waterloo girl was the only Canadian student designated one of the ‘"University Scholars" for 196364 at Susquehanna Univerâ€" sity, Selinsgrove, Pa., an honour awardedâ€"for â€"cumulative. acadâ€" emic averages of at least 3.25 out of a possible 4.0. Miss Hauser is a graduate of! Waterloo _ Collegiate _ Institute where she was an honour stuâ€" dent and a member of the class would be unable to go down Alâ€" bert as originally planned, but would go straight across Univerâ€" sity Ave. making a shorter trip. (Continued on page 7) week are being stolen from Twinâ€" City boxes. Found guilty of impairment in charge was Paul Schendel, 79, of 15 Margaret Ave. N., Waterâ€" loo. He was fined $60 and costs. The above is the new phone number of the Wateriso Chronâ€" Commencing with next week‘s paper, the Waterioo Chronicle will be delivered on Wednesâ€" day, rather than Thursday, as has been our policy for almeost in order to accommedate the new schedule, the deadline for display and classified advertisâ€" ing will be ncen on Monday. We trust that the change will cause a minimum of inconvenâ€" your advertiting needs. This is also the number to call to seâ€" been made in order to enable us fo give better service to our give better news coverage. 744 â€" 6364 ie ? >\ c i â€"40t0g) 4 speaking on Saturday at the opening of the new $650,000 wing of the Waterioo Lutheran University following the unlockâ€" ing of the doors at 3 p.m. by Mrs. Harry D. Greb, congratâ€" ulated the University on the » Canada Council Director ~Rraises Local University Today, perhaps more than any other time in the past couple of centuries, people own their own homes, or else are in the midst of owning them. However, there are still some who do not know the joy of having their own place, a house that is all their own. It is to these persons that this story is directed and dedicated. This then is the actual story of a man who bought his own home. It is true, I know. because I am that man. Well last Friday I gave in. When I got home from work, my wife was waiting for me with that lovely amile of hers that tells me right away that she is going to spend my money on something, (if she hasn‘t already done so.) ‘"Been shopping dear," I asked fearfully. ‘"‘No." she replied, "We‘re going shopping . . . for a house." "A house!" I gasped, but we can‘t afford . . .". My words were drowned out by the screams of panicâ€"stricken pedestrians as our car, my wife at the wheel, screeched out of the driveway, through two hedges and across three lawns and one front For some time now my wife and my son, and my motherâ€"inâ€"law, and my friends, and my milkâ€" man have been after me to move out of our apartâ€" ment and buy a home. â€" ‘"You can‘t describe the satisfaction that comes with owning your own home," they said. MISS MARIAN HOUSER EASE MAJORITY ly $26,000,000. Of the $38,000.â€" 000 we have given to universitâ€" ies, you may be interested to know that just about oneâ€"third â€" $12,000,000 â€" has been used acquisition : of their expanded home for the aris, He mentionâ€" ed that, having given a hand, in a small way, through the organization which he repreâ€" sented, he could scarcely be blamed for sharing so obviously in their pleasure. He said, "It woulld not be in appropriate to tell this audience a little about the University Capital â€" Granis â€" Fund, from which the Canada Council makes appropriations like the one that heiped in the construction of this building. This fund started out on April 15, 1957, as $50,â€" 000,000. In the course of six years, and because of the happy proliferating faculty of money in the hands of shrewd investâ€" orss, it has become worth $64,â€" 280,000. Out of this total sum we have authorized 150 grants totalling $38,330,000. We have thus left to spend approximateâ€" THE LAST LINK of a three mile long "Chain of Pennies" is laid by Jim Mitâ€" chell, Chairman of the University of Waterloo‘s Charity Drive Committee. But Seriously . . . (Continued on Seriously . . . by Tom Evans A House Of My Own "Hi there," she said, waving both hands at the real estate agent as the car somehow steered itself into the driveway, only slightly denting the right front fender. ‘"We‘re here to see the house." "Isn‘t it just wonderful darling?" she gushed. There‘s a lovely big living room where you can reâ€" lax. and your own study where you can go and reâ€" lax when you want to get away from junior for aâ€" while." « "Five hundred is all it takes for the downâ€"payâ€" ment, and you‘ll have a home of your own," said the salesman cheerily. He knew I was trapped. So did I. I scribbled my name on a cheque and handed it to him. Yesterday we moved into our new home. This evening when I came home from work 1 went into my own living room to watch the news on T.V. My son was watching Sea Hunt, so I went to my own study. My motherâ€"inâ€"law was sewing there so I deâ€" cided to take a bath. Unfortunately I‘d forgot about junior‘s snapping turtle. 1 was soon reminded. As 1 limped into the kitchen my wife whitpered, "Get out of here, you‘ll make my eake fall. _ _ So here I sit, back at the office, writing this article. and meditating upon the virtue of owning my own home. porch to the road. We were indeed off to buy a house. The University students collected more than $1,500 Saturday for the Kâ€"W Kinsmen‘s Workshop for Mentally Reâ€" tarded Adults. ; Chronicle Photo.