U IN prbf ""ii'ii'i"iiiiisi gas-en f?t"fl.lf, saving transmission So Dr. Joseph Tevaar- werk, with promises of an automatic transmission that doesn't eat up gas, is being listened to. By Joanne "irhart Anyone who comes up with gas-saving ideas these days is listened to eagerly. Tevaarwerk, a tribologist - a mechanical engineer concerned with things like friction, lubrication and wear - is researching a “continuously variable speed" transmission that g oi' :i‘gfgi 'iiiiiiiiilll p" My (s'('i'i,':_iii1a.s,i,, A _ rt: ct-tttttran-ttttttae.,, mwamoosaom If your chino; won’t - becoming to you " you should ll" _ - Waterioo Chronicle} Wodnudov, Sept-Mb" 19, ttmt GUESS WHO’. S TOPS FOR Filu,,lll,, , '_i(fe"i" .::';sés.; _i':.iai' , t I , if? , coming to us! ..: a a. s...:) I. ' oid 3.," _ , L Jtilllll i . ' . '3. i [all le, g E! 'ii'!,,,.-;.,':.]"'-?.,!.). t" ~ r'.'c'd " i'.?'": "c.':., a k would make automatic transmissions as fuel-ef- ficient as manual ones. "We have seen estimates of savings in the area of 30 per cent...which would be fantastic when you think of what it could mean to our energy picture," says Te- vaarwerk. _ The basic difference in these transmissions is that power is transmitted through a thin layer of lubri- cant between two steel discs. As pressure builds, the lubricant seems to sol- dify. Automatic transmis- sion: today relay power from the engine to the drive- shaft will! fast-moving fluid. , The idea of continuously Wing 404 members remember Battle Chroniclo cull writov _ Residents of Watoi'loo will got a noisy sut- prise tonight when the local " force associa- tion concludes its commemoration of the Bat- tie of Britain. _ At about 6:30 p.m.. thtee vintage airctaft will do a "tty-ttv" over the centre of the city in honor of the Canadian "you who fought and died in the famous battle. The aircraft are Har- vard: - a single-engine plane that was used extensively as a training craft by the Royal Canadian Air Force. _ They belong to the Warplanes Heritage Group tram Mount Hope Airport in Hamilton. The anniversary ot the Battle of Britain is celebrated all over Canada. and is the high- light of the year for most air force associa- tions. The local group in charge of the Com- memoration is Wing 404. TiiiGGii â€Bennettzlirectm of public relations for Wing 404 was a youth in England during Galaxy's Fall Fashions are arriving daily, lovely Ladiirs' Blouses, Shirts and Swuraters, plus leans and Wide Wale Corduroy Pants, all trom leading dough houses and munuiacturers, FKCIORY ‘OUTLEIS To: variable speed transmis- sions is not new, but has not been put to use incur: be. cause of size and weight, high pressures and working tolerances. They are. ho. wever, used in ieveral in. A. Fashion Shim Famous Labs! Stuns in a wnde sebum ot plans and newtall panems Easy care polyester and cotton uterus Mtg Sugg Reg GALAXY PRICE $1900to$2400 _ $999 B. Bloom. Beautiful oewfa0styies from a well-known Canadian mammal Assorted shades and desgns GALAXY PRICE Mtg Sogg Reg 524 00 to $30 00 $1 ty" C. 0005900! 8m... E :ctuswe Des-gnev and styles 'o. Brand Name 5mm. sum of polyester arttttxhtort with menewrouottporusrnatttz*ar Woe assottment ot new (all lashm shades Mtg 5099 Rea suaoo E, WWWâ€. Pleatedhom snag" leg Jeam Pre-washed an cotton damn Mtg Sogg Reg GALAXY PRIZE bodystroes G. Widow-b Getaway Pan's. Heated from stra-ght leg a" ctMtort corduroy pants from a leadmg manufacturer Bege mud brown mud gem and blue GALAXY me "ietgsoogmro “There was a car market- ed in the United States, back about 1909,†says Tevaar- were. "It made use of a type of variable speed transmis- dustrial machines. the Battle of Britain. He says most people aton't swan of tho numbu of Canadian “you who served in tho bank, which many 0mm feel was tho most important battle of the Se- cond World War. According to Mi. Bannatt. many Canadian mares fought in Royal Air Force uniforms and aircraft dyrirm'that time. Late in the battli. a squadron of Canadian “you want to Britain and carved under the famous mmndiaiiittticer Douglas Badar. Representatives hom Wing 404 will be at the cenotaph Wednesday - located at the Marsland Centre, Waterloo. to lay a wreath in memory of the airmen killed during the battle. Unliko the jet that flow over Waterloo so- vorol weeks ago. cousini concern among "tsi- donts. the three Harvard: will be undor the control and direction of thmtorloo-Wsttingtoet Airport's traffic controthr. and they will maim. min a legal height. ' $1999 GALAXY PROCE '26" '36" 1370 M08! marten 704251 9 30 to 6 '22 $1299 930to 930 $799 Fri sine. It was called the Car- tercar and the manufact- urer even had a little adva- tising slogan for it: 'No clutch to slip, no gears to strip.' But it was a little ahead of its time." K-W Little 4 Theatre Oktoberfest production K-W Little Theatre is pre- senting "The Hand that Cra- dles the Rock" for its Ok- toberfest production. The play, a comedy writ- ten by Canadian Warren Graves, will be performed Oct. Hi. and Oct. 11-13 at Victoria Park Pavilion. The production studies a current issue - a wife con- cerned with an exciting in- terior design career, and a husband staying home with their baby. Tickets are $4 for general admission, and $3 for stu- dents and seniors. Tickets for all three plays K-W Lit- tle Theatre is putting on are available for $10. The se- cond play of the season, "The Sound of Murder," will be shown in February, with the third play, which has not been chosen. foil ing in May. Tickets are av lable from Scribes Boo - stores. or can be ordered by calling W, Wmugroup is still in need of actors and production people "sam. Atter but! 57351154 m vmm St N. [urban music We". Bakeries) wai AIP', 5mm up! WAd to For pre-Winter Installation YOUR MEMORIAL SUPERIOR MEMORIAL-S SHOULD BE ORDERED NOW \‘a'. a - LII.“ .5!)