Page 20 â€" Waterioo Chronicle, Wednesday, October 1, 1980 Uâ€"LOCK IT â€" â€" U KEEP THE KEY â€" â€" â€" WEST OF KING ST. > SARTURDAY __ _ NEWSPAPER RECYCLING OCTOBER 4 NOVEMBER 1 DECEMBER 6 HELP REDUCE f S0L.I0 WASTE for further information CALL CITY OF WATERLOO â€" 886â€"1550 EX. 245 (PLEASE CLIP OUT AND SAVE FOR FUTURE REFERENCE) 10 x 10 â€" 10 x 15 â€" 10 x 20 OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE es UPON REQUEST R 886â€"7 350 §85 COLBY DR WATERLOO ‘} % HOW CAN YOU GET INVOLVED? ©@ Tie newspapers securely in bundles with twine ®@ Place bundles at your curbside by 8 a.m. on the Saturday listed for your area, as noted above © Use cardboard boxes as containers for newspapers ® Include cardboard, magazines or junk mail § SIZES 5 x 10 â€" 5 x 15 10 x 10 â€" 10 x 15 â€" 10 x 20 OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE ‘Take a few minutes . . .. City of Waterloo RECYCLE DO NOT ~~Hot goaltender stops Chippers Waterloo Chippers ran into a hot goalie and dropped a 3â€"0 decision to St. Catharines® Nickersons Sunâ€" day in the final of the St. Catharines Grape Festival Old Timers hockey tourâ€" Chippers enjoyed good success. in the rouffdâ€"robin portion of the event, beating Barrie 1â€"0 Friday and Fort Erie 5â€"3 Saturday. Their only preliminary.loss was also to Nickerson‘s 3â€"1 Saâ€" turday afternoon. ‘‘Their (Nickersons) goaâ€" lie just played an outstandâ€" ing game against us in the final," said Chipper coach Buddy Johnston. *He just stoned us time after time." As Johnston‘ ironmically pointed out, the villainous St. Catharines netminder was the same one who dressed for Niagara Falls Stamford last year when Chippers won their division with an identical 3â€"0 win. ~ LXxn Re OCTOBER 18 NOVEMBER 15 DECEMBER 20 EAST SID E A‘s drop final game 3â€" In their win over Fort Erie, Roy Greenan scored for Chippers with 50 seconds left to insure the 5â€"3 victory. Chappie Dahmer with a pair, Bob Duggen and Andy Seraras had the other Waâ€" terloo goals. 5 cnpmbah-er with a tied 00 in regulation. Both pair, Duggen and Andy â€" goalies in that game, includâ€" Seraras had the other Waâ€" ~ing Chipper Joe Mansfield, terloo goals. . ‘*_â€" carried a hot hand as Chipâ€" In the 3â€"1 loss to Nickerâ€" pers were outshot 2%â€"12. sons, Wayne Pearen scored *‘That‘s the first time in Waterloo‘s only goal while the history of the tourâ€" in the tournament opener nament that they‘ve needed Chinguacousy scored with only three minutes remainâ€" ing in the game Sunday to edge Waterloo Athletic A‘s 3â€"2 in the last game of the regular season for the Waâ€" terloo side. A‘s, who staged a strong second half of the season, ended in third spot in the Onâ€" tario Amateur Soccer Deveâ€" lopment League with an 8â€"5â€" 1 record and 17 points. _ Friday against Barrie, Howie Dietrich‘s shootâ€"out goal gave Chippers the vicâ€" The victory ruined a fine secondâ€"half comeback by A‘s who twice fought back from deficits to tie, only to lose when their goalie Andy Christie lost the winning goal in the late afternoon A‘s who twice fought back back for Waterloo. Less from deficits to tie, only to than five minutes later lose when their goalie Andy Chinguacousy took the lead Christie lost the winning again, but a goal by Ante goal in the late afternoon Granic at 72 minutes sun. seemed certain to give A‘s Chinguacousy opened the at least a draw until the unâ€" scoring at 12 minutes of the fortunate struck in the wanâ€" first half and it wasn‘t until ing moments. Bauer Bruins â€" Fairview Park Mail Stone Road Mail Lynden Park Mail Opening the scoring at 4:25 of the first period was Tim Allensen assisted by Jason Zettler and David Schenk. Newcomer Greg MacDonald was in the right position to put home the puck from Jason Poag and John East. Tim Allensen With two new defence from last year, Richard Goode and Derek Seibert and forward Greg Macâ€" Donald, Bruins played their new type of hockey with no bodychecking and they looked impressive in outsâ€" kating thei opponents. The ~Waterloo Bauer Bruins minor peewee hockâ€" ey team lived up to their ‘‘family‘‘ reputation by blasting Guelph 9â€"2. Portrait Studio after the teams had 95 C acposit. Se ars Portrait Studio portraits/ passports/ frames at time of sitting s o | h. 14 color portraits !fl’flbl .-7"'- Mon., Tues., Sat. 9:30 a.m. till 5:00 p.m. Wed., Thurs., Fri. 9:30 a.m. till 9:00 p.m. _ Oneâ€"Hour Passport Photo Service Available There will be a 95¢ charge for each additional person in portraits. No limit on number of phoâ€" tographic packages (full package orders only). Choice of available backgrounds. Our selection of poses. Adults and family groups welcome! 13%°93 This offer good for portraits taken through Oct. 4. Satisfaction guaranteed or your money refunded.© Use your Sears Charge Card two 8x10‘s two 5x7‘s ten wallet size Chippers return to tourâ€" nament action Nov. 28â€"30 when they play in the Heâ€" speler tournament. They are also entered in the Torontoâ€"Italian event Feb. 19â€"22, the St. Clements event March 5â€"7 and then play host in their own event April 8â€"10. a shootâ€"out," said Johnston. "It was really something.‘" In the third period Waâ€" terloo exploded once again. Chuck Dietrich scored a shorthanded goal from Steve Israel. Jeff Clugston scored from a setup by Tim Allensen and 19 seconds later Jeff put in his third of the goal from Tim Allensen. Jason Poag scored the last Waterloo goal from Greg MacDonald and Chris Rigby. the 60 minute mark that Andy Coppolino got that one found the mark again from a fine setâ€"up by Jeff Clugston. With 54 seconds remaining David Cherry scored from Chuck Dietrich to put Waâ€" terloo ahead 4â€"0 at the end of the first period. Jeff Clugston scored â€"the only goal in the second from Brad Kit and Tim Allensen.