(@mwï¬myzm%m... The new location to buy that special gift. Fine pottery, art, sculpture, and glass are complimented by the finest locally produced decorator items for the kitchen, and that special child‘s room. We‘d be pleased to assist with suggestions for any special gift occasion Bottle of leat gloss with any purchase Retail Value 25 (First 600 customers) expires July 11/81 39â€"C Durward Place Waterioo 884â€"0856 {rear of building) Large Inventory of: hydroculture supplies, plants, wicker, gift line at warehouse prices â€" SALE ENDS JULY 11 â€" 20% to 50% off ~CLIP & SAVE â€" â€" â€"â€" WAREHOUSE MOVING SALE the soilâ€"less plant system (Formerly Hydroculture Luwasa Products FREE Hours: Mon. to Wed. 10:00 to 5:30 Thurs.â€"Fri. 10:00 to 9:00 Sat. 10:00 to 5:00 (1) 'Iv(,alim/w,( ( htaric 8806 â€" 3082 t rl'qillll (Ahoot CONESTOGA RD. N. * mpi Tigers taste own medicine That pair of victories brought Tigers to withâ€" in one game of .500 (6â€"7) heading into last night‘s game at Jack Couch Park against Kitchener Panthers â€" Tigers picked up a pair of shutout vicâ€" tories in two very difâ€" ferent ways last week when they ventured to Dickson Park Thursâ€" day and lambasted Terriers 150 with a 22â€"hit saivo, and then were awarded a 90 committeeâ€"room victoâ€" ry over Royals after the Guelph club canâ€" celled Saturday‘s makeâ€"up game with Waterloo due to an inâ€" ability to field enough players. Waterloo Tigers found out Tuesday night all Interâ€"County Major Baseball League teams are not as generâ€" ous as Cambridge Terâ€" riers and Gueiph Royals. By Rick Campbell Chronicle Sports Editor custom made excelient work realistic rates 3 YEAR GUARANTEE 579â€"5442 FREE ESTIMATES the shoe was enâ€" DECKS H. GERBER Shellacked by rampaging Panthers Waterioo Pot Mark Fagan .500 Brad Schnurr _ .387 Mike Yosurack _ .361 Mick Kozlowski .356 Mike Zapfe .286 Mike Mallory .280 Bob Schnurr .235 Dave Barrett .225 Brian Schnurr .206 Dunc MacDonald .200 Jim Taylor .192 Tom Valcke .182 Dan Caldwell 111 Terry Boegel .050 Friday against the falâ€" tering London Majors who have now lost 11 straight, they play host to Cambridge Saturday Tigers will attempt to get the wheels back on their wagon tonight when they travel to Brantford for an 8: 15 start. They continue a tirely on the other foot on this occasion as Panthers, in the manâ€" quite accustomed to, scored early and often and waltzed to an easy 18â€"3 rout. 341 MARSLAND DRIVE â€" WwWATERLOO A PHONE 886â€"7777 The newest most exciting curts yet Tiger stats Skate to Contemporary CHRISTIAN MUSIC ~Eat n "Putt Recreation Centre THIS AD WORTH $1.00 OFF :‘:"*%Z2" ADMISSION $1.50 â€" SKATE RENTAL s0¢ FAMILY RATE 3.50 Come out for the fun of it! Hwy. 8 Kitchener The Super Bearcat Every Saturday from that point. Import Tiger starter Marty Olmstead, who had been impressive in previous outings with Waterloo, had what would best be deâ€" Tigers looked like they were getting off to yet another good start Tuesday when they scored a run in the first inning and sent six men to the plate. But Pan thers came right back to send eight in their half, scoring four runs off five hits and it was literally no contest at_godwel at 7: 30 p.m. 12 13 16 2B HAr Waterloo branch enâ€" tered three teams in the 18â€"team zone event and one of those came out on top with the other also scoring low enough to advance to theâ€" district championâ€" ships in Owen Sound Two teams from Waâ€" terloo Legion Branch 530 qualified for furâ€" ther play Saturday by finishing in the top 10 teams in the Royal Canadian Legion zone golf championships at Elmira Golf Club. Marty Quincey and Roger Kropf each powâ€" ered home runs for the winners with Quincey adding a double. Bill Byckowski had a pair of doubles and a single and Billy Martin three singles for the winners, who have displayed It was ‘"let‘s haunt Waterloo"‘ night for a pair of former Tigers as slugger Dan Collison kept up his torrid pace going threeâ€"forâ€"four at the place for Panthers and pitcher Rick Wilâ€" liams coasted through six innings to record the victory before givâ€" ing way to Gary Meyer. scribed as "just one of those nights‘" as he was ripped for 10 runs and 11 solid hits in less than four innings of work. Relievers Craig Duâ€" becki and Mike Simpâ€" son weren‘t much more successful as Panthers relentlessly continued their barrage, but none were helped much in the field either as menâ€" tal and physical errors pervaded Tabbies deâ€" fensive ranks. Legion golfers 200 Weber Street N., Waterloo â€"qualify for district play Self contained building of approximately 16,000 square feet of office, storage and work areas 4.8 acres of land Zoned commercial Property completely fenced Electric heating and air conditioning â€" FOR SALE â€" Waterioo North Hydro P.O. Box 640 200 Weber Street North Waterioo, Ont. N2J 4A3 Telephone 886â€"5090 The top Waterloo team Saturday was comprised of members Don Guenther, Tom Moffatt, Don Ryan and Bill Arsenault while the second Waterloo team qualifying was made up of members Bert Richards, Romey Gies, Cliff Bolduc and Al Hergott. Aug. 15. The top 10 teams from that event will go on to the provincial finals Sept. 12 in Chatâ€" ham. Thursday in Camâ€" bridge was much cheerier for the locals as they tallied four firstâ€"inning runs, bagged another six in the fifth, and rode the excellent shutâ€"out pitching of Dan Smith to victory. Import slugâ€" ger Mark Fagan, who was 0â€"4 in Kitchener, had a tremendous night at the plate, going fourâ€" forâ€"five with a double. His only out, a strike out, came after a ball that appeared to go for a home run in right field was declared Tigers had nine hits themselves, not a bad total for a road game but they were scatâ€" tered throughout with Jim Taylor topping the charts with a pair of d o u bles . B rian Schnurr, who was the victim on a pair of Panther double plays, singled twice and Dunc MacDonald chipped in a double. si y awesome power .t":: plate during the first half of the season.